Posted on 11/24/2006 9:24:43 AM PST by AdmSmith
One word: Incest.
Too Funny, but we knew this from their behaviour.
Inbreeding
Oh, I can hardly wait for the kickback on this piece of research! It might be advisable for this scientist to invest in some personal security. Any cartoonists out there?
Wow, that chart is amazing.
Cletus Akhbar!
LOL
Those big black tents, and social restrictions preventing men from seeing or speaking to their prospective wives before marriage, can conceal some major physical and mental defects that would make a woman unmarriageable and largely undateable in any normal society.
As long as the young and promising of thier culture keep stepping up to win Darwin Awards, we can expect the trend to continue...
If I'd know how to do it at the time...
I should have saved a copy/screen-shot of the Palestinian Authority's
own web-page that discussed the in-freakin-credibley high levels of
cousin marriage in the PA areas.
Sounds much more retrograde than even the old stereotypes about
inbreeding in places like Oklahoma (my home state), Arkansas and
other southern states.
and ... of course .... once the lights are out ........
And don't forget that you also have second cousins marriages...
Consanguinity is the quality of being descended from the same ancestor as another person.
The degree of relative consanguinity can be illustrated with a consanguinity table, in which each level of lineal consanguinity (i.e., generation) appears as a row, and individuals with a collaterally-consanguinious relationship share the same row.
The connotations of degree of consanguinity varies by context (e.g., Canon law, Roman law, et al.). Most cultures define a degree of consanguinity below which sexual interrelationships are regarded as incestuous (the "prohibited degree of kinship"). In the Catholic Church, unwittingly marrying a closely-consanguinious blood relative is grounds for an annulment, but dispensations were granted, actually almost routinely (the Catholic Church's ban on marriage within the fourth degree of relationship (third cousins) lasted from 1550 to 1917; before that, the prohibition was to marriages between as much as seventh degree of kinship).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consanguinity
Have read somewhere that almost 50% of the marriages among Iraqis involved cousins (first, second, third, ect) that were arranged by their families, I'm sure this is one factor that contributes to them having a much higher degree of tribalism, sectarian strife, and the like over there compared to the West and elsewhere where it is rare.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.