Law of low trust people who have to see an animal killed in front of them to know it's wasn't substituted with rat meat. These are people who have problems with gutter oil being used in restaurants and melamine in baby formula. HBD isn't just about IQ.
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I just explained a very important way in which they're different - it's not just population size.
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No, that they're so low trust that they need to witness an animal being killed to be assured that it is what the seller says it is. Low trust leads to all kinds of pathologies some of which have externalities.
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It's governance related in a sense; the communist revolution in China destroyed their evolved culture leaving them with nothing beyond bare, low level behaviors but just because these pathologies were unleashed by governance doesn't mean you can quickly reverse it w/ governance
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There's a giant source of data out there called the experiences people have interacting with a country of a billion people - it's got hugely high n but it's not double blinded. Bet that the conclusions of that study replicate though.
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It's easy to replicate the experience - it's impossible to design a "study" that would pass the filters that are in place - double blind? specifically test trust in a lab setting? This is because of the limitations of psychological studies not the limits of knowledge.
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