Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families, Marriages, Relationships & Adoptions
sociobiology.substack.com
Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families, Marriages, Relationships and Adoptions By A. J. Fisher, Jan. 14, 2011Thanks for reading Sociobiological’s Substack! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. As anyone familiar with the literature knows, mixed-race marriages and romantic relationships suffer many more problems than single-race marriages and romantic relationships. For those familiar with human biodiversity (HBD) and sociobiology, this should come as no surprise. There are obvious medical problems with mixed-race offspring, like mixed-race children being unable to find organ donors, as many organ transplants (such as bone marrow or stem cell) will only take if the donor and recipient are of the same race. In evolutionary terms, one could argue that mixed-race marriages are maladaptive in that they reduce a person's overall genetic fitness. In a multiracial marriage or relationship, one is showing altruism toward a partner who shares fewer genes than a co-ethnic would share. A parent will also share fewer genes with a multiracial child than with a same-race child.
Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families, Marriages, Relationships & Adoptions
Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families…
Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families, Marriages, Relationships & Adoptions
Biological Problems with Mixed-Race Families, Marriages, Relationships and Adoptions By A. J. Fisher, Jan. 14, 2011Thanks for reading Sociobiological’s Substack! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. As anyone familiar with the literature knows, mixed-race marriages and romantic relationships suffer many more problems than single-race marriages and romantic relationships. For those familiar with human biodiversity (HBD) and sociobiology, this should come as no surprise. There are obvious medical problems with mixed-race offspring, like mixed-race children being unable to find organ donors, as many organ transplants (such as bone marrow or stem cell) will only take if the donor and recipient are of the same race. In evolutionary terms, one could argue that mixed-race marriages are maladaptive in that they reduce a person's overall genetic fitness. In a multiracial marriage or relationship, one is showing altruism toward a partner who shares fewer genes than a co-ethnic would share. A parent will also share fewer genes with a multiracial child than with a same-race child.