Kytro wrote on Oct 11
th, 2011 at 2:43pm:
... wrote on Oct 11
th, 2011 at 2:07pm:
of course they both play a part, but how do you reconcile that with the notion that different races do not have different common behavioural traits? If genetics play a part in determining behaviour, those sharing similar genes will exhibit similar behavioural patterns. This would account for the greater occurrence of violent crime by those of african descent compared to those of european or asian decsent, but leftists deny this exists, despite the mountain of evidence from all over the world.
The problem is separating what causes what. Genetics often can predispose certain type of characteristics, say aggression. This by no means that people don't have the ability to influence their behaviour even if they have aggressive tendencies.
In order to be relatively certain that genetics was the primary driver for aggression in people of African descent you would need to eliminate or minimise the other variables from the environment / culture.
J Philippe Rushton has done a lot of research to that end.
Quote:The global nature of the racial pattern in crime is shown in data collated from INTERPOL using the 1984 and 1986 yearbooks. After analyzing information on nearly 100 countries, I reported, in the 1990 issue of the Canadian Journal of Criminology, that African and Caribbean countries had double the rate of violent crime (an aggregate of murder, rape, and serious assault) than did European countries, and three times more than did countries in the Pacific Rim. Averaging over the three crimes and two time periods, the figures per 100,000 population were, respectively, 142, 74, and 43.
I have corroborated these results using the most recent INTERPOL yearbook (1990). The rates of murder, rape, and serious assault per 100,000 population reported for 23 predominantly African countries, 41 Caucasian countries, and 12 Asian countries were: for murder, 13, 5, and 3; for rape, 17, 6, and 3; and for serious assault, 213, 63, and 27. Summing the crimes gave figures per 100,000, respectively, of 243, 74, and 33. The gradient remained robust over contrasts of racially homogeneous countries in northeast Asia, central Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa, or of racially mixed but predominantly black or white/Amerindian countries in the Caribbean and Central america. In short, a stubborn pattern exists worldwide that requires explanation.
http://www.charlesdarwinresearch.org/Race%20and%20Crime.pdf