tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post6440004906725180017..comments2024-03-27T18:24:19.683-07:00Comments on Steve Sailer: iSteve: Interview with Gregory ClarkUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger37125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-19729403796129082272014-04-15T18:49:13.638-07:002014-04-15T18:49:13.638-07:00I wonder if he considered the laws that limited op...I wonder if he considered the laws that limited opportunities for catholics and Jews? I thought there were some laws against the Irish too. Wouldn't this skew the statistical studies?Michaelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08729571286877355941noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-3664185585353240182014-04-14T14:34:58.220-07:002014-04-14T14:34:58.220-07:00"Macaulay was not representative of British a...<i>"Macaulay was not representative of British administrators, most of whom considered Indians degraded beyond redemption"</i><br /><br /><i>"When the old king — who was suspicious of the English, their railways and telegraphs — died, Purun Dass stood high with his young successor, who had been tutored by an Englishman; and between them, though he always took care that his master should have the credit, they established schools for little girls, made roads, and started State dispensaries and shows of agricultural implements, and published a yearly blue-book on the “Moral and Material Progress of the State,” and the Foreign Office and the Government of India were delighted. Very few native States take up English progress altogether, for they will not believe, as Purun Dass showed he did, that what was good for the Englishman must be twice as good for the Asiatic. The Prime Minister became the honoured friend of Viceroys, and Governors, and Lieutenant–Governors, and medical missionaries, and common missionaries, and hard-riding English officers who came to shoot in the State preserves, as well as of whole hosts of tourists who travelled up and down India in the cold weather, showing how things ought to be managed. In his spare time he would endow scholarships for the study of medicine and manufactures on strictly English lines, and write letters to the “Pioneer”, the greatest Indian daily paper, explaining his master’s aims and objects.<br /><br />At last he went to England on a visit, and had to pay enormous sums to the priests when he came back; for even so high-caste a Brahmin as Purun Dass lost caste by crossing the black sea. In London he met and talked with every one worth knowing — men whose names go all over the world — and saw a great deal more than he said. He was given honorary degrees by learned universities, and he made speeches and talked of Hindu social reform to English ladies in evening dress, till all London cried, “This is the most fascinating man we have ever met at dinner since cloths were first laid.”"</i><br /><br /><br />http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/kipling/rudyard/jungle2/chapter3.htmlAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-16589742951162412014-04-13T23:49:50.682-07:002014-04-13T23:49:50.682-07:00@Paleo writer,
The Indians are in extreme, self-ce...@Paleo writer,<br /><i>The Indians are in extreme, self-centered bias when it comes to the British occupation of their country. They like to blame them for any and every perceived problem. I've had people from India tell me the British are the reason for their caste system, completely ignoring its existence (and the consequences of it) in place for thousands of years prior to the British. Also conveniently ignored is how the British, much like the Romans, brought the people they conquered into what was the modern age at the time. The Indians were even doing barbaric things like burning live widows on their husband's funeral pyre before the British put a stop to it. Of course its clear the progs have been taking all the necessary steps to rewrite all of it into a tale of the white man's wickedness, damn the facts.</i><br /><br />I am Indian, and I have never heard any Indian saying that the British created the caste system. So I call BS on that. Indians do blame the British for exacerbating their religious differences (the "divide and rule" policy), and there is a lot of truth to that. How wilful a policy that was, I don't know, but the British had a knack for creating and imposing classifications on native people, the result inevitably being more conflict. They did this in Ireland too.<br />Regarding wife-burning, it was undoubtedly an extremely barbaric practice, but there is little to suggest it was widely prevalent (indeed, any more prevalent than witch-burning was in late-1600s New England.) It used to be practiced on rare occasion by the upper aristocracy, the feudal or property-owning class. And the British were hardly at the forefront of stopping this practice. It was educated Indians who influenced the British administrators to institute laws against this practice. Mostly, the British wanted to keep their revenue-collecting machine intact and left Indian practices alone, especially after the rebellion of 1857.<br />None of this is to suggest that the British (and their liberal thought) had no positive effect on India. It did, but that was not by design (Macaulay was not representative of British administrators, most of whom considered Indians degraded beyond redemption). Indeed, the entire project of liberalism (Westernization) has since acquired a bad name in India because it was the British liberals who were at the forefront of attacking Indian people and culture.<br />(You should read some serious history instead of repeating anecdotes and summaries from ideologically-biased sources.)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-89107160691829676322014-04-13T15:20:01.234-07:002014-04-13T15:20:01.234-07:00Paleo writer I've had people from India tell m...<b>Paleo writer</b> <i>I've had people from India tell me the British are the reason for their caste system, completely ignoring its existence (and the consequences of it) in place for thousands of years prior to the British.</i><br /><br />Before the British, the Indians mainly had lots of inbred families (they call them jatis) competing with one another. These inbred families tended to do similar sorts of jobs and generally be extremely nepotistic.<br /><br />After the British, the Indians still had these inbred families competing with one another, but now these inbred families tended to think of themselves more as part of classes or castes, and show a little more solidarity towards one another in favor of working together to kick the lower castes in the face a little more.<br /><br />Part of the reason for this was our class system back home, which we exported, part of it was imperial administrators high off of fanciful ideas from ancient texts (remember this was also the period in which amateur Victorian enthusiast historians had decided that abstract French medieval legal texts offered an actually accurate description of medieval "feudal" society, which we now know to be err.... *slightly* inaccurate).<br /><br />That is part of the *glorious* legacy of we, the British, in India. Rule Britannia! ;) (But not exactly the divide and rule the Indians complain so of, as such....)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-26677041505788414232014-04-13T09:47:30.251-07:002014-04-13T09:47:30.251-07:00"There are extreme cases like India where the..."There are extreme cases like India where they say, “We’re reserving a quarter of all places at university for people who the British happen to have assigned to the various scheduled castes.”"<br /><br />The Indians are in extreme, self-centered bias when it comes to the British occupation of their country. They like to blame them for any and every perceived problem. I've had people from India tell me the British are the reason for their caste system, completely ignoring its existence (and the consequences of it) in place for thousands of years prior to the British. Also conveniently ignored is how the British, much like the Romans, brought the people they conquered into what was the modern age at the time. The Indians were even doing barbaric things like burning live widows on their husband's funeral pyre before the British put a stop to it. Of course its clear the progs have been taking all the necessary steps to rewrite all of it into a tale of the white man's wickedness, damn the facts.Paleo writernoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-42748280346429916192014-04-12T15:50:24.432-07:002014-04-12T15:50:24.432-07:00"
Its much more telling that those whites who..."<br />Its much more telling that those whites who rolled out of the gutters of Dublin, Belfast, Glasgow, and Inverness and ended up in Appalachia in the 1600's and 1700's are still dirty poor white trash hillbillies 300 or 400 years later."<br /><br />Dublin? Very few "southern" Irish went to rural areas in America. Overwhelmingly they went to cities, especially after the famine. Cathlic Irish were few and far between in "Appalachia."<br /> <br />The Scots and Scotch-Irish headed for the hills because so many had been highlanders.<br />While on the topic of Scots, the Scots produced more scientists and inventors in 300 years than any other one country, I believe I read. They also had the earliest compulsory education (1400s). They took this to where they settled most heavily, North Carolina, which had a reputation for education in the South, and for "progressiveness" -- the word wasn't all bad years ago. <br /><br />applenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-39138243972424050502014-04-12T15:45:02.597-07:002014-04-12T15:45:02.597-07:00"...ended up in Appalachia in the 1600's ...<i>"...ended up in Appalachia in the 1600's and 1700's are still dirty poor white trash hillbillies 300 or 400 years later."</i><br /><br />Have you yourself seen these dirty hillbillies or do you perhaps just watch a lot of TV?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-59992987164637790922014-04-12T15:42:18.294-07:002014-04-12T15:42:18.294-07:00"Exactly, I'd note that the poor that wou..."Exactly, I'd note that the poor that would've died in a famine 300 years ago now get food stamps and other income security spending (which is for the good). I suppose being alive when you'd otherwise be dead is a form of social mobility that Clark apparently neglects.'<br /><br />And one that would change the outcome eventually, you'd think. Although it may lead to idiocracy.staying alivenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-31102070163292680552014-04-12T15:39:16.534-07:002014-04-12T15:39:16.534-07:00"Given surnames are patrilineal, any (im)mobi..."Given surnames are patrilineal, any (im)mobility conclusion obtained solely based on surnames are ignoring any mobility of women and therefore potentially mismeasuring the mobility of the whole.<br /><br />The mobility of women is that beautiful women of nearly any social class with a modicum of self-control have at all times risen rapidly into the arms of the wealthiest and most powerful available males. Nobody cares about such mobility. What we want to know is what happened to their brothers who didn't have a pretty face and a nice figure and a suitable personality."<br /><br />Whether you find them "interesting" or not (and many were dazzlingly so), their genes are part of the "elite."<br />Orange-seller Nell Gwynne and Chas. II had 12 children of whom at least some descendants must still be puttering about. These beautiful social risers didn't always have it easy. Nell (I think it was she) was mercilessly pelted by eggs, or some such produce, while in her sedan chair in public thoroughfare, by a bigoted mob who mistakenly thought she was another, less popular, of King Charles' favorites. She had to yell at them, "Good people! I am the Protestant whore, not the Catholice whore!"dcitenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-38627171009821299602014-04-12T15:31:25.375-07:002014-04-12T15:31:25.375-07:00"Clark's findings are a huge argument for..."Clark's findings are a huge argument for communism.<br /><br />If social mobility through equality of opportunity is a pipe dream, then the only way to remove the unfairness of better living standards from hereditary privilege is through radical and perpetual redistribution."<br /><br />well, not for nothing did Marx install himself in London for many years. Communism doesn't work. The collective farms were a disaster. Not everybody even wants to be "elite." But they must feel they own something to put themselves into it. Besides, what would the "elite" be without the unelite. dcitenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-40856108233651254252014-04-12T03:42:08.982-07:002014-04-12T03:42:08.982-07:00What about Scorese's Italian ancestors?What about Scorese's Italian ancestors?Steve Sailerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11920109042402850214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-21152544738499028812014-04-12T03:40:24.139-07:002014-04-12T03:40:24.139-07:00So Francis Ford Coppola's maternal grandfather...So Francis Ford Coppola's maternal grandfather was Enrico Caruso's pianist. His paternal grandfather was a skilled gunsmith:<br /><br />Both of Coppola's parents were first-generation Italian-Americans, the children of immigrants who left Italy for the United States around the turn of the century. Great ambition and artistic talent ran on both sides of the family. Francesco Pennino, a musician and songwriter, worked for a time as Enrico Caruso's pianist; his grandson would eventually honor him by using a fragment of one of his musical plays, a melodrama called Senza Mama, in a scene in The Godfather, Part II. But Pennino's biggest contribution to Francis Ford Coppola's life and career could be traced to his enthusiasm for movies: He operated several movie theaters in the New York area, and he was responsible for bringing a number of silent Italian films to the United States. He had connections to Paramount Pictures, which led to his being offered a job writing scores for the company's silent films, but Pennino, for all of his love of the movies, wanted nothing to do with Hollywood.<br /><br />Augustino Coppola, Francis's paternal grandfather, while not a musician himself, encouraged his large family to study music, and two of his sons, Anton and Carmine, went on to have careers in music. Augustino worked as a tool-and-die maker, and he could boast of building the first Vitaphone sound system for Warner Bros. He, too, was immortalized in a scene in Godfather II: A group of Mafia hoods enter and demand that a gunsmith oil their machine guns, which he does while his young son plays the flute nearby. In real life, Augustino Coppola was similarly approached by neighborhood toughs; he oiled their guns while little Carmine stood nearby. <br /><br />https://www.nytimes.com/books/first/s/schumacher-coppola.html<br />Steve Sailerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11920109042402850214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-86918096957333267142014-04-12T03:37:19.617-07:002014-04-12T03:37:19.617-07:00Sorry, Carmine's son August became a professor...Sorry, Carmine's son August became a professor of literature.<br /><br />Carmine's younger brother Anton was the conductor of the orchestra for a lot of Broadway shows and composed an opera about Sacco and Vanzetti.Steve Sailerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11920109042402850214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-5170489270935069892014-04-12T03:34:35.768-07:002014-04-12T03:34:35.768-07:00Carmine Coppola was born either in Italy or in New...Carmine Coppola was born either in Italy or in New York in 1910. He studied at Juilliard in the 1930s and eventually won a Best Score Oscar. One son is Francis Ford Coppola, a daughter ? is Talia Shire. A granddaughter is Sofia Coppola. <br /><br />Carmine's brother became a professor of literature. His son is Nic Cage.<br /><br />Clark's theory would suggest that back in the Old Country, the Coppolas weren't peasants. <br /><br />Anybody know?Steve Sailerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11920109042402850214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-33298488257619831532014-04-12T03:28:18.837-07:002014-04-12T03:28:18.837-07:00I wonder if Italian immigrants tended to fall in c...I wonder if Italian immigrants tended to fall in class when immigrating due to problems learning English. You see that frequently with Koreans -- a guy who worked for me said his father had been a pharmacist in Korea, but when he came to America he couldn't learn English to pass the exam, so now he owned five dry cleaners in the ghetto. If you were a black liquor store owner in Watts, it always seemed kind of unfair that Koreans with advanced degrees were coming 10,000 miles to out-compete you in the South-Central liquor store trade.<br /><br />The golfer Gene Sarazen (Eugenio Saraceni) who won the 1922 US Open said his father had never wanted to be an immigrant laborer. He'd wanted to be a Jesuit and teach Dante, but his father had died, setting back the family finances, so he had immigrated to the U.S. but he could never learn English well and was always poor.<br /><br />Here's a test: the Coppolas. Three generations of Oscars. Were they at the bottom of the Italian class system before they immigrated? <br />Steve Sailerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11920109042402850214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-37506075792723891792014-04-12T03:09:59.905-07:002014-04-12T03:09:59.905-07:00Judy Warner I can't believe that the U.S. didn...Judy Warner <i>I can't believe that the U.S. didn't have higher mobility when our immigrants came mainly from Europe.</i><br /><br />People moving to the US brought their relative status, mostly, with them.<br /><br />That relative status was often absolutely higher in the USA, or for aristocrats, at least sometimes, was at least occasionally absolutely lower.<br /><br />But it was relatively the same. European migrants to America occupied about the same position in the hierarchy as they did back home.<br /><br />There weren't really any "talented people kept chained by the aristocratic social order", except in as much as the aristocratic social order either made the top richer and the bottom poorer or was a worse (or better lol) deal for everyone.<br /><br />The relative poverty of European Jews has been much exaggerated. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-78407224879737959722014-04-11T15:09:24.461-07:002014-04-11T15:09:24.461-07:00how common is shropshire? or any of the -shire nam...how common is shropshire? or any of the -shire names.jodynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-50902945450014131052014-04-11T14:55:55.133-07:002014-04-11T14:55:55.133-07:00Given surnames are patrilineal, any (im)mobility c...<i>Given surnames are patrilineal, any (im)mobility conclusion obtained solely based on surnames are ignoring any mobility of women and therefore potentially mismeasuring the mobility of the whole.</i><br /><br />The mobility of women is that beautiful women of nearly any social class with a modicum of self-control have at all times risen rapidly into the arms of the wealthiest and most powerful available males. Nobody cares about such mobility. What we want to know is what happened to their brothers who didn't have a pretty face and a nice figure and a suitable personality.Andrewnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-57910765588222567122014-04-11T14:52:55.647-07:002014-04-11T14:52:55.647-07:00Judy Warner:
My Jewish grandparents were probably...Judy Warner:<br /><br /><i>My Jewish grandparents were probably typical of Jewish immigrants</i><br /><br />Your Jewish grandparents came from an area where they were independent businessmen, and upper middle class merchants and traders and professionals among a land of enslaved serfs.<br /><br />Just because you were descended from a Polish Noble or German Burgher doesn't mean you came from dirt.<br /><br />Its much more telling that those whites who rolled out of the gutters of Dublin, Belfast, Glasgow, and Inverness and ended up in Appalachia in the 1600's and 1700's are still dirty poor white trash hillbillies 300 or 400 years later.<br /><br />You can't escape who you are.Andrewnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-35214651598001627102014-04-11T14:48:39.034-07:002014-04-11T14:48:39.034-07:00I've said it before here, but 11 centuries of ...I've said it before here, but 11 centuries of social stability for my family as boringly upper middle class is as positive a proof as I can think of on this topic.<br /><br />Since the earliest known records upon the arrival from Denmark of Hiallt on the shores of Normandy at Hauteville with Rollo the Magnificent through moving to England, then to Long Island and into the American interior, its been one generation after another of comfortable stability in the upper 2-10% of society. Never rising too far, never falling too much. Undoubtedly Hiallt himself came from a family of some means as he managed to get a boat and lead a band of armed men to Normandy to stake his claim to a bit of French turf which he and his descendants proceeded to populate through furious reproduction..Andrewnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-80923937538088237432014-04-11T13:20:56.642-07:002014-04-11T13:20:56.642-07:00@SFG
Or it's an argument for aristocratic res...@SFG<br /><br />Or it's an argument for aristocratic responsibility. The upper and lower classes aren't going anywhere. So there need to be standards of duty and obligation for both. Ryannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-81463003600840009892014-04-11T12:25:04.743-07:002014-04-11T12:25:04.743-07:00The right hates the idea that there are very slow ...<i>The right hates the idea that there are very slow rates of social mobility, but they love the idea that there’s nothing you can do about it.</i><br /><br />I think a more common argument from the Right is that free markets, less regulation, etc, would increase mobility.Matranoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-74381391775212561782014-04-11T11:09:57.045-07:002014-04-11T11:09:57.045-07:00Upward social mobility is highly overrated.
What ...Upward social mobility is highly overrated.<br /><br />What we should be focusing on is family instability.<br /><br />I'd rather come from an intact poor family than a shattered rich family.<br /><br />Yes, I know that rich families tend to be more solid than poor - just saying, Stevebots, that the focus on wealth is ridiculous. We'll never make everybody rich. But we can foster policies that keep families together.Just sayingnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-3325754982256425412014-04-11T09:39:34.092-07:002014-04-11T09:39:34.092-07:00"Oh, come on. This strikes me as a great argu..."Oh, come on. This strikes me as a great argument for socialism. The lower classes aren't going anywhere, so why not try to improve their position?"<br /><br />Exactly, I'd note that the poor that would've died in a famine 300 years ago now get food stamps and other income security spending (which is for the good). I suppose being alive when you'd otherwise be dead is a form of social mobility that Clark apparently neglects. beowulfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14987548132065830204noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9430835.post-41102851213819957422014-04-11T09:00:32.546-07:002014-04-11T09:00:32.546-07:00It would be interesting to make up a list of surna...<i>It would be interesting to make up a list of surnames that are well-known in England but rare in America.<br /></i><br /><br />Funny you should say that. I sometimes see bizarre English names like "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gough-Calthorpe_family" rel="nofollow">Anstruther-Gough-Calthorpe</a>" I think to myself, "Huh. I wonder why nobody with names like that moved to the new world." <br /><br />Presumably, the answer is that the Anstruthers, Goughs and Calthorpes had enough money as it was, and it was the <a href="http://names.mongabay.com/most_common_surnames.htm" rel="nofollow">Millers and Andersons</a> who felt they could do better elsewhere.John Smith's ghostnoreply@blogger.com