ATL Bear said:You're assuming it doesn'tRedbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:I literally answered both your questions. Do you realize Latin America wasn't even modernized until the 17-1800s??Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:Poverty does play a factor in its continued practice today, its undeniable.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:The Industrial Revolution not the Middle Ages. Maybe quit making ethnic swipes and own up to Appalachian culture and many others domestically that remain prevalent. It's as much poverty related as culture.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:It said cousin marriage, not first cousin marriage. We've even had 2 Presidents that had cousin wives.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:Heck, it was a pillar of the pre Industrial Revolution marriage in Europeans worldwide.Redbrickbear said:historian said:
I wonder if he understands the medical issues that inbreds have?
No I doubt he knows that
I also don't think most Western people know how widespread it is across the world.
You are wrong about that…
[first cousin marriage was not common in Medieval Europe due to the strict rules against consanguinity (blood relation) established by the Catholic Church, which prohibited marriages between close relatives including first cousins]
[Medieval Europe continued the late Roman ban on cousin marriage. Under the law of the Catholic Church, couples were also forbidden to marry if they were within four degrees of consanguinity]
FYI, multiple states in the U.S. allow first cousin marriage.
And what we are talking about is the prevalence of closely related cousin marriage....aka the types of marriage systems that led to low IQ levels and birth defects.
Something that is still common in much of the world and has not been common in the Western world since before the Middle ages. (Adams and Jefferson for instance married 3rd cousins and FDR married a 5th cousin once removed)
[First cousin marriage is common in the Muslim world, with estimates of the practice ranging from 20-60% across countries. In many Arab countries, first cousin marriages account for almost a quarter of all marriages. In Bangladesh, about 10% of people marry a first cousin]
[The prevalence of consanguineous unions varies across different societies, influenced by factors like religion, culture, and geographical location. In Western and European nations, the occurrence of CM is less than 0.5%, while in India, the prevalence stands at 9.9%. On the other hand, consanguinity is particularly prevalent in many Arab nations, with rates ranging from 20 to 50% of all marriages. In these regions, first-cousin marriages are especially common, averaging around 20-30%]
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10924896/
"Ethnic swipes"….you mean accurate information about other parts of the planet and the behavior of other peoples?
And you were wrong about it being common before the Industrial Revolution in the West
It was not even common in the Middle Ages in the West because of the laws of the Catholic Church (something you were totally uneducated on)
It's laughable to say it's "poverty related"…..it's a practice related to culture and religion.
If poverty was the reason than why is Latin America and South Africa mostly free of the practice? Plenty of poverty there
It's prevalent in places where Christianity is not dominant (or has not yet become multi-generationally dominant)
You again fail to deal with the actual data on the practice as it exists in the world
0.5% in the Western World and 20-60% in the Islamic world
And you use the existence of cousin marriage among the tiny number of the European royalty to try and empty it was a widely accepted Western practice (when no historian would ever agree with you)
You have also not explained why the poor regions of Latin America or the Philippines shun the practice while rich Saudi Arabia embraces it
The pre or post industrial development of Latin America is not relevant to the fact that it was not a widely practiced form of marriage in the region
While it was and is in the Middle East
In fact rich and industrialized parts of the Middle East still practice it more than rural and poor parts of Latin America
You have no answer for why this would be….so you avoid answering it
Do you have any proof it's happening widely in Latin America today?