RE: How You Know This Shit Was Written By Men!
January 1, 2017 at 2:59 pm
(This post was last modified: January 1, 2017 at 3:04 pm by Huggy Bear.)
(December 30, 2016 at 4:45 am)Thumpalumpacus Wrote:(December 26, 2016 at 2:41 am)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: ... if beating the snot out of each other is your metric.
Me, I think it's a good case for cultural evolution that we don't engage in such stupidity. As for biological evolution, you'd have to make the case that we're actually incapable of such antics due to the mutation of our genotype in order to support your point that we've devolved. And the change in alleles over time is the metric for evolution -- or de-evolution, for that matter.
I'm still waiting for a reply.
The "beating the snot out of each other" metric is common through out nature...
![[Image: 186483.gif]](https://images.weserv.nl/?url=www.strangefarmer.com%2Fimages%2Fcontent%2F186483.gif)
Also I doesn't take a scientist to figure out that gmo's and processed foods likely have a negative impact on our biology, for example young girls are reaching puberty much earlier than they used to.
http://www.sciencealert.com/girls-are-go...rm-effects
Quote:For many girls in the developed world, puberty is coming earlier than ever before, with studies showing that, on average, puberty is now starting for girls at around 10 years old - at least five years earlier than a century ago.
http://www.newsweek.com/2015/02/06/puber...01920.html
Quote:This sudden sexual development in a child so young can be unnerving to parents. “My daughter is 7 years and 10 months old. She started having body odor at 5 and breast buds at 6,” one mother wrote recently in a group chat about the condition. She wrote, too, of her daughter’s “roller-coaster emotions,” a common complaint from parents observing massive mood swings, PMS-like symptoms and other “teen emotions” in daughters just beginning the first grade—and in some cases even younger.
The above is an example of what I mean by de-evolution, and by devolving I simply mean the human biology going in a negative direction.