MessageSorry all, but I got a little mad.

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Michael Gurstein 
  To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 4:33 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice


  I would have thought that this need hardly to have been said;  but of course, 
I agree!

  M
    -----Original Message-----
    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
    Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 1:00 PM
    To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION
    Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice


    Let's cut the crap.  Chris was kicked off the list because he needled and 
tormented people.  I've not found Ray to do anything that should have him 
kicked off.  The list has been great since he came back.   He speaks from a 
rather different point of view but one which we can try to understand and 
respond to.

    Ed

      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Ray Harrell 
      To: 'Keith Hudson' ; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
      Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 2:51 PM
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice


      So Arthur, Sally and the list, 

       

      Is this the group consensus? 

       

      That I'm a racist and that Harry and Keith's statements about the African 
American culture are accurate rather than pompous, self serving pieces of 
arrogant garbage?      

       

      REH

       

      From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
      Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 4:11 AM
      To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION; Harry Pollard
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice

       

      Well said, Harry.

      Keith

      At 00:57 29/12/2010 -0800, you wrote:




      The racism is all yours, Ray.

      I am happy to treat all peoples the same way. You want to change the way 
things are done according to the way they are in this case the color of their 
skin. Your refusal to accept that there may be a problem condemns any chance of 
making things work.

      We had a fine radio personality in Los Angeles named Michael Jackson. He 
was a great host and was very left wing in his politics something useful in 
Hollywood where he could always get celebrity guests. Some years ago, he had I 
think Jesse Jackson on the show and in discussion, Michael said If a white 
mother takes her ill baby into a hospital and two doctors come forward one 
white, the other black who will she hand her baby to?

      They agreed she would hand the baby to the white doctor. Then Jesse 
Jackson added If a black mother brought her ill baby into the hospital she 
would hand it to the white doctor.

      There is one problem.  

      Then we have Cosby saying that if some black kids were walking toward him 
on the  sidewalk, he would cross the road. There are many other instances of 
which the factory example was one.

      I remember on one occasion pointing out in class that some 80% of violent 
crimes are committed by blacks (I based this on the fact that 80% of the 
victims of violent crimes are black.) A student who didnt believe looked up the 
Federal statistics and told the class that hed found more than 50% of the 
murders were committed by blacks. (Ive never checked that but assume he 
properly found it.)

      These are in the past I havent looked at this situation in a long time. I 
just hope things are better now. I did see the other day that we are wasting 
money sending kids to college who shouldnt go there. They drop out all colors 
but the largest percentage of drop-outs are black some 70% of them.

      We should certainly stop wholesale enrollment of kids in college, but 
concentrate on those who wont drop out among them the 30% of blacks.

      Now, if your ideology insists these things arent true, you cant help the 
black people in our society. 

      There are millions of black people particularly older people - who dare 
not go out in the evening. And the agony of losing a child to a stray bullet 
seems to come up often.

      I would love things to change, but it wont come if we refuse to recognize 
the way things are and take steps based on the reality of the black experience 
and the reality of the reaction of non-black people to it. But, that wouldnt be 
politically correct so I fear our black families dont have much of a chance.

      Harry

       

      From: Ray Harrell [mailto:[email protected]] 
      Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 6:41 AM
      To: [email protected]; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, 
EDUCATION'
      Subject: RE: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice

       

      Parallel structures Harry.    A little bit of information, too little and 
an unwillingness to recognize parallel structures coming to a conclusion of 
cooked data and self interest.   Sounds like racism to me.    I was there in 
Washington Ghetto in 1964, were you anywhere near a ghetto?    You comment 
sounds like the dumb comments of simpleminded capitalists from South Dakota to 
Belize who complain about the locals because they wont give them rights to just 
about everything. 

       

      I wont talk to you again on either of these  posts and if this attitude 
continues here my time is wasted.    You are not interested in justice or 
solutions, only your own story.    The pity is that some of your story on the 
use of land parallels mine by I acknowledge national boundaries and you dont.   
Our land use was even called Georgist by the Robber Barons.     But this is all 
old stuff.   Been there, already talked about it endlessly and there has been 
no movement that I can see so this is a waste.    You should think one word 
living in California.    Okie!

       

      REH

       

      From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Harry Pollard
      Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 3:46 AM
      To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'; 'Keith Hudson'
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice

       

      Ray,

       

      Enterprise factories were set at the edge of black communities to provide 
them with work.

       

      It was found that before very long the factories were filled with workers 
-- Hispanics.

       

      There is a problem with blacks that probably rests on decades of welfare 
-- a problem that is evident in many nonblack welfare state situations. It is a 
lack of industriousness.

       

      What we have done to people by providing welfare instead of justice is a 
crime.

       

      Harry

       

      From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ray Harrell
      Sent: Saturday, November 06, 2010 1:05 PM
      To: 'Keith Hudson'; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice

       

      Bull Shit!

       

      REH

       

      From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
      Sent: Saturday, November 06, 2010 11:21 AM
      To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
      Subject: [Futurework] Epigenesis -- was Indian prejudice

       

      Ed,

      The puzzling aspect of modern African-Americans is why they haven't done 
much better in the professions, business and politics since slavery was 
abolished. James Flynn, among others, has pretty conclusively proved that it's 
nothing to do with inferior intelligence -- they are as much up to the mark as 
white Americans. The same could be said for the Dalits of India or the Buraku 
and Ainu of Japan. Even though in both countries the 'untouchable' castes have 
had full constitutional rights since the 50s, and although much is made of the 
few exceptional individuals, they hardly feature at all in any important sphere 
of life.

      The same could be said for the castes at the other end of the social 
scale -- the Brahmins of India or the upper middle-class of the UK (which, via 
Cambridge and Oxford Universities, still almost completely dominates business, 
politics, professions and much else that's important ever since this new class 
rose during the 19th century). (America is still supposed to be an 
equal-opportunity society but it is becoming obvious that an elite Harvard-Yale 
class is already growing fast in America, similar to the UK -- and the same in 
France and Germany.)

      The new and fast-growing field of epigenetics in biology is now beginning 
to give us the reasons why social status, high or low, perseverates for 
generations, and which can't be adequately explained on the basis of genes, or 
nutrition, or education alone. This is the major discovery that emerged from 
the Human Genome Project from 2003 onwards. It isn't genes alone (or their 
potentiation alone) which is inherited, but also the particular ways that genes 
are "set" in order to work in coalition with others. In fact, without these 
epigenetic coalitions the genes couldn't do their job at all. The agents that 
decide on these genetic settings lie in the DNA but outside the genes 
themselves. In effect these agents act rather like cowboys -- they lasso genes 
that lie at far distances from one another on the DNA (sometimes on different 
chromosomes) and bring them together so the coalition-gene can do its stuff 
efficiently.

      There are two important points to this: firstly, epigenetic settings are 
as much involved in propensities of behaviour as much as physiological effects; 
secondly, the settings can be inherited for many generations, or even thousands 
of years, before they might re-set themselves -- but feeling their way back to 
what was the original "standard" setting may take several generations. If we 
consider that culture can be considered as a social collectivity of behaviour, 
then epigenesis is beginning to explain several mysteries, not only those of 
long persistence of social status mentioned above but also why some 
cultures/nations cannot manage their economies in the same way as the West. For 
example, Argentina was the fourth most prosperous country in the world at the 
turn of the 20th century when it was selling vast quantities of grain and meat 
to Europe, but somehow they couldn't consolidate this in their financial 
institutions and politics -- it has defaulted on its government loans and 
issued new currencies several times since its peak.

      Epigenetics is probably the fastest growing sub-field within biology 
(because gene-coalition propensities are also involved in many diseases such as 
type 2 diabetes and many cancers)  but what fascinates me is that this may 
finally explain many puzzling features of social castes but also economic 
development of this country or that.

      Keith

      At 09:15 06/11/2010 -0400, you wrote:

      Pete, you say "I rather suspect the primary reason for using African 
slaves was the convenient skin marker that made it impossible for the labour to 
ever be free of pursuit."  That may have been a reason, but not likely the 
primary one.  In building up their plantations, Europeans tried to use native 
Indian labour, but soon found that the Indians were not immune to European 
diseases and thus died off in large numbers.  People from west Africa were 
generally immune and were brought in to replace the indigenous slaves.  The 
chart below illustrates what happened in Guatemala.
       
      Ed 


       
       
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: "pete" <[email protected]>
      To: "RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION" 
<[email protected]>
      Sent: Friday, November 05, 2010 8:57 PM
      Subject: Re: [Futurework] Indian prejudice

      > On Fri, 5 Nov 2010, Christoph Reuss wrote:
      > 
      >> Malcolm Blackmore wrote:
      >> > The MacGregor side of my
      >> > family were evicted at gunpoint from the Highland croft they rented 
and
      >> > forcibly placed on a boat at Aberdeen to be sent as indentured 
labour to
      >> > America.
      >> 
      >> Interesting.  Are you saying there was __white slavery__ in America?
      > 
      > Pretty much. although indentured labour was supposed to be paid, and to
      > terminate upon completion of the debt obligation, in many cases it was
      > contrived in such a way that it was a life sentence. The main
      > distinctions between it and true slavery were that 1) children weren't
      > the property of the employer, to sell out from their parents, and 2) if
      > a labourer escaped, and got far enough away, he/she could blend in with
      > the white population and disappear. In fact, I rather suspect the
      > primary reason for using african slaves was the convenient skin marker
      > that made it impossible for the labour to ever be free of pursuit.
      > 
      > See also the "home children" of Canada, shipped out from England, who
      > were child slave labour, provided with only room and board, and confined
      > to work, usually as farm labour, for their "guardians" til they were 
18.  
      > Some lucked out and were treated as well as the guardians' own children
      > might have been, but others suffered horrendous conditions, only to
      > be turned out on the streets malnourished and destitute upon reaching
      > adulthood.
      > 
      >> Methinks the MacGregors would have had the option to return to Europe 
      >> soon. And before being evicted, they would have had the option to get 
      >> rich. ;-}
      > 
      > I imagine Malcolm can set you straight here, but the answer is generally
      > no. Getting back to europe was pretty much out of the question, but
      > making a new life in the new world and having success, was a possibility
      > if not for the labourers, then at least for their children. That is,
      > if they survived long enough...
      > 
      > Another very interesting story along these lines is the saga of the
      > crofters who were subject of rescue attempts by Lord Selkirk, who tried
      > to provide them with homesteading land in southern Manitoba, in the very
      > early years of the 19th century, when there was no overland route from
      > the east coast, and the ships were to deliver 1000 settlers via
      > Churchill in Hudson's Bay. The many attempts by fur-trading companies,
      > principally the Northwest Company, to thwart his rescue plans on two
      > continents, including fraud, bribery, intimidation, and finally murder
      > by wholesale massacre with a mercenary militia, make a very eye-opening
      > story of the brutality of life two centuries ago.
      > 
      > -Pete
      > 
      > 
      > _______________________________________________
      > Futurework mailing list
      > [email protected]
      > https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
      > 

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      Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 


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      Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 



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