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Superior: The Return of Race Science: Saini, Angela: 9780807076910:  Amazon.com: Books

During the pandemic, I watched the news with the alarming rates of infections and deaths from COVID 19 affecting African Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans disproportionately. Why? Are these groups genetically predisposed? Are they more exposed because of their jobs of the “essential worker status”? Are they affected more because of the food desert climate they inhabit? Is it because of the lack of medical facilities within their neighborhoods? So it is either socioeconomic or genetic, but it became clear that socioeconomic inequalities were the dominant factor.

The fundamental biological fact is that genetic variability among humans is less than any other species on earth and is approximate 0.1 per cent. Also, there are more DNA variations between black Africans than between black Africans and white Europeans. The popular superficial characteristics that define race, e.g. hair texture, skin color and facial features, only represent a few of the thousands of traits that define us as a species. These superficial traits are tied to migratory patterns, population histories and gene to environment interactions. Therefore complete genetic segmentation of populations is complex and non-discrete, and on a gradient.

These scientific facts irrevocably end the fallacy of race as biological but simply a political-economic-social construct. But through time, geneticists, archaeologists and anthropologists either willfully or naively “mold” genetic data to justify the idea of racial biodiversity. Even clear-eyed antiracist scientists often fall into the trap of studying genetic data and end up actualizing such racial differences. For example, highly-educated scientists in academia in Europe, the US and India hold on to biased old ideologies of racialized genetic pre-determination despite lack of biological evidence for racial difference in humans. The scientific method is simply corrupted as these scientists start with illogical conclusions of the existence of a racial hierarchy of biological racial differences and walk backwards into theory, experiments, hypothesis and observations to validate their “prior racialized bias”. It is “subjective and mythologized” scientific inquiry; science in this frame is influenced by time, culture and place. It also goes against the scientific standard that “correlation is not causality”. These pseudoscientific beliefs have implications in today’s culture, medicine, science, education, religion, social policy and foreign relations.

Angela Saini writes a historical, personal, sociological and journalistic piece on the origins of the pseudoscientific concept of “race” and its resilience through time till today. She adds a tone of humorous-cynicism confronting fallacies in the logic of scientists, anthropologists and academics. The roots of the ideas of “race” ironically began in the “Age of Enlightenment”, prominently including Voltaire, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Georg Wilhelm, Fredrich Hegel, which coincided with Europeans colonizing the world and particularly transporting enslaved Africans to the Western Hemisphere. It resorted to setting European civilization as the benchmark to define other non-Europeans. Colonialization, slavery, Holocaust, Jim Crow, apartheid and imperialism were, therefore, justifiable means of engagement in dealing with “nonwhites” since they were “biologically inferior” by their irrational European standards and pseudoscience. So, any civilization outside of “white” was seen as “savage or inferior” even though societies in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and America existed thousands of years ago with cultures, trade, religion, science, language, urbanization and governments.

Europeans met Native Americans, saw and were amazed by the advanced agriculture, bigger cities, gold, many subcultures, trade by barter based on needs, weak social hierarchy, non-taxation and simplified government structure. So who is truly a “savage”?

Race is wrongly defined as innate, genetic and biologically deterministic of certain groups, thereby deadening the truth of a “universal human race or Homo sapiens” but instead “predisposed traits within certain populations headed to fateful racial destiny”. “Socioeconomics”, “history”, “lifestyle”, and “nurture” are non-genetic casualties that are commonly willfully neglected in investigating differences within the human species.

The reductionist view of tying intelligence and behaviors to race and wealth of nations has been a tool to promote racial hierarchy through time. There is a choice of neglecting the consequences of colonialization, slavery, genocide, Jim Crow, apartheid and imperialism, which have caused non-white populations to have suffered rampant inequalities. This counters the argument of genetic inferiority. These pseudoscientific ideas led to the rise of KKK, Eugenics, Nazism, Pioneer Fund-Mankind Quarterly publications, Richard Herrnstein’s and Charles Murray’s The Bell Curve and political right-wing extremist movements. It is no surprise that people of European descent either directly or indirectly participate in the social ideology of “whiteness” based on the pseudoscientific notion of superior intelligence relative to others.

There is a thin wall separating the eugenics of pre-World War 2 from the genetics of Post World War 2. Even the scientifically respected field of genetics found its roots in Eugenics. Angela exposed the celebrated James Watson of the “double helix structure of DNA” discovery was a racist. The need for categorization resonating from non-human species research in works of Carl Linnaeus and Charles Darwin extended into human beings led to “scientific racism” then “eugenics and quietly rebranded into genetics. The Kaiser Wilhelm Society for the Advancement of Science, a staple for eugenics research during the Nazi regime, was rebranded into Max Plank Society, the perfect example of this historical whitewashing. Otmar von Verschuer and his infamous diabolical protégé, Josef Mengele, were part of the Kaiser Wilhelm eugenics research group.

The horrid examples in the book about the cruelty that “Ota Benga” and “Sarartjie Baartman” faced is a testament to how the indoctrination of “superiority” made those white spectators become inhumane and vacuous entities akin to barbarism.

One comical part of the book was how “race” was expanded for superior racial talents to selectively pick “Dante, Raphael, Titian, Michelangelo and Da Vinci” to be of “Nordic descent” despite their origins from southern European ancestry, which had been stereotyped as “unintelligent”. Another ludicrous pseudoscientific claim on enslaved Africans called the “slavery hypertension hypothesis” from Clarence Grim suggests that Black Americans are genetically predisposed to retain more salt because of an accelerated natural selection process during the Middle Passage voyage. So salt-driven evolutionary process protected the surviving Africans on the ships. Still, it retrograded them into a medical predisposition for hypertension. It is beyond humorous. Race categorization is regressive and a terrible proxy for human variation in the space of medical research. Grouping people of different ethnicities into the race columns in conducting medical research by assuming genetic differences fail to account for dietary, socioeconomic and environmental underlying causes. For example, lumping Middle Easterners, North Africans and Europeans as “whites” or African Americans and Africans as “black” in studying patterns and prevalence of certain diseases renders such research highly flawed.

Race inherently can be reconstituted, expanded or even abandoned since it is tied to sociological framing rather than scientific facts. Race was solely built for “social hierarchy/caste system”. In human history, no civilization is dominant, but instead, it is tidally short-lived. Finally, we refuse to realize that humans are more ethnically mixed but “genetically singular” than the artificial walls of race.

My only critique of her book is that the racial hierarchy concept had its roots before the Age of Enlightenment. The Post Constantine era and dark to medieval times in Europe where rampant antisemitism and islamophobia was a function of “religious superiority” worked similarly to race. English church and state created laws calling for the surveillance, herding, incarceration, legal murder, and expulsion of English Jews. Muslims were seen as “subhumans and evil”, so their murder was justified. This racist principle also justified the Spanish Inquisition sanctioned by the church and Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand to “cleanse” Spain from “Muslims and Jews”. This “supremacist” ideology in conjunction with religious superiority and pursuit of economic imperialism was also used as a predicate for military invasion and/or Christian Crusade to claim/steal Jerusalem from the “heathens and subhumans who were seen as unchristian by the joint European amalgam of “Western Christendom” which includes the Holy Roman Empire, English Kingdom, Spanish Kingdom and other European mini kingdoms “.

Oil prices fall and its economic snowball effect……

Oil prices has been relatively stable hovering at $110 dollars/barrel for the past four years until the uneventful summer ( early July 2014) that saw the rapid 30% decline in prices. As of today, the price sits at $70 dollars per barrel which continues to weaken the already fragile world economic market. Austerity measures and supply/production cutbacks talks  has been resonating among countries to counter and re-surge the oil prices. The falling import demand by United States; a major consumer and the onset of their domestic unconventional hydrocarbon  production (hydraulic fracturing) and the decline of global demand (especially Asia) are the central ploy of the oil price fall therefore rendering the  world market “over-saturated” with oil. Here are some of the effects of falling oil price on countries, investors and global market.

  •  OPECThe 12 member “oil” cartel that includes Libya, Ecuador, Angola Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iraq, Venezuela, United Arab Emirates, Algeria and Kuwait are center-stage players in the world oil market. They had a crucial meeting to discuss the current volatility  of market and demand to supply ratio with its effects on individual incoming monetary deficits. They predictably agreed to continue with the current pace of production (30 million barrel/day) regardless of the oil price decline. OPEC Secretary-General Abdallah Salem el-Badri was quted saying “We will watch how the market will behave”. This action will further hurt the oil prices. It has been reported that a reduction of 2 million per day will increase the price per barrel.  They are resilient because of the fear of losing oil market capitalization to competitors especially U.S. and Russia (although affected by NATO and/or European sanctions). They predict that OPEC will retain and win out the price war with non-OPEC competitors in the long run. OPEC produces a third of the world supply.

Abdallah Salem el-Badri- Secretary General of OPEC

  •  United States :  United States are one of the reasons why the oil prices are falling because of the boom of the “unconventional” shale hydrocarbon production on the past eight years. United States, a formerly top importer of oil and gas has sharply cut down due to the boom of shale oil. The production by United States will continue to grow regardless of oil prices. The self dependence will continue to dissociate U.S from the geopolitical instability for the Middle East and Europe thereby making the U.S oil market mutually exclusive. United Sates is well on its way to be the top hydrocarbon producer in the world but the decline in oil price will curb a positional forecast. It is well known that shale oil is roughly three times more expensive to produce than conventional means. The short term effect will make United States a relative winner over OPEC but a continual decline of oil prices will cut down shale production for oil companies to retain and/or increase profit margin.

  • OPEC MEMBERS (Gulf states):   Saudi Arabia,  United Arab Emirates and Kuwait; de facto stalwarts that pushed for  OPEC decision in  retaining production supply thereby forcing United States to balk domestic shale production. They are all of one accord because they have strong monetary liquidity (combined more than $1 trillion in reserves)  that could relatively support them if their economy runs into a deficit during the ongoing oil glut. Saudi Arabia; the top oil oil exporter promises other OPEC members to be patient and promises that in 6 months there will be rebound to $80-90 per barrel at the expense of United States’s reduction in shale production.

Saudi Arabia’s oil minister Ali al-Naimi

  • OPEC MEMBERS (Nigeria, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela): These OPEC countries tried to push for cut in production to spike up the demand thereby increasing the oil price. This stance is accounted for their domestic budgets that cannot withstand the falling oil prices which could result in austerity measures to retain monetary value and meet its obligatory financial statues . In comparison to the Gulf states, this countries have a larger population that demands for a bigger domestic revenue from oil to run their economy (combined less than $200 billion in reserves). Nigeria has been forced this week to devalue its  currency by 8%  reducing  Nigerian economy  by $40 billion (oil revenue accounts for 80% of Nigerian spending power).  In Angola, the monetary value fell about 3% since September reducing their economy by $15 billion. Venezuela currently undergoing strong inflation  caused by government currency need a strong spike in oil prices to pay for its domestic welfare services. Iraq has recently recaptured some critical oil production areas from ISIS thereby cutting down ISIS sale of oil to the black markets from 70,000 barrel to 20,000 barrel a day with the aid of U.S airstrikes but are still on the cringe of suffering economic downturn. Iran (especially Ayotollah Ali Khamenei) have been open about their dismay of OPEC’s stance on continual optimal oil production especially Saudi Arabia.They accuse Saudi Arabia of using this glut as a template to further suppress the geopolitical-religious base of Shia (Iran have the most Shiate population in the world). They also point at United States for using the this economic price war to further to choke the nuclear negotiations in their favor because of the upcoming   economic hardship at Iran’s horizon.

 

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei- Supreme leader of Iran

 

Nigerian Minster for Oil and gas- Mrs Diezani Allison Madueke and OPEC President elect

 

Oil price graphic

  • Russia :  Despite the imposed NATO sanctions and oil glut, Russia’s budget forecast is still relatively balanced. Russia;  a major exporter of oil and gas which accounts for 70% of its revenue. Russian monetary value has hit record lows with respect to the euro and dollar (30% decline). It is reported that  oil price decline is costing Russia roughly $100 billion a year and imposed  sanctions accounts for $40 billion. Russia is currently discussing cutting down its production by 30, 000 barrel/day to offshoot the price and making budget cuts to sustain their economy.

Vladimir Putin-Prime Minster of Russia

  • Asia: Asia’s  countries could benefit from the declining decrease in oil price because of its increasing demand for oil as a function of high population. China, the incumbent  top  oil importer  stands to benefit from falling oil prices but it will not offset their slowing economy. Japan could use the cheaper oil imports to suppress the current inflation.  India benefits from  falling oil prices by reducing its current deficit.
  • Europe:  Europe has  been subjected to low inflation and weak growth and its fear of upcoming recession but cheaper oil could lessen such fears. Cheaper oil prices should boost the spending power of Europe’s consumers,  who are still under high unemployment reins. However European Central Bank could sets it sights at  inflation target at 2% due to falling oil prices.

 

  • My forecast:  OPEC will win the price war with the American shale producers because their production costs($50-70 per barrel) are too high compared to OPEC($10-20 per barrel) and OPEC will regain and restore their dominance in market shares.But the question is when?  To the everyday consumer, cheaper oil means cheaper fuel prices and more savings. Stronger multinational oil companies(ExxonMobil,  Shell, BP, Chevron and Total) will lose marginal market share due to falling prices in comparison to  smaller American shale dependent producers (Continental resources,Anardarko, Devon energy, Newfield, Chesapeake) who are very susceptible to fall in investment, profit windfall, corporate buyout due to losses, or face dire company bankruptcy.