We're not supposed to judge and stereotype people, but we do it all the time and it's pretty much our favorite hobby (to the point of obsession) and an important survival skill.
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Replying to @RokoMijic
Much simpler explanation: her genetic programming failed because she lived in a society with a different species - one different than the one that provided the environment of her selective background. (her killer was black)
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
Whites, asians, and other races also produce criminal scum. And if you read about medieval Europe there are plenty of them, plus plenty in the classical era too. So despite this explanation being spicy, I don't think it's true.
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Replying to @RokoMijic @CovfefeAnon
Plus, the evidence of already having murdered someone is much stronger than race if you look at it purely though numbers/probabilities.
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Replying to @RokoMijic @CovfefeAnon
Finally I think it's time we think of race/species as a continuous manifold rather than a hard boundary. The truth is that people vary on a big multidimensional continuum.
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Replying to @RokoMijic
It's really not though.pic.twitter.com/37mTdjl4n3
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
It's a manifold though some parts are sparse or empty at the moment, and there's no hard species boundary, though the missing links are dead.
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Replying to @RokoMijic
A manifold with empty spaces between clusters is exactly what a hard boundary is. It's not that there are missing links between the clusters - it's that selective pressures created the clusters after a split (combined with the groups mating with *different archaic hominids*)
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Replying to @CovfefeAnon
Well, it's not a hard boundary in the sense that you can always produce a series of creatures that smoothly go from A to B ... though in practice they might not exist yet.
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True. Also true of lions and tigers.
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