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originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: cachibatches
Sorry, but you're the one not seeing the forrest for the trees here. You're focusing on Greece's lack of fertile farmland to the detriment of all other resources. Yes, their wealth was built on trade but to obtain that trade required a navy. You can't have a navy without lumber, without a way to feed your standing armies and navy, to pay them and to cloth them, you simply don't have them. You're neglecting the big picture and focusing on specific details.
As for Rome being reliant on Egyptian grain... not anywhere near to the extent you seek to insist. Rome stretched from North Africa (Carthage) to Britannia long before the death of Caesar, the triple alliance, civil war and eventual ascendency of Augustus. They did quite well for hundreds of years prior to incorporating Ptolemaic Egypt into the blossom of Rome.
As to your thoughts on domestication in Africa, particularly Zebras... morphological similarities are where their affinity with Equus ends. Taming them has only happened on a small scale and domestication has never been successful. They've never been ridden, they are morphologically too small to support the weight of a grown man. Sure, with several thousand years of selective breeding it could have been accomplished similarly to horses, but Zebra have some unique personality traits as a result of their close quarters contract with predators and created a unique set of behaviors not found in horses. When a horse is spooked, it kicks randomly and tries to get away. When a zebra gets scared or kissed off and kicks, it looks down between it's legs, aims, and goes for the head. Just to provide context, Zebras kill lions with kicks to the head, either immediately or because they break the lions jaw and it starves to death. No horse has ever killed a lion! And even "tame" zebras will inflict vicious bite wounds on their handlers. They are simply far more aggressive than horses and have a social hierarchy based on dominant females. Horses have no such thing. To keep comparing the Zebra to a horse and insist it should have been easy is born of notnloking at all of the facts.
And just to quickly touch on your hypothetical evolutionary scenarios... it's a really over simplified and dumbed down approach by saying tribe A went north into Europe, tribe B. Went East into Asia, Tribe C. Went to the Americas and so on and so forth. We know by studying genomics that human migrations and admixture events are a much more complicated scenario than what you are describing in vastly over simplified terms.
A) Greece has notoriously poor soils. This is why they became colonizers. Fact. It is NOT debated by historians.
Egypt became the bread basket of the Roman empire. When grain shipments from Egypt were held held up from Egypt, civil unrest ensued due to the empire's dependence.
originally posted by: cachibatches
originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: cachibatches
Sorry, but you're the one not seeing the forrest for the trees here. You're focusing on Greece's lack of fertile farmland to the detriment of all other resources. Yes, their wealth was built on trade but to obtain that trade required a navy. You can't have a navy without lumber, without a way to feed your standing armies and navy, to pay them and to cloth them, you simply don't have them. You're neglecting the big picture and focusing on specific details.
As for Rome being reliant on Egyptian grain... not anywhere near to the extent you seek to insist. Rome stretched from North Africa (Carthage) to Britannia long before the death of Caesar, the triple alliance, civil war and eventual ascendency of Augustus. They did quite well for hundreds of years prior to incorporating Ptolemaic Egypt into the blossom of Rome.
As to your thoughts on domestication in Africa, particularly Zebras... morphological similarities are where their affinity with Equus ends. Taming them has only happened on a small scale and domestication has never been successful. They've never been ridden, they are morphologically too small to support the weight of a grown man. Sure, with several thousand years of selective breeding it could have been accomplished similarly to horses, but Zebra have some unique personality traits as a result of their close quarters contract with predators and created a unique set of behaviors not found in horses. When a horse is spooked, it kicks randomly and tries to get away. When a zebra gets scared or kissed off and kicks, it looks down between it's legs, aims, and goes for the head. Just to provide context, Zebras kill lions with kicks to the head, either immediately or because they break the lions jaw and it starves to death. No horse has ever killed a lion! And even "tame" zebras will inflict vicious bite wounds on their handlers. They are simply far more aggressive than horses and have a social hierarchy based on dominant females. Horses have no such thing. To keep comparing the Zebra to a horse and insist it should have been easy is born of notnloking at all of the facts.
And just to quickly touch on your hypothetical evolutionary scenarios... it's a really over simplified and dumbed down approach by saying tribe A went north into Europe, tribe B. Went East into Asia, Tribe C. Went to the Americas and so on and so forth. We know by studying genomics that human migrations and admixture events are a much more complicated scenario than what you are describing in vastly over simplified terms.
You are simply repeating things that are factually incorrect, and I can only repeat myself so many times.
A) Greece has notoriously poor soils. This is why they became colonizers. Fact. It is NOT debated by historians.
Egypt was the most fertile land of the ancient Mediterranean world. Fact.
Egypt became the bread basket of the Roman empire.
When grain shipments from Egypt were held held up from Egypt, civil unrest ensued due to the empire's dependence.
They "did quite well" before the empire as it became was guilt. Fact. None of this is debated by historians.
Zebra have been both tamed and bred by Europeans, meaning that they can be domesticated. FACT.
If it had been done thousands of years ago, there would be docile breeds due to selection. FACT. That is how genetics works.
Indeed, there used to be a more docile sub-species that is not extinct.
These are just things that you need to research.
originally posted by: LABTECH767
a reply to: JarridSinn
Probably longer than that and of course that would mean either we are not apes despite biological similarity's
or that the species were created or seeded many time's over from a set of standard templates of some kind, a gene bank even
groups.google.com...#!topic/talk.radio/DlG9BvX1dZ8
This does not mean they were us, but it does mean that something very similar to us, created/seeded by the same source as we were existed then.
God, alien's, colony ship's, Gene Bank's, a race knowing it was going to go extinct placing something out there, a periodic visitor back to the solar system that would re-seed there home world in the hope that some day there race would survive and not die out or self destruct.
Who know's just speculating but a subject I love and I do not obviously buy into the whole primate ancestry evolution which is not to say that I do not believe in evolution as a mechanism because I am certain it does work as such but I do not accept that we were ever primates given the evidence to the contrary even if that evidence is deliberately ignored or even hidden.
One of my pet idea's is that the human race may not even be from here, the earth was seeded and perhaps many time's over and perhaps there is even a cyclic reason for this.
originally posted by: JarridSinn
a reply to: peter vlar
Just one question on what seems to be an absolute point. i ask because it is very difficult, if not impossible, to find the answer. here goes nothing, in all the study of genetics has any other mammal been found to have a fused gene, or what might be the catalyst for such a gene?
Gene fusion is a process by which the complete or partial sequences of two or more distinct genes are fused into a single chimeric gene or transcript, as a result of deoxyribonucleic acid‐ or ribonucleic acid‐derived rearrangements. This phenomenon is widespread and has been observed across all domains of life.
originally posted by: peter vlar
originally posted by: LABTECH767
a reply to: JarridSinn
Probably longer than that and of course that would mean either we are not apes despite biological similarity's
Biological similarities... you mean like sharing a statistically significant portion of each other's genome? The evidence for commons ancestry goes far beyond biological similarity and I think you probably know that.
or that the species were created or seeded many time's over from a set of standard templates of some kind, a gene bank even
But why are H. Sapiens so special that they're the only species that rates such special treatment? And then there's the drought of evidence for any such event actually occurring, but I'm honestly more curious why you think our species rates such special treatment and no others have been a part of you're hundreds of millions of years long breed HFM program.
groups.google.com...#!topic/talk.radio/DlG9BvX1dZ8
Link doesn't work as is and when I got to the site you linked, every one of their links to whatever purported evidence they claim was DOA and have nothing viewable.
This does not mean they were us, but it does mean that something very similar to us, created/seeded by the same source as we were existed then.
Without any actual evidence shown, there isn't actually anything to comment on. I would have loved to have seen the alleged photos they believe are all the evidence needed to overturn 160 years of increasing evidence.
God, alien's, colony ship's, Gene Bank's, a race knowing it was going to go extinct placing something out there, a periodic visitor back to the solar system that would re-seed there home world in the hope that some day there race would survive and not die out or self destruct.
It's a fun bit of mental gymnastics, certainly. But I find it difficult to believe that we have such a genetic affinity with every known organism on Earth yet our origins lie elsewhere...?
Who know's just speculating but a subject I love and I do not obviously buy into the whole primate ancestry evolution which is not to say that I do not believe in evolution as a mechanism because I am certain it does work as such but I do not accept that we were ever primates given the evidence to the contrary even if that evidence is deliberately ignored or even hidden.
I must have missed it, could you fill me in on what evidence exists showing that we don't actually share a MRCA with other apes that is being deliberately hidden and ignored?
It's interesting that you believe that evolution is an actual biological mechanism yet refuse to believe that HSS share common ancestry with Great Apes or far more broadly, as you put it, primates.
One of my pet idea's is that the human race may not even be from here, the earth was seeded and perhaps many time's over and perhaps there is even a cyclic reason for this.
If this were true, how do you explain the genetics? I'll ignore the fossil record, biological and anatomical data. I'm just curious how you reconcile the concepts in your own mind.
originally posted by: LABTECH767
a reply to: Harte
The truth is Harte we are simply men - and woman - whom want to know the truth, why we have this drive I do not know but perhaps it is all about sight, seeing gives advantage, not seeing is a dangerous disadvantage and in that we share at least one goal even if our charted route to it may differ.
originally posted by: LABTECH767
a reply to: Harte
Ha sorry for the late reply and you are most probably correct - also I DO respect you Harte - just don't always agree AND likely most of the time then I am wrong as well so what I am saying is sorry to have gotten a bit short with you, had this song going through my head and it ring's so true to so much in life.