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Post a Comment On: Steve Sailer: iSteve

"Pakistani First Cousin Marriage in Britain"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Anonymous Gobold said...

Exactly the same story was reported over two years ago, but nothing changes, so why is it being raised again now?

2/10/08, 2:54 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Of course getting rid of the primary purpose rule would have nothing to do with this?

2/10/08, 3:12 PM

Anonymous David said...

The MSM solution is clear:

Britons and black Muslims must interbreed.

Expect to see lots more interacial relationships on TV shows in Britain (not that there aren't any now). The marching order, or meme if you will, is plain.

2/11/08, 7:41 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I live in Canada, and reportedly inbreeding is a problem in some Mennonite communities. Their solution? Invite outside men to come in and "breed" with Mennonite women. But the "date" consists of essentially a one-night stand in which everything but the bare minimum necessary for procreation is covered.

2/11/08, 9:55 AM

Anonymous cranky matron said...

I'd be fascinated to see some source for the Mennonite stud-service story. I don't believe they are nearly as closed-off genetically as the Old Order Amish, who accept their genetic problems as the will of God.

Anyway, my understanding is that cousin-marriage isn't so much a problem as generations upon generations of repeated cousin-marriage.

Can't really see why the native Brits would care much about their imported Pakis, aside from the costs associated with putting genetically defective babies and children on the NHS tab. And as an "acceptable" pretext for expressing some good ol' fashioned ethnocentricism... not that there really needs to be an acceptable reason to favor your own kinfolks over a bunch of incomprehensible foreigners.

2/11/08, 10:10 PM

Anonymous Drawbacks said...

I read some years ago in Scientific American that first-cousin marriage in Pakistan was helpful in that the couples married earlier and therefore had a headstart in babymaking that was not nullified by the loss of more pregnancies and infants to genetic abnormalities (which were most likely fatal there, but aren't in 21st Century Britain).

2/12/08, 6:53 AM

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