Obviously, they came to the Americas for chocolate!She said the trip was fueled by chocolate.

Moderators: MichelleH, Minimalist, JPeters
Obviously, they came to the Americas for chocolate!She said the trip was fueled by chocolate.
Actually, it was outright horrible.That movie stunk.
uniface wrote:Anomalous Mitochondrial DNA Lineages in the Cherokee
"The geneticists always seem to cry 'post-Columbian admixture,'" says Stephen C. Jett, a geographer at the University of California at Davis, "but fail to take into account that there are no plausible post-Columbian sources for the particular genetic mix encountered."
"Anomalous Mitochondrial DNA Lineages in the Cherokee" concentrates on the documented or self-identifying Cherokee descendants whose haplotypes do not fit the current orthodoxy in American Indian population genetics. Here are some highlights, organized by haplogroup . . .
http://dnaconsultants.com/_blog/DNA_Con ... _Cherokee/
You're off on the wrong foot, CS.Um, who cares what Stephen C. Jett, A GEOGRAPHER, thinks about GENETICS???
My son is a published geneticist. He always has to run the gauntlet of the peer review process before he can publish.uniface wrote:You're off on the wrong foot, CS.Um, who cares what Stephen C. Jett, A GEOGRAPHER, thinks about GENETICS???
The world has had more than enough of the Guru Syndrome already.
You're looking for someone to trust. Someone well-informed to believe.
Belief is a mode of functioning that is immune to facts, logic, experience and even personal experience. It's a world unto itself. The funny part is, it impersonates Science, and gets upset when people don't take it seriously.
In actual science, theory is adjusted to account for facts. For a (presumably) familiar example of what happens when it isn't, from years past, the pre-Clovis 14C dates at Meadowoopd Riockshelter and Mesa Verde. You (again, probably) saw the way that went. The Establishment only sat down and shut up when it realised that people were laughing at it.
In Practice, Archaeology -- unfortunately -- is a clone of 16th Century Roman Catholicism. Complete with Ordination (a PhD), a priesthood (tenured professors), elaborate dogmatics, persecution of heretics, and control over the dissemination of information to the public (what used to be the requirement to secure an Imprimatur and Nihil Obstat for publication is now acceptance by a "Professional Journal" after -- of course, "Peer Review." [aka, examination by the Village Soviet]. The names and the small details change, but the system endures).
Review the archaeological Party Line Orthodoxies of the last hundred years and tell me -- with a straight face -- that more Faith in the dogmatic certainties (that change every ten years) of the Hierarchy is the proper response. Or if it might be reading with an open mind to see whether the new information (or old information re-formulated) makes sense.
And finally, whether the requirement actually relevant to the issue might be, not a PhD from the "right" school and tenure at the "right" university, but the ability to think far enough outside the current box to identify information germane to the question. A useful model of which might be the little child in the tale of "the Emperor's New Clothes."
Nobody needs a special license to see what's in front of his face.
Really.
You asked
Yes Indeed, I trust you will remember that statement, as I will.Belief is a mode of functioning that is immune to facts, logic, experience and even personal experience. It's a world unto itself.
De gustibus non disputandem.I much prefer a flawed system of checks & balances to your conspiracy theory laden drivel.![]()
Unfortunately that road has led you to some dead ends in the past.For my own part, I much prefer looking through the windscreen to see the road ahead.