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 | | From: | stlbl | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | 17 Jan 2005 03:55:53 -0800 |
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 | I agree with the comments about Bush---you know there is a I Hate George Bush Fan Club discussion group....there are some interesting articles on this backintyme.com site (get past the commercial stuff--there are articles listed on the end)--about the one-drop rule and America's ridiculous policy of classifying people as black OR white--that author says, and I agree, it makes about as much sense as a short/tall binary way of looking at people---no in betweens acknowledged!?! You HAVE to fit in one category---but what about we men that are right at the MEAN---5'10"?
Therefore --- if you apply their precious Bell (actually Gaussian) curve to SKIN COLOR and use this binary way of thinking---with say Nordic/Baltic peoples on one side of the curve and say, Nigerians of the other side---80 % or more are mixed genetic and the same criteria (statistics) that quantifies lower IQs(sub-mean) to blacks will have relegated the whole idea of SEPARATE races to the realm of the ridiculous (there is a gradient of races just like intelligences, however measured) which is good as this is the realm in which these studies were devised. Which is why most intelligent people (myself not included) would just laugh at these sort of rantings and not lower themselves enough to involve themselves in these sort of discussions.
Its funny that with that way of thinking, you would have to classify the British royal family as black---does Bush know his only real allies in his latest Republican war is a Black monarchy???--and that the 19th century was fundamentally a century of a white(ish) Navy conquering the world for the sake of their Black Queen?? Any informed Brit knows about Victoria's African side of the family....
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 | | From: | P.Comm | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | Tue, 18 Jan 2005 09:24:50 GMT |
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 | "stlbl" wrote in message news:1105962953.322649.271420@c13g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... >I agree with the comments about Bush---you know there is a I Hate > George Bush Fan Club discussion group....there are some interesting > articles on this backintyme.com site
Ain't there? It's a dynamite site!
(get past the commercial > stuff--there are articles listed on the end)--about the one-drop rule > and America's ridiculous policy of classifying people as black OR > white--that author says, and I agree, it makes about as much sense as a > short/tall binary way of looking at people---no in betweens > acknowledged!?! You HAVE to fit in one category---but what about we men > that are right at the MEAN---5'10"?
True - Sweet used to be friendly awhile back (he's a great guy!), but when I wrote him my hypothesis about what caused that black/white (dark/light) duality among western people RELIGIOUSLY speaking (carried over to everything else) he didn't say much after that. He did say he did not like religion. My hypothesis crosses disciplines, it's outside the box - VERY much so. Also, lots of people partly black don't like that one drop rule and resent blacks insisting that they self-identify as black. I suggest he read Sandor Gilman "On Blackness without Blacks" and see what they are reacting to. Well, we now have people of mixed race that resent blacks getting all over them for not identifying as black, even if they are literally "one drop." I understand why they do that - it's like how Slavs EMPHASIZE how Nietzsche was a Slav - it's due to past German prejudice against Slavs as inferior. It's a dynamic, it's emotional and it's very very real - it can't just be dismissed. Emotions are real. Dynamics in society are also real. The whole "act black" thing well, when whites go off on that and start up with "no such thing as race" they better grasp that blacks that are into that DEMAND that race is real - and they want to speak up, identify - especially if the person is famous or a professor or something. It's like whites denied them humanity before due to race. NOW whites (liberals) want to deny them RACE when they are PROUD of it or speaking "in your face" about it. Let's ask blacks themselves. I don't like "black ON white" bullshit - primarily because it's not just black on white - it ends up being black on anything non-black as perceived by them! You can't be TRANSracial around them. Heh. > > > Therefore --- if you apply their precious Bell (actually Gaussian) > curve to SKIN COLOR and use this binary way of thinking---with say > Nordic/Baltic peoples on one side of the curve and say, Nigerians of > the other side---80 % or more are mixed genetic and the same criteria > (statistics) that quantifies lower IQs(sub-mean) to blacks will have > relegated the whole idea of SEPARATE races to the realm of the > ridiculous (there is a gradient of races just like intelligences, > however measured) which is good as this is the realm in which these > studies were devised. Which is why most intelligent people (myself not > included) would just laugh at these sort of rantings and not lower > themselves enough to involve themselves in these sort of discussions.
Did it ever occur to you that blacks in the USA deliberately fuck up their tests? I have MET blacks that deliberately fucked up in school, got low grades, just to be "cool." I've seen it with my own eyes. It's sort of like some Hispanics that pretend they don't speak English when they DO - and fluently. > > Its funny that with that way of thinking, you would have to classify > the British royal family as black---does Bush know his only real allies > in his latest Republican war is a Black monarchy???--and that the 19th > century was fundamentally a century of a white(ish) Navy conquering the > world for the sake of their Black Queen?? Any informed Brit knows > about Victoria's African side of the family....
You lost me on that one. I don't get it. >
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 | | From: | Wolf Kirchmeir | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | Tue, 18 Jan 2005 10:37:08 -0500 |
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 | P.Comm wrote: [...]> > Did it ever occur to you that blacks in the USA deliberately fuck up their > tests? I have MET blacks that deliberately fucked up in school, got low > grades, just to be "cool." I've seen it with my own eyes. It's sort of > like some Hispanics that pretend they don't speak English when they DO - and > fluently.
I've noted deliberate underperformance also among First Nations and working class students. Two examples:
-- an Ojibway girl who (in her weekly journal, written for English class) expressed anxiety about her ambition to succeed in school, since her friends put her down for "trying to be better than them" if she got good marks.
-- a boy whose marks went from A/A+ to D/F in a fairly regular pattern - he was working class, and his friends put him down whenever he got a good mark.
Then there are those who are afraid of messing up if they do the test as instructed, so they deliberately mess up. That way, they have controlled the outcome, not the test. Me, myself, have fucked up on tests, just to show the bastards that they couldn't figure me out. That was when I was a teenager, ane very confused. Which is another reason I put very little stock in SATs and such. -- There are many and usually very mixed motives for messing up on a test. Racial consciousness is just one factor.
Etc.
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 | | From: | P.Comm | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 23:38:37 GMT |
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 | "Wolf Kirchmeir" wrote in message news:41aHd.35056$W33.767525@news20.bellglobal.com... > P.Comm wrote: > [...]> >> Did it ever occur to you that blacks in the USA deliberately fuck up >> their tests? I have MET blacks that deliberately fucked up in school, >> got low grades, just to be "cool." I've seen it with my own eyes. It's >> sort of like some Hispanics that pretend they don't speak English when >> they DO - and fluently. > > I've noted deliberate underperformance also among First Nations and > working class students. Two examples: > > -- an Ojibway girl who (in her weekly journal, written for English class) > expressed anxiety about her ambition to succeed in school, since her > friends put her down for "trying to be better than them" if she got good > marks. > > -- a boy whose marks went from A/A+ to D/F in a fairly regular pattern - > he was working class, and his friends put him down whenever he got a good > mark. > > Then there are those who are afraid of messing up if they do the test as > instructed, so they deliberately mess up. That way, they have controlled > the outcome, not the test. Me, myself, have fucked up on tests, just to > show the bastards that they couldn't figure me out. That was when I was a > teenager, ane very confused. Which is another reason I put very little > stock in SATs and such. -- There are many and usually very mixed motives > for messing up on a test. Racial consciousness is just one factor. > > Etc.
Well, here is another example. I was hanging out with a math professor - it was casual, we were having dinner at this GREAT (oh god GREAT) place - and heh, had gone thru a whole pitcher of Sangria (the real thing) - so we were pretty drunk. Throughout the night, he was passing me these really dumb math problems that were all jokes. Then, he passes me this problem after taking 12 coins out of his pocket. I EXPECTED a joke since the other ones (maybe 50 in all) were jokes. Of course, he said it was not a joke (but he said that with the others, too). That one I solved pretty fast - drunk too. Then he gets this BIG attitude over it. See, it took HIM 3 days to solve it and he had told me that. HA.... And so, to make things worse, I improved on the problem later on (when sober) and presented him a new problem, told him there is a pattern to it a way to solve all such problems and I "got it." He couldn't solve it. He's a professor. I have HS math only. Go figure. Why he'd get all attitudish over it and, well - that has nothing to do with intelligence. It's emotions.
Thing is - when you go to "take a test," you know you are "taking a test" and some folks get stressed out - others do not. Some very good test takers are dumber than the backside of a barn when it comes to real life things or applying what they should know, or appear to know.
It really SUCKS that kids have that kind of ethic and then proceed to fail. That kind of thing did not exist when I was a kid in school at all. What you are desribing is the product of diseased egos - and diseased egos imo, have to GO.
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 | | From: | Wolf Kirchmeir | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 01:42:40 -0500 |
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 | P.Comm wrote: [snip story of a math puzzle - btw, what was it? I'd like to try it. Even if it takes me a few days...]
It's not whether you've studied math, its whether you can see certain kinds of patterns.
> It really SUCKS that kids have that kind of ethic [of trying to fail] and then proceed to fail. > That kind of thing did not exist when I was a kid in school at all. What > you are describing is the product of diseased egos - and diseased egos imo, > have to GO.
When I was in school in Austria, England, and even Canada, we didn't have nearly so many tests, and all of them, with one exception, were "performance tests" -- we had to to do what we had been doing in class. Ie, precis in language, word problems in math, drawings in drafting, map lettering in geo, etc. I guess our teachers, bless their antediluvian theories of education, believed that we would actually learn the skills we practiced... The exception? "Reading comprehension tests", administered after we had supposedly read a book to a deadline, and before we took it up in class. I think it was a ruse to ensure that (most of us, anyhow) would actually read the book.
I didn't see a multiple choice _exam_ until university. In an ed psych course. It took me twenty three minutes to do what was supposedly a 3-hour exam (at a rate of nearly ten questions/minute); I made no revisions, and scored in the 92nd percentile. That university took my money under false pretenses.
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 | | From: | P.Comm | | Subject: | Re: Racial Differences in Intelligence | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 00:59:10 GMT |
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 | "Wolf Kirchmeir" wrote in message news:du1Id.56562$W33.1683034@news20.bellglobal.com... > P.Comm wrote: > [snip story of a math puzzle - btw, what was it? I'd like to try it. Even > if it takes me a few days...]
Got an email addy? I'm at nakived at juno dot com if you email me, say who you are and what you want. I'll mail it to you. > > It's not whether you've studied math, its whether you can see certain > kinds of patterns.
Well, I saw patterns, alright, later on when I got sober :) > >> It really SUCKS that kids have that kind of ethic [of trying to fail] and >> then proceed to fail. That kind of thing did not exist when I was a kid >> in school at all. What you are describing is the product of diseased >> egos - and diseased egos imo, have to GO. > > When I was in school in Austria, England, and even Canada, we didn't have > nearly so many tests, and all of them, with one exception, were > "performance tests" -- we had to to do what we had been doing in class. > Ie, precis in language, word problems in math, drawings in drafting, map > lettering in geo, etc. I guess our teachers, bless their antediluvian > theories of education, believed that we would actually learn the skills we > practiced...
When I was in school in the 50s in the USA - there was a strict merit system and no grading tests on curves. EG, fast readers, regular, slow readers. Pronunciation, enuciation, spelling Bs, all that. Knowing the meaning of the words, how to use them in sentences - that was in very early years in school, I was about 7 or 8 years old. It blows my mind that people today in higher grades don't know this stuff. Each individual say, was given 50 questions, 2 points each question. The scores were absolute, not graded based on what others got (on a curve). Curved grades are like this: IF the top student in the class only got 30 right out of 50, that grade counts as a the "new A score" and the rest of the scores fall into place from there, with 30 right being the best score (A grade). I saw this as cheating, when I first ran into it in 12th grade. 30 right and 20 wrong should have been a C grade, not an A grade. That means that with the curved grade, people who FAILED that test with only 10 right would get a C grade! Zero right would be a D! NO failing grade there at all. That's also seen as "dumbing down" education here in the USA. Anyway, say in math or arithmetic, we were given problems to solve that were up to par with what we had learned about solving them. They were not the same problems. In other words, does a person know HOW to add, subtract, divide, multiply, do fractions, percentages, etc etc. Same for geometry (plane geometry) which I had in 5th grade. I aced those courses. History was (I HATED IT) just a rehash of what a person memorized and I saw it as worthless. Reading was a test of comprehension, or they asked us to write something ourselves to describe a situation. We had reading comp too and I used to get accused of always post structuralizing the stuff - tho I got good grades, when asked to try not to do that, I ended up deconstructing, LMAO. I think cultural differences probably made me see things from a very different perspective. But I'd ace that too. They did teach us to THINK - which I think was very good. EG, in geometry: "The angles of any given triangle, when added up, equal 180 degrees. Go home for assignment and PROVE WHY this is so." That was the kind of problem we got a lot. Most of us did it, too. Then the problems would be - ah, a plane geometry text book for back then. I know they don't teach that in high schools here anymore mostly. SOME schools do teach it. But I had this in 5th grade, in grammar school.
The exception? "Reading comprehension tests", > administered after we had supposedly read a book to a deadline, and before > we took it up in class.
See above, we had that too, it was part of regular reading. The thing is, back then there was this "THIS is supposed to be the meaning of this story" idea - STRUCTURLISM. I always post structured the stuff - or deconstructed it. LMAO. It was as if, for me, what the author of the story said had no meaning - it was just hearsay. Example from well-known kid story: "yeah, but what did Cinderalla DO that her sisters hated her so much?" "How did she end up being the step daughter - was that her natural mother? where was her father? Etc." Of course, that's outside the actual text in the story - I'm using that as a well known example of a story - we never read that particular tale, but even as a kid when I first heard it, I wondered WHY they were so mean to her because being mean to siblings was OUTSIDE my experience in-culture! People were mean only to those that really deserved it due to some real provocation! So the teachers used to smile and like it and the other kids were always ready for it "oh boy, here it comes." Some would think it was funny and laugh, others used to look at me kinda odd and THINK about it and understand the different viewpoint.
I think it was a ruse to ensure that > (most of us, anyhow) would actually read the book.
A REALLY good author to read where you can NOT agrue with structure or post structure or deconstruction - is H. P. Lovecraft. That also would increase a person's vocabulary, for sure. "Call of Cthulhu," "At the Mountains of Madness." Excellent for that! > > I didn't see a multiple choice _exam_ until university.
I never had a multiple choice exam in school, not ever. I saw them when I worked in a medical school (I was not a student at all), medical students took them! They were SIMPLE questions, too! I saw them on job applications, had to pass it to get the job. I also saw it on civil service exam - I got 100% right. FAST too. Really easy test. I can't believe people failed it!
In an ed psych > course. It took me twenty three minutes to do what was supposedly a 3-hour > exam (at a rate of nearly ten questions/minute); I made no revisions, and > scored in the 92nd percentile. That university took my money under false > pretenses.
Heh, I got 99th %ile on my SAT :) Hmm, I can't remember if that was multiple choice or not - I'm not sure on that test. Long time ago! >
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