The Perils of Race Science with Charles Murray [S2 Ep.21]

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  • čas přidán 1. 07. 2021
  • Welcome to another episode of Conversations with Coleman.
    My guest today requires a longer than normal preamble. I'm speaking with Charles Murray, who is a Political Scientist, Writer, and W.H. Brady scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.
    Murray has been a controversial figure throughout his whole career, but especially since the publication of "The Bell Curve" in the '90s. The most controversial claim in that book was that the mean IQ gap between black and white Americans is partly genetic in origin, meaning it cannot be fully closed by changing the environment in which black kids grow up. As you'll hear in the podcast, I suspect Murray is wrong about this and that huge cognitive changes are possible in the long run for black America by means of environmental interventions.
    I did not have Murray on to rehash the empirical claims he made in The Bell Curve. I had him on to discuss his new book, "Facing Reality: Two Truths about Race in America". This book has a slightly different emphasis than The Bell Curve. In facing reality, Murray argues that we have to face two truths about race in America, or else the American experiment is doomed. These two truths, according to Murray, are that different races have different mean levels of cognitive ability and that different races have different crime rates. Murray believes that the only way to fight back against the idea that America is a racist nation and to fight against the proliferation of race-based public policy is to bring his empirical claims from The Bell Curve into the mainstream. Now, I strongly disagree with Murray about this, as you'll hear....
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Komentáře • 4,6K

  • @searose6192
    @searose6192 Před rokem +49

    I am a black woman. Just let me get that out of the way.
    It seems quite apparent to me that there is no sensible reason that human beings would evolve and adapt to their various environments physically, but have that evolution and adaptation stop at the neck. It strikes me as obvious that some particular intellectual abilities would have been more beneficial in some environments and less so in others. The evolutionary pressure on the populations living in the places where analytical thinking was a huge advantage, for instance, would have that pressure result in heritable changes to cognition that improved analytical thinking.
    Long term memory may have been more advantageous in a different environment and may have become a prominent trait for people groups living there.
    This seems both obvious and not particularly controversial.
    As those people's descendents began to live in societies that were designed around the strengths of the people who set them up, they will naturally find it difficult to compete with the population that has created the culture based on their own adaptations.
    My point, in brief, is culture is downstream from genetics which is downstream from the evolutionary pressures of environment. You can hardly expect a person whonis optimized to one environment (and therefore one set of heritable characteristics and therefore cultural expectations) to thrive when plopped down in a completely different environment surrounded by people who have created a culture optimized to ensure their characteristics are utilized to best advantage.
    I think the data on fluid intelligence vs crystallized intelligence and distance from the equator as well as the invention of writing in a society is quite illustrative of this. There is some solid research showing cultures without writing (historically) have far higher levels of crystallized intelligence and greater capacity for detailed long term memory (crucial if you communicate important information over generations via oral history) vs cultures that developed writing systems (thereby offloading some need for crystallized intelligence) who's fluid intelligence is higher (crucial when you live in an environment that frequently shifts or has strong differences seasonally)

    • @faint8984
      @faint8984 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Amazing comment very interesting and informative this was also my thoughts

    • @searose6192
      @searose6192 Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@faint8984 Thanks.

    • @DOPEDOGTOPDOG
      @DOPEDOGTOPDOG Před 2 měsíci +1

      race realism is the correct position , period , as usual Coleman have nothing to contribute to this subject , after half an hour of unassailable arguments , he could only venture : " and what about lead paint ? ". LEAD PAINT , seriously , that has to be the stupidest cope I've ever heard in my whole life .
      The truth is Race and IQ are the most established field of all the humanities : it's under constant scrutiny , these are the most repeated experiments of all science ! this science has been settled for decades Coleman , like all black intellectuals ( even Thomas Sowell ), simply refuses to see it . they just can' t DEAL with it .
      That's the real reason why there is NO real black intellectuals :if you can't be honest with yourself , when you look in the mirror , you can't think at all .
      White people are not racist , they are just trying to escape black violence and criminality , which has been out of control since the 60's .
      Real racists , like neo nazis .. are only a few hundreds of people out of 300 millions of whites ! On the other hand 99% of blacks are total racists they have a burning hatred for whites , asians ..and even latinos , that blind , white knuckling , seething rage I can see everywhere .

    • @pathfinderwellcare
      @pathfinderwellcare Před 2 měsíci +5

      👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 Excellent points. Best comment on this entire thread. Hopefully it serves as food for thought.

    • @johngalt1361
      @johngalt1361 Před 2 měsíci

      As long as you invest so much energy in “excuse making” - poorly disguised as reasoning, the de-evolution of blacks will only worsen.
      What works is not a mystery or pertains to the proximity to the equator. Blacks have come farther and further, considering the starting line, than any group of folks in the history of America. Why we are going backwards is due mostly to folks like you, with all this pseudo science nonsense!
      Simple, in successful cultures a baby-mama is known as a wife. A hustle, is known as a job. Your status is not determined by the type of car you have or the label attached to your handbag. And street knowledge is prized only if you intend to spend a larger portion of your life behind bars, instead of being on the streets.

  • @jeffreykennedy5953
    @jeffreykennedy5953 Před 2 lety +159

    If our politicians could speak to each other like this we would be on a better path but I’m not holding my breath

    • @murdockhancock1660
      @murdockhancock1660 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you seen what happens when politicians come together

    • @jeffreykennedy5953
      @jeffreykennedy5953 Před 2 lety +1

      @@murdockhancock1660
      Of course. It would require different people than we currently have in politics to have these kinds of conversations. Which is why I’m not holding my breath

    • @murdockhancock1660
      @murdockhancock1660 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jeffreykennedy5953 its the power that corrupts the holder makes no difference

    • @jeffreykennedy5953
      @jeffreykennedy5953 Před 2 lety +1

      @@murdockhancock1660 agreed completely which is why I support a smaller government with less concentrated power and term limits.

    • @murdockhancock1660
      @murdockhancock1660 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jeffreykennedy5953 agreed the mischievous ambitions of men must be checked

  • @emmang2010
    @emmang2010 Před 7 měsíci +27

    I love how Asians who were part of Murray's analysis, are LITERALLY NEVER BROUGHT UP. This topic is a magnet for specifically black people

    • @BBshark000
      @BBshark000 Před 5 měsíci

      Because Asians are treated with NEGATIVE affirmative actions in the US - something which Black people hate when they use ‘fairness’ as a veil to advance their agenda.

    • @ahmedeensaeed991
      @ahmedeensaeed991 Před 2 měsíci

      How?

    • @kittytrail
      @kittytrail Před měsícem

      ​​@@ahmedeensaeed991 they've just been _un-asian'd_ and thrown under the same bus as whites now. too smart to not make the others, non-Eastern asians and whites, look bad. if you're happy to have retrads as uni professors, doctors, judges, nurses, teachers or whatever just because of the tint of their skin, i hope you'll be sending your kids to them and will have them around you when in the ER as a patient. meritocracy is the only way out. a real one, not an _affirmative action'd_ one where your only merit is having the "right" skin colour. if you want a 30 years reality check of what that kind of merit has done to the only functionning country in Africa (with Libya) after 1982, have a deep dive in what happened and is still happening in South Africa, especially in the energy sector and planning and to the black population living standards now that they cannot objectively say _it's whitey fault_ (but they still say it though). i won't even mention Zimbabwe as marxism had as much to do as the skintone of the new leadership of the country.

    • @Threemore650
      @Threemore650 Před měsícem +1

      @@ahmedeensaeed991
      Well…
      They come out of it feeling unflattered.
      Unfortunately the people who would most benefit from understanding it, probably need help with that.
      However, the exact opposite of this data’s recommendations being now the norm; the opportunity to avail society of this wisdom may have passed.
      IQ doesn’t indicate human worth. I think we can all agree, super villains are usually high IQ.
      I personally think Downs Syndrome people are some of the best company available.
      High IQ doesn’t indicate innovation - oddly…. The Brits, Dutch and Germans are no smarter than the Danes, Swedes or Norwegians, but they seem to have vastly more of the innovative gene.
      I hope they keep refining the test.

    • @afree3884
      @afree3884 Před 29 dny

      This idea that black people, the whole of black people, every single black person across the globe, are somehow less intelligent as a collective is not something that is new to us. 'Understanding' this type of insidious racism will never benefit us, nor will it benefit the mediocre people who create and adopt this prejudiced RELIGION.
      What's odd about this whole concept is that a simple Google search would inform you that black people had governments, kingdoms, cultures, and invented things prior to the arrival of the European. I'm so happy that most of us have not and never will come across this channel.

  • @ethanarnett7637
    @ethanarnett7637 Před 2 lety +172

    First let me say thank you for this podcast,
    I researched this issue a few months back and was immediately struck by the fact Google was censoring my results assuming my intent was racist, returning only articles on why these "empirical" facts( as referred to by both) were wrong and from a by gone era of racists. Charles Murray was included. After much effort I was able to track down one poorly sourced article on the race IQ gap that failed to discuss the issue with any nuance and forced me to continue looking into this matter over multiple days to reach any kind of scientific conclusion.
    My point being Coleman makes good points about a fear of the laymen interpretation, however Charles argument for nearing a tipping point of no return is sadly exemplified by the Google censorship.

    • @andrewjoyner4133
      @andrewjoyner4133 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @ethannarnett You tries using a different search engine ??

    • @jjj-bl8yf
      @jjj-bl8yf Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@andrewjoyner4133 did some research on duck duck go, Reddit etc and what I concluded is that Murray has really no scientific basis for his claims. And there isn’t really any proof I can find that supports his hypothesis. The general scientific consensus is that he’s incorrect.

    • @andrewjoyner4133
      @andrewjoyner4133 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@jjj-bl8yf It's been a while since I watched this interview but as far as I can tell, at least in my opinion if there is any difference there it is pretty much cultural or environmental rather than something inherent about black or white people that dictates intelligence.

    • @chumpzilla30
      @chumpzilla30 Před 10 měsíci +12

      @@jjj-bl8yf there were a couple scholarly disputes about his methodology, but I never heard anyone credible broadly dispute his findings. Try Google Scholar. Also I think Lexfridman did a podcast about this a while ago.

    • @Jianju69
      @Jianju69 Před 10 měsíci +13

      Google is smugly certain about their take on the world. Hence, they're quite happy to enforce that opinion by way of controlling the thoughts of others.

  • @DustyfootPhilosopher
    @DustyfootPhilosopher Před 2 lety +765

    Coleman, this conversation took a lot of courage and you handled it expertly and with immense empathy. Great job, brother. I don’t comment much on CZcams unless something moves me. I’m so grateful to have discovered this conversation. Having difficult conversations with fellow humans will allow our species to move forward from dogma and ignorance. Great job!

    • @Samsgarden
      @Samsgarden Před 2 lety +66

      It didn’t take as much courage as you think. Coleman has political amnesty due to his skin colour.

    • @Ana-sh5jy
      @Ana-sh5jy Před 2 lety +41

      @@Samsgarden I believe Coleman did demonstrate courage in this conversation. But even so, regardless of this conversation, Coleman had already shown me that he possesses a fearlessness few other public intellectuals have. I have little doubt that I am listening to an honest opinion when I listen to Coleman.......And Kemar B., I 100% agree! Great job Coleman!

    • @maricampari3970
      @maricampari3970 Před 2 lety +35

      Agreed. This shouldn't be brave, but it is in this environment. Men like Coleman are modern journalistic heroes.

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před 2 lety +35

      @@Samsgarden
      I give conservative Blacks, and any willing to buck the Narrative even slightly to the Right, props for courage. They're treated as race traitors by many Blacks.

    • @andrewyoussef8500
      @andrewyoussef8500 Před 2 lety +17

      Why does every intellectual conversation need to be prefaced with ‘courage’ or any other similar associations? Guarantee you that the other side of the argument (the woke) have the same thought process when they praise their own heroes.
      Speak your mind and put your chips on the table. No heroism required.

  • @nateofthesouth
    @nateofthesouth Před 2 lety +500

    I admire your interview stance. No attacks, no gotcha's. Just honest conversation even when there's disagreement.

    • @thinksimon
      @thinksimon Před 2 lety +11

      True, though I had a hard time detecting major disagreement... other then should you put a lipstick on it...

    • @bmdecker93
      @bmdecker93 Před 2 lety +8

      Well said. It's an approach that we are sorely lacking in public discourse.

    • @nateofthesouth
      @nateofthesouth Před 2 lety +8

      @@thinksimon Exactly. Coleman has interviewed many types on his channel, and almost never disagrees. And when he does disagree, it's in the most generous of ways.

    • @UKtoUSABrit
      @UKtoUSABrit Před 2 lety +14

      I disagree. Why then did Coleman spend 10 mins "prepping" his audience BEFORE starting the Podcast. VERY disingenuous by him

    • @nateofthesouth
      @nateofthesouth Před 2 lety +10

      @@UKtoUSABrit _Heavy speculation_
      I _assume_ because this all feels wrong to Coleman. So he adds the trigger warning. I think we're watching a bright young person get slowly red pilled while doing his level best to maintain integrity and curiosity.
      Again _heavy speculation_

  • @derekstevens96
    @derekstevens96 Před 2 lety +80

    This is one of the crazy conversations where I can actually understand and agree with both people even though they disagree

    • @ContextReallyMatters
      @ContextReallyMatters Před 8 měsíci +9

      That both made some fair points and they also both agreed on some points. The difference I see is less race based and more age based. The younger man is more idealistic. That's how young people tend to be. The older man is more realistic. The older you get, the more you tend to accept things for how they are and not how you hoped they were. You concern yourself with the things you can change and accept that there are some things you can't change.

    • @brucecmoore2881
      @brucecmoore2881 Před 8 měsíci +1

      The problem they have, is that both have the same kind of education, which means the same metaphysics; I am not a consciousness. Thus I am Being-in-the-World and so I am determined by the Horizon of my existence.

    • @eoinoconnell185
      @eoinoconnell185 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@ContextReallyMatters I cane to a similar conclusion.
      Coleman has a hopeful ''it is getting better'' optimism.
      Charles' attitude is ''it's not getting better, so we need an honest discussion to rectify the problem''.

    • @TommyGunz327
      @TommyGunz327 Před 3 měsíci

      Coleman is a grifter. Always has been.

    • @TommyGunz327
      @TommyGunz327 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@eoinoconnell185 Coleman is incorrect. IQ is biological and there is no “fixing it”.

  • @m3po22
    @m3po22 Před 2 lety +43

    I'm a big Charles Murray fan and I think this was the absolute best conversation you could have had. I'm not all the way done yet, but there was nothing you said so far that was off the mark. I also saw your perspective and felt your frustration. I agree with you. There is no amount of effort that is too much for increasing cognitive health. There are so many downstream negative outcomes and the benefits of working on them are almost immeasurable. I feel this is worth working full time on for the rest of our lives.

  • @robertryan1663
    @robertryan1663 Před 2 lety +135

    This is by far the most thoughtful interview I've ever seen of Charles Murray. I think Coleman is worth listening to on any subject he chooses to speak on.

    • @NextWorldVR
      @NextWorldVR Před 2 lety +7

      He whipped my head around like a slap, and changed my mind on 'mainstreaming' by _reminding_ me,; being color blind is more than just being willing to see positive traits. Seeing past some traits is just as fair, (IN BOTH "DIRECTIONS") and may be the only thing that will finally equalize us socially. We have to all forgive each other for being Human!

    • @andrewwood7303
      @andrewwood7303 Před rokem +4

      Listen to Sam Harris interviewing Murray. Brilliant.

    • @nicholaslaport3354
      @nicholaslaport3354 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@andrewwood7303I agree. I really enjoyed Sam's conversation with Murray. I'm a huge fan of Sam anyway, so maybe I'm biased.

    • @santacruzman
      @santacruzman Před 13 dny

      Charles is basically the same in all his video appearances. Coleman? I can't honestly say, but he doesn't come off as really grasping the data here. He also seems a tad slow. Is that normal for him?

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      @@santacruzman Hughes was honest: he said during the interview he wasn't well-versed in the data.

  • @JB-Mon
    @JB-Mon Před 2 lety +293

    I’d be interested to know what percentage of black, Latino, Asian, etc people object to marrying outside their race. I would hypotheses a small percentage of all races have that belief and that is more a human thing than a “white” thing.

    • @mikeymike9118
      @mikeymike9118 Před 2 lety +29

      Exactly what I was thinking.

    • @danospect5991
      @danospect5991 Před 2 lety +10

      of course

    • @MelissaKemp
      @MelissaKemp Před 2 lety +31

      Yes! Coleman didn’t back up the claim that believing in an IQ gap leads to real racism. He showed a correlation, but not causation. Also, I totally applaud him for doing this interview

    • @nobijazznis1617
      @nobijazznis1617 Před 2 lety +10

      So true. Indians still try not to have interracial marriage. The other question coleman doesn't pry into is why that stat has any weight in this discussion. There are many other factors on why not to intermarry.... just look at Muhammed Alis old interviews on the topic.

    • @MrCaveman366
      @MrCaveman366 Před 2 lety +17

      I imagine it would be higher among non-whites, they seem more xenophobic on average.

  • @therenaissanceman8392
    @therenaissanceman8392 Před 2 měsíci +5

    This conversation requires both very high levels of maturity and strong moral principles. Which is why our society is definitely not ready to have this conversation in the public.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      But there are loads of other conversations in public that society botches as well. And not having it in public doesn't mean that people won't have it in private.

  • @leftykiller8344
    @leftykiller8344 Před 2 lety +12

    Wow. What an amazing conversation. Thank you Coleman for continuing to approach thoughts and issues that many people wouldn’t be caught near. I understand his reasoning of why he felt the need for this book, but I also think it’s a mistake because it’s just throwing gasoline on an already raging fire. Now, I watched this seven months after the video was released, and I have never heard of the book. So I think the mainstream media has wisely kept away from it. I also don’t see racial tension as high as it was seven months ago either. Political tension is still at a crazy high, and sometimes race gets used by both sides to stir people up, but I do think things are getting better. I think that this conversation has such great benefit when looked at as a whole, and I want to thank both of you for having this discussion.

  • @commonsenseproductions5893
    @commonsenseproductions5893 Před 2 lety +44

    For everyone saying “IQ tests are biased and don’t measure anything meaningful”:
    Why are high IQs so strongly correlated with success? It’s obviously measuring something, and that something is definitely beneficial...
    People have been saying IQ tests are biased for 100 years. You don’t think they got it sorted out pretty well by now?

    • @sunnyvegas2778
      @sunnyvegas2778 Před 2 lety +6

      Less than 5% of society is considered “successful”, I do not see a correlation between IQ and success at all... do you have links for this??

    • @DDeCicco
      @DDeCicco Před 2 lety +10

      @@sunnyvegas2778 Less than 5% of society are in the upper tails of the IQ distribution. As you go closer and closer to the tail, the proportion gets smaller and smaller. Of the people tested in the upper range of income, there is a surprising number who also occupy the upper range of IQ distributions. To say that there is no correlation "at all" is to say that the correlation is 0%. That would be unlikely, as would it being 100%.

    • @JohnSmith-hs1hn
      @JohnSmith-hs1hn Před 2 lety +1

      @@DDeCicco Correlation=/=causation

    • @paulyshore1942
      @paulyshore1942 Před 2 lety +3

      Writing a coherent sentence is a function of white supremacy.

    • @nomoresunforever3695
      @nomoresunforever3695 Před 2 lety +2

      It could be that the reasons to succeed in our society is as biased as the test.

  • @tomhansen6115
    @tomhansen6115 Před 2 lety +197

    Bravo for having Murray on Coleman.

    • @hugh-jasole
      @hugh-jasole Před 2 lety

      @Meko "right wing alarmist views" LOL you're not just a clown buddy you're you're the entire circus

    • @SmallBobby
      @SmallBobby Před rokem +2

      Correction: Bravo for having Murray on, Coleman.
      I shudder at the thought of the prior statement without the useful comma.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      @@SmallBobby LOL, exactly! Punctuation saves lives!

  • @jeremyg591
    @jeremyg591 Před 11 měsíci +8

    I’m about halfway through this. I just subscribed and did the notification bell.
    While I learn towards Murray’s position, you are still amazing at highlight concerns and disagreeing in ways that made me think in different ways regarding this issue.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před měsícem

      I have read from both sides on this issue. I still lean towards Murray, though I think the crime issue is far more fixable than cognitive ability differences. It would be absurd to deny that environment plays a role, and I think Murray is clear that this does have an effect as well.

  • @truthstarved
    @truthstarved Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent podcast. The first step toward solving a problem is to correctly understand it. Seeing things as they truly are is an essential element of acquiring a correct understanding of a problem. Interpreting the implication of raw data in biased deference to "equity of outcome" solutions is illogical on its face. I marvel at displays of innate intelligence that far exceed my own. I listen to podcasts such as this and take pleasure in the fact that Coleman Hughes and his controversial guest challenge my own misconceptions about race and intelligence. The willingness to calmly interrogate hot button topics with an unflinching desire to face uncomfortable truths is a mark of exceptional character; and the ability to lucidly articulate those truths is singularly noteworthy. Being humbled by truth well spoken is a privilege.

  • @redguard7710
    @redguard7710 Před 2 lety +96

    Coleman these thumbnails are bananas

    • @voidscreaming1012
      @voidscreaming1012 Před 2 lety +5

      Very telling this conversation was given a different thumb nail vs all his others.

    • @jkaupp8
      @jkaupp8 Před 2 lety +3

      Blame the algos

    • @OQIF87NREU
      @OQIF87NREU Před 2 lety +10

      him choosing a clickbait-style thumbnail for this kind of episode cracks me up

    • @skreeeboy
      @skreeeboy Před 2 lety +6

      @@OQIF87NREU, I'm wondering if he has a "team" now where someone is making the decisions to present his videos with these thumbnails. Honestly, when I saw it, I immediately thought, wtf? I didn't expect to see something like that, and as such, it wasn't something I was disappointed in seeing, but now that I've seen it, I hope he gives it up. It may or may not be a winning strategy for getting people to click on his videos (I assume it's actually a winning strategy) but nonetheless, I hope he doesn't continue with it.

  • @huskypup3489
    @huskypup3489 Před 2 lety +151

    Yes, Thomas Sowell has been speaking correctly on these issues for years, and he’s been completely ignored by the media, academia and anyone else who matters. When was the last time Thomas Sowell appeared on CNN? Or had his views promoted by the NY Times?

    • @mpcc2022
      @mpcc2022 Před 2 lety +4

      Well said.

    • @cooldudecs
      @cooldudecs Před 2 lety +11

      Thomas Sowell believes it's cultural

    • @huskypup3489
      @huskypup3489 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cooldudecs I agree. Murray brushed off the point about early reading common in high IQ cultures.

    • @Capius1272
      @Capius1272 Před 2 lety +6

      @@cooldudecs Because it is. Making it racial is triggering and controversial which generates that... you know the thing... Black Americans pretty much stymie and separate themselves. Nigerians and Jamaicans, etc prepare themselves to acclimate into our society.

    • @dtaylor091489
      @dtaylor091489 Před 2 lety +13

      i think this was a deliberate choice by Sowell. i recall him saying once that he stopped appearing on television because there was no correlation between what he said what the media said he said.

  • @akmalone3009
    @akmalone3009 Před 11 měsíci +64

    Early childhood is probably the most critical time in human development. Family life and culture is absolutely a factor in intelligence.

    • @RichardEnglander
      @RichardEnglander Před 10 měsíci +8

      Right but IQ seems to be at least 50% inherited and we are not blank slates.
      Oh, diet for the growing kids also massive

    • @skp8748
      @skp8748 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@RichardEnglanderEpigenetics, prenatal care, early childhood engagement, nutrition and culture are vastly more important in determining capacity to achieve academically, your will to be productive, your proclivity to be violent and your financial outcomes.
      For example the Danish, Swedish, British, Candadian, American and Dutch long distance records are all held by ethnic somalis athletes but Kenya is the most successful followed by Ethiopia with somalia nowhere to be seen... that's because in Somalia athletics is held in high regard Sir Mo Farah had multiple Gold medals but in his tribe the ICJ judge is more esteemed not to mention the lack of facilities training ect compare this to Kenya where Nike has entire compound or ethiopia where the govt subsidies training facilities... Haile Gebrselassie is exalted as almost mythical figure in Ethiopia in Somalia they deify billionaire like Abdirashid Duale and Ahmed mohamed yusuf... so despite having the genetic predisposition for biomechanical efficency they don't have a culture/environment that is conducive hence the disparity in outcome with their regional neighbours

    • @georgeboehringer5530
      @georgeboehringer5530 Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@RichardEnglanderDifferent breeds of dogs have different intelligence different breeds of people have different intelligence

    • @cockoffgewgle4993
      @cockoffgewgle4993 Před 9 měsíci

      Where's your evidence for your assertion?
      Black Africans dominate pretty much every sport and athletic event in existence. Do you think is mostly environmental?@@skp8748

    • @andrewsebayjf
      @andrewsebayjf Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@georgeboehringer5530Different dog breeds have different intellectual strengths. Most dogs are smart in their own ways.

  • @mvtoanaheim
    @mvtoanaheim Před 2 lety +3

    Fantastic conversation. I say to myself all the time that I’m proud of this young man for tackling these controversial issues in an intelligent and respectful manner, which is actually quite impressive considering the current political environment. As for this discussion as well as many others that Coleman has engaged in, I find that I come away with more questions than answers on how to effectively attack these issues. Like Coleman I truly believe that there is hope, however one would be naive to completely dismiss Mr. Murray’s take that things are just the way they are and there’s probably not much that can be done.

  • @fallonstone408
    @fallonstone408 Před 2 lety +28

    Fantastic conversation! Congrats to both Coleman and Charles. Both are intelligent, enlightening, articulate, respectful of the others thoughts and allowing them to speak. No drama, no gaslighting, no interruptions or voice raising. A true pleasure to listen to no matter what side of the fence you are on. Keep up the good interviews Coleman!

    • @georgeboehringer5530
      @georgeboehringer5530 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Coleman is the exception to the rule

    • @tamsinli258
      @tamsinli258 Před 10 měsíci

      @@georgeboehringer5530They’re both stupid. Charles Murray is a tired old bigot, and Coleman is a self hating black man who platforms racists and other odious individuals on his show due to his desire to come across as a balanced, self aware and intelligent individual. This obsession of his stems from low self esteem regarding his place in the world. You rarely if ever see people that are involved in and ingratiated with their communities, entertain people that dislike them.

    • @TommyGunz327
      @TommyGunz327 Před 3 měsíci

      Coleman isn’t intelligent.

  • @thehylander266
    @thehylander266 Před 2 lety +76

    Hello Coleman. Enjoyed the podcast. A few points I would like to share with regards of your argument that it’s best to not tell about IQ in the mainstream because that may result in a worse result than what Charles fears:
    I am second generation North Korean and half Irish. My mom was Korean and my father Irish. People can tell I am half Asian. I go to school in an area that is heavily Korean with children Korean immigrants who came here with little and have kids to get a better education.
    Over the years I have noticed a lot of prejudice and animosity towards Asians like me. I took a few courses based in the social sciences. I took some critical race subjects. I came across this stuff because I and other Asian students were essentially being told that we were “white adjacent.” That we essentially benefit from a system of white supremacy. This was the answer given to me when I asked why poor Asians do better than many whites if the system is systemically racist.
    I felt like I was shut down from giving my opinions after this many times. It become so toxic of an environment I had to leave some of those courses and study other things for extra credits. It really felt like the teachers didn’t want me to ask questions and they would put my questions last, second to the white students to hear “less white perspectives.”
    If and when whites become enough of a minority, assuming your argument doesn’t work in convincing people of color and wealthy white elite to judge people as individuals and that it’s culture that causes these differences in outcomes, then what will happen?
    What will likely happen is other groups who are not dark skinned will also be blamed for doing better in academia and employment. Asian, Jews, etc.
    So at what point will it stop? I fear this is why, as hard as it may be to admit, that we have to speak about IQ differences as Charles says because if it doesn’t go mainstream, the groups blaming whites as being racist won’t stop there. And that’s assuming it doesn’t end in physical violent uprising by either groups. It won’t stop with whites and they will be blaming Asians and Jews next because, why? We not only outperform black and many Hispanic people in academics and employment and income, but we also outperform many whites on average as well. So they will then have even more of a reason to go after us.
    So should I now have to suffer being put at the back of the bus despite not being from America? And coming here poor? I don’t get it.
    If it is true, then I just don’t see how we can ignore IQ and group differences because it won’t stop with white people. And after Asians and Jews, and mixed race people like me, it will come for light skinned Hispanic and Mulatto people will be next. I don’t think it will stop. And assuming this is about race and IQ and Charles is right, do we really want to be a society that doesn’t uphold truth as a core principle to stand for and pursue? Societies of the past didn’t uphold truth as a core foundation and we all can see what became of them, as the corpses and bones can attest to. A lot of this stuff going on my mom’s tells me is eerily similar to Mao and North Korea with regards to the cultural revolutions there. And how can we be sure that this environment against white people won’t lead to a genocide? It seems that when it’s normalized for groups to be accused of being morally bad, it’s not long until genocide happens. Perhaps this is what the white people fear as they become minority. It reminds be of what China did to its minority groups. It really troubles me. I don’t want to see the US fall to this.

    • @sunghc03
      @sunghc03 Před 2 lety +23

      The "white adjacent" narrative is such horseshit. Asians have no privilege or political power/influence whatsoever in America. It basically just punishes Asians for their work ethic and resulting success because it throws a wrench in the oppression narrative.

    • @markfrancis9806
      @markfrancis9806 Před 2 lety +11

      Bravo! Excellent analysis. The disaster that Charles Murray is warning about is racial violence on a national scale and the end of Constitutional America. I suspect some powerful people, worldwide, are instigating this and they hope it will occur very soon.
      Will mainstreaming this information accelerate this occurrence or put the racialists back on their heels - at least temporarily? I think this will be a catalyst for an entirely new debate - if it's not already too late.

    • @thehylander266
      @thehylander266 Před 2 lety +10

      @@sunghc03
      It was really hard hearing them accuse me of that. I work two jobs and my mom is sick and try to get through school and they kept telling me I am still privileged. I could have used the extra credits and lost a lot of time but I just couldn’t finish those classes.

    • @sunghc03
      @sunghc03 Před 2 lety +5

      @@thehylander266 it's so frustrating and insidious

    • @tedmom3029
      @tedmom3029 Před 2 lety +4

      Thank you for sharing your story because it is classic. Much of the divisiveness is not driven by so called “whites” but by confused people who cannot even see what is their own best interest but instead play identity politics and the cult of activism to create a fantasy world for which there is no solution just unending chaos.
      I think we can go back to in our basic day to day behaviors of meeting people as individuals and identifying sanity in people like Coleman Hughes, Lawrence Murray, John McWhorter, Sam Harris, Glenn Loury, etc.
      Thank you again for your insights.

  • @kitkakitteh
    @kitkakitteh Před 8 měsíci +7

    The Truth should ALWAYS be mainstreamed. If that’s disastrous, so be it. It means we need to discuss it MORE. It is up to society to understand and accept Truth.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před měsícem

      Keeping this conversation out of the mainstream won't stop people from saying and believing the harmful things that Coleman Hughes cited in this interview. Black American children could still come across the same thoughts and ideas anyway. Mainstreaming this conversation will put everything on the table. It's much better to face uncomfortable things in the face than to have people secretly having those conversations.

    • @santacruzman
      @santacruzman Před 13 dny +1

      ​@@Musicienne-DAB1995Um, he is agreeing with you. And both of you are using the term, mainstreaming, problematically when there are much better, less confusing, terms to use. Also mainstreaming is the term used to designate putting challenged learners in with the less challenged students based on the assumption that these kids would help each other succeed. This is the disaster of NCLB policy that Murray refers to. Special needs kids need education that is geared specifically to their educational need. And the kids in the "mainstream" (the regular classroom) need to be challenged and motivated at a level that meets _their_ intellectual needs too.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      @@santacruzman Yeah, you're right. I know that the original woman was agreeing with me, and I didn't word my answer very well. But yes, I agree with what you're saying.

  • @eddaminer
    @eddaminer Před 2 lety +6

    Coleman: I have to congratulate BOTH you and Charles Murray for a very civil and enlightening discussion of a topic that is obviously very close to both of your hearts. If we could get more discussions where both sides who have different perspectives but are respectful of their opponent we could begin to do a better job of healing wounds and solving problems.

  • @mohamedgoldstein5565
    @mohamedgoldstein5565 Před 2 lety +26

    Funny how we are up in arms when someone says there is IQ disparity but have no issue when another says there is an athletic disparity.

    • @mohamedgoldstein5565
      @mohamedgoldstein5565 Před 2 lety +1

      @WHITES LOVE MY PLAYLISTS Democracy is why facts are not widely accepted. Its the rule of the majority and not rule of the capable.

    • @narwhal7642
      @narwhal7642 Před 2 lety +1

      @WHITES LOVE MY PLAYLISTS Ridiculous

    • @mohamedgoldstein5565
      @mohamedgoldstein5565 Před 2 lety +1

      @WHITES LOVE MY PLAYLISTS Rule of the capable will never happen because we are by nature selfish, and that will put an end to the rule of the capable.

    • @mohamedgoldstein5565
      @mohamedgoldstein5565 Před 2 lety

      @WHITES LOVE MY PLAYLISTS What a valid argument. Keep it going wise one.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před měsícem

      The athletic disparity is far more obvious and brutal than the disparity in cognitive abilities. At least from what I see in terms of athletics, especailly sprinting.

  • @brettg274
    @brettg274 Před 2 lety +75

    It’s going to be difficult no matter what we do. What Murray is saying is, do we want it to be difficult because we’re living a lie, or because we’re facing truth?

  • @endrik6397
    @endrik6397 Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you Coleman, for having the kind of difficult, nuanced discussions our society needs to have. I think you both made some excellent points. Fantastic interview (and guest), and just one more example of the important value you are bringing to our society. Please, please keep up the difficult, but great work!

  • @jesusisthewhy
    @jesusisthewhy Před rokem +14

    Thanks Coleman. I believe culture can indeed be changed and that we shouldnt quit or consider it impossible just because its hard. Also, one empiric that I would have loved to hear discussed more was the effect of absent fathers (or the equivalent thereof) on culture and IQ. I myself believe it could have been a major factor in the reduction of the IQ gap between 1920 and 1970 and also a large factor in its stagnation since. Would love to see a pt2 of this conversation sometime. Or maybe pick up this same topic with John McWhorter?

    • @andrewwood7303
      @andrewwood7303 Před rokem +1

      Take the time to suffer through The Bell Curve. You have to concentrate really hard and it takes days and days to get through. There’s a good chance that one’s ability to comprehend the book requires a relatively high IQ as well as an impartial attitude. Very challenging!

    • @macbird-lt8de
      @macbird-lt8de Před 10 měsíci

      So white should change their culture to accommodate lower iq race?
      No, the races should peacefully separate.
      Why is that a sin?
      It’s not; we were brainwashed that race mixing is inherently an important value. Why is it so damned important?
      Important enough that everybody ends up losing their respective cultures?
      Important enough to continue with delusion idealism?
      Culture vs Nature doesn’t really matter. Culture comes from your nature.
      The only way racial mixing is achieved is through force.
      Why isn’t forced integration considered immoral?
      These gentlemen are on the same side of the “debate”.

    • @jesusisthewhy
      @jesusisthewhy Před 10 měsíci +1

      @macbird-lt8de @macbird-lt8de The short answer is: seperate but equal is a sin because God says its a sin (1John 4:21)
      But further, it's misplaced policy. the existence of race itself is much less a reality than the construct of it (Acts 17:26). Culture comes from story, not nature, and is not a commodity to be gained or lost. If culture indeed came from nature, then we would all have the same one.
      I submit that, even with the existence of Jim Crow between 1920 - 1970, the story of the American Black family was much more hopeful than it became after that, when the government overreached its good intentions with the CRA. And the stats on Black upward mobility during the last 100 years, especially prior to and since 1964, back that up.
      The CRA should have fixed what it could (equal access, red lining, etc) and not what it couldn't (public education, the family, affirmative action, etc).
      #schoolchoicenow

    • @cockoffgewgle4993
      @cockoffgewgle4993 Před 9 měsíci

      Believing in a magical sky fairy is definitely low IQ.
      Culture and genetics is a chicken and egg argument. Of course culture is malleable and changeable, but at the same time, smarter people tend to produce better, more productive cultures.@@jesusisthewhy

    • @scottsherman5262
      @scottsherman5262 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@macbird-lt8de Well...my goodness. While I appreciate that you kept your comment cordial, I appreciate that tremendously actually, I feel a moral obligation to push back. Taking your vision from a purely pragmatic position, how do you imagine a race-separate world would work out in the short to mid-terms? I think it's easy to imagine an outcome so negative as to completely omit the long-term altogether. Economies would crash & humans would lean into what humans do so well...waring. You ask why is racial harmony so important, why is the lack thereof so sinful?? The simplest answer is because we've evolved societally to know better...we now consider it immoral, correctly so, to remain separate from, & let's call it what it is, to hate other groups. You'll often hear people say "Kids aren't born racist, they have to learn that." Turns out, that isn't true. In fact, the exact opposite is true...study after study clearly show that kids fear those they read as outsiders, & then they're taught to lean away from that. I could see you saying, in response, well there it is right there!! Proof that remaining separate is natural!! Sure, it's natural, but no more natural than our humanity allowing us to socially evolve into an accepting, no, a welcoming people/society. People love to say that this & that are social constructs, as if that omits any value. Humans cannot exist absent of society, so a socially constructed value is no different from some physical trait. Most Americans do not want to just forget about the racial harmony they've learned...I'll grant you that many millions do, or think they do, but most don't. This is a question of morality above all else, & we've come too far to throw it all away now. That's my reasoning.

  • @WhtetstoneFlunky
    @WhtetstoneFlunky Před 2 lety +150

    There is a video on CZcams where Steven Pinker, a soft-spoken liberal, goes into scientific detail explaining how the Ashkenazi Jews evolved into a human demographic that has a greater level of the traditional form of intelligence when compared to any other demographic. There is surprising little protest concerning such a statement yet other, similar statements (and the accompanying explanations) involving other demographics are ridiculed as racist or pseudoscience. We live in a culture where certain ideas, true or not, are not acceptable.

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před 2 lety +24

      Also, no one took issue with Jordan Peterson arguing that "Jewish people are over-represented in positions of competence and authority because, as a group, they have a higher mean IQ. "
      Someone should take his blog post 'On the so-called “Jewish Question”', and swap Jews with Whites and Whites with Blacks and watch the uproar.

    • @JohnSmith-hs1hn
      @JohnSmith-hs1hn Před 2 lety +4

      Kinda like the banning of Critical race theory, eh?

    • @WhtetstoneFlunky
      @WhtetstoneFlunky Před 2 lety +8

      @@JohnSmith-hs1hn If Critical Race Theory would produce a net negative, then it should be dismissed. The same would be true with examining differences in I.Q. by race. If the publicizing such possibilities would create a net negative, then that is probably the one overriding reason to not pursue those possibilities.

    • @JohnSmith-hs1hn
      @JohnSmith-hs1hn Před 2 lety +7

      @@WhtetstoneFlunky You're moving the goalpost, you hypocrite. First it was "true or not", now its "whether it will be a net negative". Rules for thee minority, not white me. This is the duplicitous nature of your white opponents. They want to teach that blacks are intellectually inferior, but when it comes to CRT condemning that very racism, now it's "divisive". You can't make this up. This is how white supremacy works.

    • @WhtetstoneFlunky
      @WhtetstoneFlunky Před 2 lety +12

      @@JohnSmith-hs1hn In my second post I used the term "whether it will be a net negative". That is because you brought into the discussion Critical Race Theory, and the discussion changed to a comparison of two different concepts. So again, whether ideas are true or not, the possibility of those concepts doing harm should be a strong consideration whether the population should be subjected to those concepts.

  • @GoDaveGo
    @GoDaveGo Před 2 lety +136

    The options seem to be:
    A) Tell kids that it’s no one’s fault, groups of people have different IQs, and that means some individual people get to have careers others can’t. The career is dependent on you, not on the group.
    B) Tells kids that we can’t figure out why or how, but that each of us is playing a role in a system that discriminates against some groups because of how they look. As a result, you may have to do more or less to get a particular career, and that’s based on the magnitude of your moral crimes and the moral crimes you fall victim to.
    C) We tell kids that you work hard, and you try to be the best you can be, and sometimes life isn’t fair. You’ll have successes and failures, and sometimes that will be your own doing, or someone else wronging you, or just by chance. But you have to do the best you can, and resenting other people will only create misery for yourself.

    • @afuzzycreature8387
      @afuzzycreature8387 Před 2 lety +7

      @Nathan Anderson not sure how that's one an autocrat would proscribe.

    • @konberner170
      @konberner170 Před 2 lety +10

      Another good thing about C is that it is true for all humans. There is no group that doesn't have a percentage of those with substantial cognitive challenge.

    • @jeupater1429
      @jeupater1429 Před 2 lety +1

      D) America, check mate

    • @Oignion
      @Oignion Před 2 lety +13

      Or you could accept that IQ is not a static(or even tangible) thing and is heavily affected by the material conditions one lives in and adjust society accordingly. People would have less racial resentment if their lives were actually improved and didn't hinge on chance. There shouldn't be a job that you aren't able to support your family on.

    • @ayyleeuz4892
      @ayyleeuz4892 Před 2 lety +24

      @@Oignion what a stupid virtuous statement 'There shouldn't be a job that you aren't able to support your family on', mate that is not at all reasonable. absolutly no grasp on reality, but principally economics

  • @rickmoser7695
    @rickmoser7695 Před rokem +6

    This is the beauty of the concept of freedom of speech getting us closer to the truth, not just who we agree/disagree with, keep it up!

  • @lauraferguson4335
    @lauraferguson4335 Před měsícem +1

    I was talking to a guy not long ago who worked with the prison system. He said that the people who build prisons decide where to put them based on 4th grade reading levels. It is a screaming reminder of how many parents are not reading to their children when they're young.

  • @roballan1024
    @roballan1024 Před 2 lety +30

    I think Coleman is showing some intellectual cowardice here. He spends most of his time saying he is not an expert, doesn’t know the details, hasn’t read the literature, etc but he then completely disagrees with the researched expert Charles Murray who has specialized in this area for decades.
    He then starts speculating as to what other possibilities might account for differences between races, but because he has already established that he is in a position of ignorance he is able to make speculations that are already proven false.
    Coleman also wants to move quickly into the so called center of the bulls eye, and cites critics of Murray that he says he has read, having not read Murray.
    Coleman both occupies a position of ignorance that allows him to side step associating with Murray, but he also claims to know enough to both disagree with Murray and agree with his critics. Coleman wishes to avoid the elephant in the room, trace differences and IQ. There is one valuable conversation here, and that is Murray input.

    • @willmercury
      @willmercury Před 2 lety +4

      Spot on. Not Coleman's finest hour.

    • @weignerleigner3037
      @weignerleigner3037 Před 2 lety +5

      Coleman says and does a lot of things that make no sense. I still give him respect cus he is honest and I think he’s a good dude. But his ideas don’t make sense a lot of the time. Him voting for Biden made no sense to me.

    • @icetrinas8649
      @icetrinas8649 Před 2 lety

      No, Murray just suits your agenda, everyone has one , this is nothing new for black people , it justified slavery , Jim Crow etc, he didn’t have to engage with this guy at all , it’s pointless.

    • @JayeHK
      @JayeHK Před 2 lety

      This was clearly difficult. After the excessive preamble, Coleman seemed to have no argument to articulate, no substance to any disagreements with Murray (including those of other names mentioned), and seemed instead to be reaching out and grasping for relief rather than making a case.

    • @stuka80
      @stuka80 Před 2 lety

      well, to some, pride is pretty strong to completely disregard even when faced with reality. Denial is not just a river in Egypt as they say.

  • @mspoints4fre123
    @mspoints4fre123 Před 2 lety +100

    Why do people make this a black\white issue like other races don't exist. Also all the subgroups within races which are different from one another. Really makes you think how pointless this black and white no nuance thinking, pun intended, really is.

    • @thinksimon
      @thinksimon Před 2 lety +1

      Only becouse we are wired to trust our eyes more then any other senses...

    • @Incessuserro
      @Incessuserro Před 2 lety +5

      Small minds see little outside the range of their limited vision.

    • @phairpil5429
      @phairpil5429 Před 2 lety +1

      The sub sub sub group is the “individual” …, therefore meritocracy (like in the NBA, NFL, MLB, MLS) is the only solution. 👍🏾✊🏾

    • @Johnnybsknees
      @Johnnybsknees Před 2 lety +2

      People are still obsessed with dichotomies. It's an unfortunate tendency of rationalism when it is not self-aware. I'm not religious, but so many people today make me want to say, "y'all mfers need Buddha"

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      No, the data does not only deal with Africans and Europeans. It also deals with east Asians as well.

  • @tigre2236
    @tigre2236 Před 2 lety +3

    Great interview Coleman. I always love your stuff. 2 points. 1st. Don't apologize to the censors for having an awesome and necessary conversation. If they can't see the value of this kind of exchange, they should go join their comrades in N. Korea or China--not be impacting you and your work. 2nd. I think Murray beat you bro! I'm used to seeing you win. But he put some great questions to you, and you didn't have much. "How would you address the cultural problem of black students bullying other black students who do good in school?" And "If you don't like what's been attempted to address the intelligence and educational gap, what do you propose?" Those are super solid, fair and valid questions. And you should find better answers to them. Murray was trying to move you into the Thomas Sowell territory of "well what are your concrete proposals and how are they better than what's been tried?" And that's a serious conversation. It's much easier to defend a vague position of criticism. Then we can all walk around with our hip disapproval. But it's corrosive, it builds nothing, it's a way of resisting the necessary though undesirable conclusions. You were brave to get into it with Murray. But he showed you what true bravery looks like, he followed the evidence and the logic all the way to the end. He said, "It doesn't matter." The difference is intractable. We don't have any new solutions to try. So we need to come to terms with it. And it's ok. It's ok if there are mean differences in IQ. It explains some of the achievement gaps. And a true though disliked explanation is better than a false though favored explanation(systemic racism!). My advice, don't be so insulted by the possibility of mean IQ differences. And 2nd, get rid of that scenario where you explain racial IQ differences to your kids! Tell your kids the truth! Racial IQ differences have nothing to do with what they are capable of! I liked how Murray pointed out that these are the size of differences between siblings. We're all just brothers and sisters, we can all succeed and do well.

  • @echom8138
    @echom8138 Před 2 lety +6

    Subscribed! I hadn't ever heard of you or Murray before this. We need more people like you Coleman. Thank you for pursuing open discourse and free thinking.

  • @thinksimon
    @thinksimon Před 2 lety +38

    This is perfect! Coleman and Murray are close enough intellectually so that they don't talk past each other, but far enough in generation and temperament that they bring a different, yet compelling prospective on the same issue. I wish they made a series of talks, or even wrote a book together.

    • @runreilly
      @runreilly Před 2 lety +8

      You're joking, right? Coleman talked past Murray many times. He doesn't have the courage to follow the truth on this topic. Despite the comments section giving their usual standard applause lines for his "bravery" he showed none here.

    • @zachdawson6052
      @zachdawson6052 Před 2 lety +6

      Coleman is in no way even close to Murray

    • @Zerradable
      @Zerradable Před 2 lety

      @@runreilly Just to be clear: you mean that because "he wasn't courageous enough" or because this act demands no courage at all to begin with?

    • @Zerradable
      @Zerradable Před 2 lety +4

      @Meko clear points? He clearly didn't address any of the issues that Coleman have brought up to the discussion.

    • @edwinamendelssohn5129
      @edwinamendelssohn5129 Před rokem +1

      @@zachdawson6052 he's much younger than Murray. Give him time

  • @dougd1573
    @dougd1573 Před 2 lety +54

    The fact that we’re looking for racial disparities is the reason we need to study the cause otherwise the attempt to achieve equity in an egalitarian state will necessarily result in laws and policies that are racially discriminatory. In other words, because we’re obsessed with disparities of outcome as opposed to equal treatment, we will only find solution that discriminate.
    As an example. If I told you there was a law that resulted in 95% disproportionate accusations and conviction of a specific demographic many people today would say that law is discriminatory against the affected group. If I told you those laws were rape and sexual assault and it vastly disproportionately affects men vs women suddenly the concern over the disparity evaporates. Its not a sexist law. It’s the intention or motivation for the law that matter. The outcome disparity is not discriminatory.

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety +1

      Except we didn’t start as an egalitarian state.
      We live in a state that created disparities through de facto and dejure discrimination against black people.
      But lots of ppl just want to ignore the 250 years of discrimination because they will have to give back the unfair advantage they stole from other people.

    • @dougd1573
      @dougd1573 Před 2 lety +2

      @@annettewilcox5413 there’s zero evidence the disparities are due to historic discrimination. Notice that first generation black African immigrants out perform whites.

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dougd1573
      There is overwhelming evidence.
      #1 majority of first gen Africans are the elite in their countries. Poor Africans cannot afford the cost to emigrate to US.
      #2 And I’ll let you think about what the difference is between the experience of first generation Africans and ADOS.(American Descendants of Slavery)

    • @dougd1573
      @dougd1573 Před 2 lety +1

      @@annettewilcox5413 there is not. A little factoid; the majority of poor people who win the lottery end up filing for bankruptcy. It has nothing to do with intergenerational wealth and everything to do with what each of us do as an individual.

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety

      @@dougd1573
      That’s the lie the US likes to perpetrate.
      The US created a white middle class from working class laborer by giving them massive of amounts of benefits that were legally denied to black people.
      Spanking new suburbs, (ie Levittown), FHA Mortgages, tax breaks, highways to the jobs, equity to pass down to their kids, etc etc
      If the government (and the populace) didn’t think it would create 2 different outcomes they would hv offered same programs to blacks.
      They knew denying these programs to blks would leave them on the bottom of totem pole.
      www.amazon.com/Color-Law-Forgotten-Government-Segregated/dp/1631494538/ref=asc_df_1631494538/?tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=312029822325&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=4494755561492955351&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=m&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9004425&hvtargid=pla-466313351218&psc=1&tag=&ref=&adgrpid=61316180319&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvadid=312029822325&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=4494755561492955351&hvqmt=&hvdev=m&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9004425&hvtargid=pla-466313351218

  • @TheHoodmailbox
    @TheHoodmailbox Před 2 lety +10

    Oh my god! Both perspectives have merit and I honestly don’t know who is right. Thank you both for having such a respectful and thoughtful conversation on such a dynamite subject. 🙏🏻

  • @Aijan100
    @Aijan100 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I am Asian from Kazakhstan. It suffices to say that of all selective systems available merit-based system is by far the safest and fairest. I always felt that an Asian element with its mentality of self- improvement, hard work and ambition to excel didn’t compute with the race theories of the day.

  • @steve112285
    @steve112285 Před 2 lety +33

    To answer Coleman's question about what good can come of talking about race and IQ, I'd say that we must at least be allowed to note the difference in response to complaints that STEM faculties aren't 13% black, that tech companies don't have 13% black coders, etc. When it comes to roles that require high cognitive ability, we cannot force the demographics to match those of the nation without degrading the quality of the institutions. Based on the distributions, for every 1000 white physics professors, it's more reasonable to expect 5* black physics professors than it is to expect 200. We should do our best to judge the merits of the individual applicant, not try to meet quotas based on a lack of understanding of the tails of distributions.
    While less extreme, the difference will also be seen in roles that require 1 or 2 standard deviations above the mean for intelligence. The answer may not be racism. It may be the abilities of the applicants.
    *: Based on an assumption of 3 standard deviations above the mean for intelligence, which would be closer to 4 for black Americans if we assume equal variance, and the fact that there are about 5 times as many whites as blacks in the country.

    • @maricampari3970
      @maricampari3970 Před 2 lety +3

      Agree, you have to understand the data in order to re-tune the "system" to make it more efficient and productive. The data is hidden, so the system is broken.

    • @tonythomas1010
      @tonythomas1010 Před 2 lety +5

      Let in more Nigerian immigrants and you see how quickly those numbers increase

    • @steve112285
      @steve112285 Před 2 lety +8

      @@tonythomas1010 Yeah, it's certainly gameable by importing the best of Africa, but I don't think that will lessen the complaints. The demand will shift to at least 13% American-born black employees.

    • @ngarumurray
      @ngarumurray Před 2 lety +1

      @@steve112285 It's not just Nigerians though. Most Africans outperform both white and black Americans

    • @pinchebruha405
      @pinchebruha405 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ngarumurray ok sure

  • @pertpesc7058
    @pertpesc7058 Před 2 lety +14

    Im a teacher 7 to 10 grade. Here in Norway. Black kids subsahara africans, born and rased in Norway, with 100% the same chanses as Asians and other races .
    Many of them finds it very hard to finish the 8 grade. Actually the majority.

    • @publicanimal
      @publicanimal Před 2 lety +9

      Here in the USA we just find excuses to let them pass on without being prepared for the higher grades. And then we give the blacks who have gone through that preferential admissions to universities despite the fact that they were never really able to keep up for most of their time in school.

    • @twntwrs
      @twntwrs Před 2 lety +4

      What explanation does the Norwegian intelligentsia give for that (if there are even allowed to talk about it)?

    • @Kate-it7cn
      @Kate-it7cn Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@publicanimalBecause we can’t have 18 yr olds in 3rd grade.
      No solutions to this.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      Interesting. Presumably in Maths and English?

  • @m3po22
    @m3po22 Před 2 lety +4

    My brother couldn't get an internship, because, in the exact words of the hiring manager, "Why would I give an opportunity to a white male?" I had a friend who is as dumb as a rock (still love him) and got a full ride scholarship for being half Hispanic while I had to work many hours to pay for my Physics degree at the same university. He was the son of an immigrant who had enough money while my family was jobless and living off of church welfare. I've seen the inner workings of tech events where racial minorities were given advantages in every single aspect, even down to the raffle ticket system for prizes. I was told (for some reason) that I was almost passed up on a job offer because a Hispanic person applied right when they were about to send it. Luckily, he sucked.
    It sounds like I live somewhere like California, right? Nope. Utah. 91% white, 1% black. Utah hasn't voted Democrat in like 50 years. Yet CRT is here. The liberals are teaching it to the children here in schools. It is cancer. It doesn't even apply to Utah. There were only ever like 5 slaves here in the entire history of Utah, and they were freed pretty quickly. 50% of my ancestors were in Northern Europe before the 1920's. The rest were Mormon refugees from Missouri, where it was legal to kill a Mormon, and before that most of them had recently sold everything they had in England to come to America when they converted to Mormonism. Something like 2% of my ancestors had been in America before that, and there is no record of them owning slaves, probably because they were from the North and only a tiny minority of people were ever slaveowners anyway.
    You cannot commit injustices against people without stirring up a lot of anger. Right now, whites and Asians are starting to become angry. I am sensing a strong undercurrent of rage boiling up around me. It can and will get a lot worse if we don't start taking the CRT issues DEADLY seriously. I will never forget the truth that all people should be treated as individuals. It is smart and moral. But I can't speak for other people in my state. All of this is building up to something. Something unspeakably terrible.

    • @m3po22
      @m3po22 Před 2 lety +3

      Reading my comment makes it sound like something terrible is immanent. But it's more like a slow boil. I predict major conflict in 8-20 years at this rate.

    • @MilanElan
      @MilanElan Před 2 lety

      @@m3po22 I hope it is sooner and we get all these wokeists CRTs expelled from the country. Latino here, I will fight alongside you because this begins with you but will continue with me

  • @ybrueckner5589
    @ybrueckner5589 Před 2 lety +6

    This podcast was an impressively civil discussion. As a gesture of goodwill I would love to see Dr. Murray put a forward in his book citing this podcast and urging people to listen. Both parties showed uncommon bravery in this day and age

  • @dooglesw
    @dooglesw Před 2 lety +38

    Two problems with Coleman's case. [1] Coleman is very worried about "schoolyard" insults regarding race and intelligence, but doesn't appear to be very worried about "schoolyard" insults about how White people are racist or evil. [2] He is very worried about discussing race and intelligence because it encourages stereotyping, but seems to admit that we need to talk about race and violence, even though this also encourages stereotyping. Historically, Whites viewed Blacks as both dumb and scary. Why is one good but not the other?

    • @munkstermann
      @munkstermann Před 2 lety +5

      I can understand Coleman's position. He is a principled if somewhat reactionary MLK style liberal. I think Murray is speaking from a position that we need an immediate fix to stop the terrible trajectory of society in its tracks before it is too late whereas Coleman is concerned with the very same underlying problems in society but thinks fighting destructive ideas with other possibly destructive ideas is going to make society implode even faster. I'm not sure whose position is right because we don't really know how society might adapt should Murray's concerns find mainstream acceptance. That said, it isn't a question of whether white kids being told they are evil in school is worse for Coleman than black kids being told in school that they're dumb. I don't think he is okay with any of it.

    • @Big_Boy_Biggins
      @Big_Boy_Biggins Před 2 lety

      I mean one is words another is systemic discrimination

    • @weignerleigner3037
      @weignerleigner3037 Před 2 lety +3

      @@munkstermann Murray isn’t saying anything other than what he found in his research. He admits this when he said he doesn’t have answers to the problem. He found a problem, and has published it. People don’t like the results and that’s fine. But ignoring this problem will never solve it. And coming up with solutions like “ending racism”will never work.

    • @munkstermann
      @munkstermann Před 2 lety

      ​@@weignerleigner3037 Did you watch the interview? Murray conducted his research precisely because he's trying to jolt the USA back from a point of no return. He went as far as to say he avoided the subject in the intermediate years since the bell curve because he didn't think it would be helpful to discuss racial IQ differences when society was in a more or less functional state in spite of it all. Murray is a sociologist with a desire to positively affect society. He isn't some assburger doing research for research's sake.

    • @cockoffgewgle4993
      @cockoffgewgle4993 Před rokem +1

      Precisely. If IQ differences are "race science", CRT and "white privilege" are "race science".
      Another accepted truth should be that codified racism and material discrimination of any kind is much worse than any social, abstract form of racism. Which should bring the conversation to "affirmative action" and "diversity quotas". Which are the only form of actual racism existing in America currently.
      Was blacks being called naggers and looked down upon worse than slavery or segregation? Of course not.

  • @anonymousprofessor7954
    @anonymousprofessor7954 Před 2 lety +86

    I read The Bell Curve when I was in college in the 90s. Back then, it was already writing on the wall. Society tried so hard to change things between the 60s and 90s. And now we're 30 years on, and little has changed.

    • @MElixirDNB
      @MElixirDNB Před 2 lety +39

      I'd argue that it was the democrats precise attempt to "help" that actually made things worse.

    • @jimmynegatron4619
      @jimmynegatron4619 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MElixirDNB Trump was in power not long ago, surely that would mean racial tension would go down. But has it?

    • @MElixirDNB
      @MElixirDNB Před 2 lety +27

      @@jimmynegatron4619 By factual statistics, all things like income, unemployment, prison reform did improve under Trump, which is why he got ~1 in 5 black voters for the 2020 election(18%) but democrats control all our media, big tech, etc which before day 1 of Trump's term were spreading lies and propaganda to increase division and add fuel to the fire of race relations. If our media wasn't so corrupt along with the constant lies of democratic politicians I do believe things would have dramatically improved. Trump was way too crass for what people were used to in a politician, but he was no racist and all the smear attempts on him were very effective in convincing liberals he was.

    • @OptimalOwl
      @OptimalOwl Před 2 lety +3

      @@jimmynegatron4619 How many liberal reforms from ca 1960 - 2000 did Trump overturn?

    • @jimmynegatron4619
      @jimmynegatron4619 Před 2 lety

      @@OptimalOwl I don’t know, how many?

  • @klaus9688
    @klaus9688 Před 2 lety +25

    Thank your for conducting this interview on such a high quality level, both intellectually and ethically. I am impressed. Also, I think that your notion of culture as a vital determinant in this matter is absolutely convincing.

    • @SmallBobby
      @SmallBobby Před rokem +4

      It's sad they couldn't go into a further discussion on differences of culture, so many gems there. Kinda disappoint in Murray finding ways to sidestep that particular issue. Even a well placed "I hadn't though of it to that extent, but should be something to further research" would've sufficed for me.

    • @CosplayEternity
      @CosplayEternity Před 10 měsíci +2

      I agree, I wish there would have been that thoughtful response for him to think more about cultural effects. What I see also is something I'm also feeling. As a young man I desired to stand up to the challenge of making a difference in the midst of seemingly impossible change (regardless of the issue or topic) as I get older I find myself becoming more and more cynical toward change through human effort. I feel Charles is at his limit of cynicism and is at the point of despair. Probably because emotionally or physically he does not have the drive of a young man with hope. This was a hard conversation to sit through, not because the topic was uncomfortable but rather they were swaying my opinion to their side back and forth at least 3-4 times during the conversation. As I reflect upon the interview I feel challenged to ask myself who I am going to be. A young man with hope or a cynical man who is throwing up a hail Mary with little hope. It's difficult because I feel both sides. However as a father I feel it is my obligation to have hope that can be instilled into my children so they do not attempt to confront this issue in their time of influence cynically before it is their time to be cynical lol.

    • @macbird-lt8de
      @macbird-lt8de Před 10 měsíci

      But it doesn’t matter if culturally determined or not.
      What’s the solution then?
      Be less culturally black?
      The culture is influenced by nature too.
      If your only solution is more money for blacks and lowering of standards then forget it. It won’t work.

  • @dfwherbie8814
    @dfwherbie8814 Před rokem +19

    “How to change a culture.” As a black man, I’ve been thinking about this for a very long time. I can only continue to do what my parents taught me to do. But it’s a very sad and frustrating thing to think about

    • @benbarca
      @benbarca Před rokem +4

      LOL Apparently it took humans 200,000 years for humans to evolve, are you going to wait that long...

    • @scottsherman5262
      @scottsherman5262 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@benbarca Such an odd reaction to what was a thoughtful & vulnerable comment.

    • @disf5178
      @disf5178 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@scottsherman5262
      Agree.

    • @disf5178
      @disf5178 Před 8 měsíci

      It is frustrating. IMHO.. there are powerful political roadblocks.. powerful interests in the way. Liberal Democrats depend on pandering and coddling a certain demographic. Their political power depends on having dependent voters. And Black "leaders".. like Sharpton, Jesse Jackson.. they depend on keeping Blacks in a box of victimhood. The media keeps the greatest leaders (Sowell, McWhorter, W.E. Williams) out of view. To me, this is the systematic oppression.
      Most people of different races want to see Black Americans succeed. The resistance is to the "opressor/oppressed" dynamic pushed.

    • @sakogekchyan7366
      @sakogekchyan7366 Před 7 měsíci

      @@benbarca
      It took meer decades for black culture to become what it is today. They used to have more two parent households than even whites.
      So all they would have to do is get back to the family values that helped them survive all those generations of oppression.

  • @MrAaronmatthew
    @MrAaronmatthew Před 2 lety +51

    Coleman is arguing for elites to protect the masses from conversations that only elites can be trusted to have. Murray is arguing that the masses need light to find the way.

    • @DeadlyPlatypus
      @DeadlyPlatypus Před 2 lety +7

      A metaphor:
      Charles Murray is Martin Luther
      Coleman Hughes is the Pope

    • @mishasruros7633
      @mishasruros7633 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DeadlyPlatypus popes are cool most the time bro. I don't know what you're on.

    • @DeadlyPlatypus
      @DeadlyPlatypus Před 2 lety +1

      @@JumboSchreiner110 Because you can see the future, oh powerful Oracle!
      Try a little honesty yourself.

    • @DeadlyPlatypus
      @DeadlyPlatypus Před 2 lety

      @Paranoia Agent 1. Coleman knows his audience can handle the discussion.
      2. Coleman knows the size of his audience.
      This discussion between Coleman and Charles has limited reach and effect on broader society

    • @DeadlyPlatypus
      @DeadlyPlatypus Před 2 lety +1

      @Paranoia Agent "Anti-black narratives" oh, ok.

  • @beemo9
    @beemo9 Před 2 lety +53

    I've never heard Coleman support self-censorship about a topic.

    • @nickc3856
      @nickc3856 Před 2 lety +20

      now you have

    • @tayzk5929
      @tayzk5929 Před 2 lety +12

      And it made zero sense.
      There's nothing negative about people accepting IQ differences between groups just like there's IQ differences between individuals.
      However refusing to accept this obviously would lead to negative consequences.

    • @koroglurustem1722
      @koroglurustem1722 Před 2 lety

      Well, every rule has an exception. He thinks that it'll be net loss due to the emotional nature of the topic in a society. More importantly he is focused on the role of culture that engenders that racial iq gap. It's not like he doesn't want to address the issue. I believe he is right in his position. Charles is right in that those policies will not affect 'what is' and you need some way of handling the current situation.

    • @RyanOManchester
      @RyanOManchester Před 2 lety +5

      @@koroglurustem1722 I think Coleman's perspective needs to be also compared against the backdrop where our current reality has 5x as many White parents having this sort of conversation with their children trying to explain to them that they aren't evil or racist regardless of what their teachers told them. When Coleman says his nightmare is the parent needing to have this conversation or the Black child being made fun of, he's showing his own personal connection to the issue and his own distance from the reality that everyday White parents and children face *right* *now* under the current CRT/systemic racism regime.

    • @koroglurustem1722
      @koroglurustem1722 Před 2 lety

      @@RyanOManchester then the solution is pushing back the CRT bullshit without becoming angry towards blacks. If individuals can preserve such a distinction nation can navigate this catastrophe. CRT accusations are very toxic and we have to reject it.

  • @DJD10
    @DJD10 Před 2 lety +5

    In 2021, listening to a conversation like this, feels just so freeing. I tip my hat to Coleman Hugehs, always cool, yet always on point. Life isn't in black & white, nor should our beliefs or opinions be.

  • @galacticambitions1277
    @galacticambitions1277 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Letting an interviewee speak, rare. Respecting an interlocutor while strongly disagreeing, rare. Well done.

  • @D4PPZ456
    @D4PPZ456 Před 2 lety +15

    This conversation reminded me of my grad school days. Discussing the issues in an impartial way, looking for the best solutions, I wish more conversations could be this productive.

    • @jonathanramos8414
      @jonathanramos8414 Před rokem

      We're trying to have a reasonable discussion!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Cenk uygur

  • @amauryft
    @amauryft Před 2 lety +34

    I feel for Coleman and I can actually hear Thomas Sowell answering him at times. Some other times I don't need to because Murray answers him to the dot, as TS would.

    • @kevinscott59
      @kevinscott59 Před 2 lety

      I agree.
      He believes in America.
      One has to feel for him if you feel the same.

  • @KB-zq9ny
    @KB-zq9ny Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you for doing this. It's just refreshing to have ideas challenged and discussed intelligently instead of having these shouting matches where one side condemns the other. These topics are disturbing, though.

  • @joshfreeman3452
    @joshfreeman3452 Před 2 lety +4

    As always, great job Coleman with a complete class act conversation and I could not be happier seeing two highly intellectual individuals discuss a hard topic in a manner we could all learn something from. I would like to point one thing out that you mentioned around the 57:30 mark in regards to polls taken of whites (democrats and republicans) that objected to a relative marrying a black person. I think it would be hard to find any race that has a majority acceptance of their relatives marrying another race. As far as I can tell, this seems to be rooted more within one's comfort in culture rather than based on one race thinking another is lesser in cognitive ability. Is it possible that one can have a preference without prejudice? I think of churches for example...why are there things deemed in the states as a "white" church or a "black" church? I don't think anyone thinks a church of 95% black people are racist and hate whites, just as I would not suspect a majority "white" church to be racist against blacks. I bring this up more as a curiosity as I enjoy trying to learn from others perspectives. I have lived in the States for the past 12 years and supposed problems along racial guidelines and discussions about possible solutions have continued to astonish me.

  • @PhilosophyofDataScience
    @PhilosophyofDataScience Před 2 lety +5

    To sum it up, Charles is saying if racism doesn't explain the disparities in America then we have to put forth explanations that are divisive and tough to hear (e.g. today's crime and IQ reality are better explanations than racism), and Coleman is saying that there is a practical difference between even the tough explanations where emphasizing culture over innate IQ can accomplish the same goal while providing hope for change and putting more control in the hands of people.

  • @moum6688
    @moum6688 Před 2 lety +41

    It's not true that Thomas Sowell hasn't used arguments similar to those of Charles Murray, he does so in Intellectuals and race, even explains the evolutionary process by which genetic differences occur between groups

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh Před 2 lety +11

      Yup, Thomas Sowell is an empiricist as well. Follows the facts

    • @Showmeyourtitties
      @Showmeyourtitties Před 2 lety

      YES! THANK YOU!

    • @afuzzycreature8387
      @afuzzycreature8387 Před 2 lety +1

      he's also expressed that at times its changed, like with the Jewish community. Now I don't know if that happened because of immigration patterns or not, I do not know.

    • @MElixirDNB
      @MElixirDNB Před 2 lety +6

      Thomas Sowell also points out how iqs of groups have changed significantly, and also points to highly successful black schools like Dunbar, so I don't think he would agree with Murray's view. The point Coleman was making here is presentation is important to a mass audience

    • @Showmeyourtitties
      @Showmeyourtitties Před 2 lety +1

      @@MElixirDNB What about IQs improving and individual success is antithetical to Murray's view? He would agree. Have you read the book?

  • @anthonypope2106
    @anthonypope2106 Před 28 dny

    Great respectful interview Coleman. There was no jumping to conclusions, simply an integral conversation.

  • @carolconnors8689
    @carolconnors8689 Před 2 měsíci +2

    14 pts is small. Black families teaching acceptance and school is cool to thier kids would be a huge step forward.

  • @Der.Zuschauer
    @Der.Zuschauer Před 2 lety +78

    Coleman appears to be arguing for "THE NOBLE LIE." Plato and I are quite pleased.

    • @filmjazz
      @filmjazz Před 2 lety +9

      I noticed that myself, and can’t help but think that when a person is in favor of the Noble Lie, they are admitting, implicitly, that they view themselves as part of the ruling class. The propagation of “noble lies” is a tool and strategy of the ruling elites. Just an observation, but I think an apt one.

    • @plostyle2554
      @plostyle2554 Před 2 lety +6

      No, more like noble discretion.

    • @shmosel_
      @shmosel_ Před 2 lety +1

      Is it a lie to avoid emphasizing uncomfortable and unproductive truths?

    • @urganodevotaton
      @urganodevotaton Před 2 lety

      @@shmosel_ And is it necessarily a truth or a significant truth anyways?

    • @shmosel_
      @shmosel_ Před 2 lety

      @@urganodevotaton We won't know until we don't care.

  • @potchd
    @potchd Před 2 lety +61

    Honest and respectful discussion like this are the only hope we have for moving forward as a society, and more fundamentally, as a species. Thank you both very, very much for engaging in it and allowing us to absorb it.

    • @brianbaldwin6745
      @brianbaldwin6745 Před 2 lety

      PotchD- your white privilege is showing.

    • @brianbaldwin6745
      @brianbaldwin6745 Před 2 lety

      @Zoomerwaffen xx shhhhhhhhhhh

    • @brianbaldwin6745
      @brianbaldwin6745 Před 2 lety

      @Zoomerwaffen xx it’s so hurtful. Reality is such a drag! Why would you say such things?! It can only be, it must be, that you are living in a reality that must folks have yet to awaken to.

    • @MisterWeave-tm4oc
      @MisterWeave-tm4oc Před 2 měsíci

      As you're being replaced

  • @Dentropolis
    @Dentropolis Před 2 lety +17

    One of the greatest statements Murray did say is that we are losing the ability to accept people as they are due to the raysist power of “Affirmative Action” and the harmful it creates.

    • @southafricanizationofsociety20
      @southafricanizationofsociety20 Před 2 lety

      @Blah Blah
      “They also pointed out (#376-7) that Davis could not use “poverty or family educational background … as a substitute for race” because “while race is positively correlated with differences in GPA and MCAT, economic disadvantage is not … [E]conomically advantaged blacks score less well than do disadvantaged whites.” (Amazingly, they did not see that this fact nullified their argument.)”
      Excerpt From
      Affirmative Action Hoax: Diversity, the Importance of Character, and Other Lies
      Steven Farron
      This material may be protected by copyright.

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety

      @@southafricanizationofsociety20 this IQ, Intelligence claim is nothing news.
      It was used by eugenics against blacks, Irish, Eastern and southern Europeans at beginning of 20th century.
      Nazi used it in mid 20th century,
      People always try to prove there’s some logical scientific reason why the must treat certain people as less than!

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety

      There was 150 years plus of white affirmative action.
      Does this count as harm in your narrative?!

    • @lemarjewell9713
      @lemarjewell9713 Před 2 lety +1

      Largest minority group in the country are women the second largest minority group in the country are white women white women benefit the most from affirmative action

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety

      @@lemarjewell9713 also benefited from wealth of their families.

  • @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596
    @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Race is real, it is genetic, and different races have different cognitive abilities. It just is what it is. Doesn’t mean any race is better or worse, it just is

    • @MisterWeave-tm4oc
      @MisterWeave-tm4oc Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's a hard fact many people don't want to accept

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před měsícem

      Just like biological sex is real, and both sexes have different cognitive and physical abilities. Doesn't make women less than men.

  • @TH.417
    @TH.417 Před 2 lety +45

    Truth doesn't matter; What matters is my Ego and the facts which make ME feel nice.

    • @TH.417
      @TH.417 Před 2 lety

      @@davidsmith9189 wut

    • @Pengalen
      @Pengalen Před 2 lety +1

      Probably you should have put that in quotes to demonstrate that you are imputing this sentiment to others and not expressing it as your own, unless I misread you.

    • @TH.417
      @TH.417 Před 2 lety

      @@Pengalen you're absolutely correct; And you're also correct that people will probably, maybe intentionally, misread me.

    • @TH.417
      @TH.417 Před 2 lety

      @Zoomerwaffen xx why

    • @TH.417
      @TH.417 Před 2 lety +1

      @Zoomerwaffen xx 13=13, 50=50

  • @brandonsuttner363
    @brandonsuttner363 Před 2 lety +33

    Hughes makes the argument that, if something is factually correct, but could damage the social fabric, we should not disseminate that information. Sounds like he believes we should let the plebs believe in religion.

    • @twntwrs
      @twntwrs Před 2 lety +3

      This is one of the most disheartening postures among so many intellectuals: "Well, we don't need it but the masses need their pacifiers to suck on and let's not discourage then from it because they might come after us."
      Sadly they're not wrong.

    • @techswagbro6249
      @techswagbro6249 Před 2 lety +4

      His argument is that Murray's work has no value (in a nice way). There is literally nothing you can conclude from Murray. Murray doesn't disagree.

    • @LoveJungle420
      @LoveJungle420 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes we should let people believe in their religion even if we can prove their religion is false. So long as they don't hurt anyone. For many people their sanity is hinged on their beliefs. It's not our place to rip out people's support system, in the spirit of truth, if it could cause harm to them.

    • @almond5560
      @almond5560 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LoveJungle420 it's not the same analogy. It would be closer to holding back studies about evolution because it would disrupt the Christian social fabric.
      In other words, it's not about not letting people believe in religion. It's about not spreading empirical information for fears that it would destabilize the dominant religious belief.

    • @OptimalOwl
      @OptimalOwl Před 2 lety +2

      @@LoveJungle420 Memes are like parasites, in that the ones which kill off their hosts too quickly tend to die off. So if a memeplex survives for centuries and grows into a major world religion, then that puts a firm upper limit on how bad it can be.
      The ideas that come out of the social sciences departments have not been so vetted. They can be limitlessly bad.

  • @amac8237
    @amac8237 Před 2 lety +19

    Well isn’t this typical.
    “ I’m extremely aware your claims are factually correct so let’s pivot the conversation to how we can throw more money at the problem and not talk about it”.

  • @KSRobinette
    @KSRobinette Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for exercising the courage to air this conversation. I hope you'll really think about the question Murray kept asking: how are you going to work harder to change the discrepancies between the races? You didn't answer. Nobody seems really to know how to persuade low income black families to encourage academic achievement more often, marry before having kids more often, avoid crime more often, etc. If people think they know, they should set up a program in which to try it and collect good data on the success or failure of their idea. If it works, wonderful. But until something works to change the situation, we need to deal with the situation that exists in the real world. You can't accomplish anything by "trying" harder without developing a specific plan to try.
    Personally, I think one piece of a solution will be undoing the power of urban teacher's unions and enabling choice in education for low income people. I think some community members have set up effective private programs. So one piece is to get the government out of the way and let people experiment. But meanwhile, what is real today is real today and we need to deal with it as it is until and unless people manage to change it.

  • @sglaser001
    @sglaser001 Před 2 lety +12

    Good conversation. I think there is value in recognizing a problem so that you can begin to address it. We don’t know if it is an intractable problem until we research ways to try to remedy based on family or cultural factors.

  • @10010x0x0x01101XX0X1
    @10010x0x0x01101XX0X1 Před 2 lety +68

    there's a difference between "mainstreaming" this topic, and simply not pretending like the truth isn't what the truth is.

    • @Shoutinthewind
      @Shoutinthewind Před 2 lety

      Is there when the idea of systemic racism is mainstreamed?

    • @ammoiscurrency5706
      @ammoiscurrency5706 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Shoutinthewind I believe that mainstreaming the understanding that currently there are differences is going to be important to some level. I however am with Coleman on this and feel like mainstreaming the idea that these differences are genetic is a horrible, terrifying, and flawed idea.

    • @10010x0x0x01101XX0X1
      @10010x0x0x01101XX0X1 Před 2 lety +8

      @@ammoiscurrency5706 how can you believe for example that different population groups have evolved to be taller or shorter than each other bc of genetics but all groups have the exact same IQ. doesn't it seem strange that Jews for example win way more nobel prizes than any other group way in excess of their population size?

    • @ammoiscurrency5706
      @ammoiscurrency5706 Před 2 lety +11

      @@10010x0x0x01101XX0X1 I guess the short answer to this was I grew up in an affluent area with alot of Asian and Jewish friends. My Asian and Jewish friends couldn't come out and play as much growing up because they always seemed to be with a tutor or learning an instrument. Growing up I can't think of an Asian or Jewish friend who wasn't raised like that. My White and Hispanic friends never had the same pressure. It's anecdotal to be sure but I'd be willing to bet faced with the same culture that gap would close considerably.

    • @ammoiscurrency5706
      @ammoiscurrency5706 Před 2 lety +1

      @@10010x0x0x01101XX0X1 Jews and Asians push their children harder when it comes to education. It's not surprising that groups stereotyped for their focus on education consistently score higher in education based metrics.

  • @stepandersen
    @stepandersen Před měsícem +1

    What a beautiful way of conducting an interview with someone you disagree with. Why do we tolerate people who scream instead of letting an opponent make an argument.

  • @Ripprock1
    @Ripprock1 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you Mr. Coleman and Mr. Murray. Very enlightening. I will be adding his book to my library.

  • @hekskey
    @hekskey Před 2 lety +27

    Very interesting and subtle discussion. You guys addressed the dangers of both accepting and failing to accept the empirical realities Murray writes about and both options seem likely to be destructive to society in one way or another. I think there is a way to thread the needle, though, but it might be unrealistic to think it would get agreement. Coleman, the risk you talk about largely comes from the average person's lack of understanding of the subtleties here and because, like you said, people can't be relied on to absorb this in a purely rational way. But the poisonous message of systemic racism Murray talks about is largely coming from the top down, not the bottom up. It's the elites roiling the masses. The only ones that really need to directly face these realities are the people at the top pushing the narrative, who should be capable of understanding the subtleties. There's no need to 'mainstream' discussions of particular racial groups being more or less intelligent on average. There's only a need for the people pushing the false narratives of systemic racism on the basis of different outcomes to face that the differences are not caused by systemic racism and to stop saying they are. By all means, people should continue trying to improve those different outcomes as much as possible, but the people at the top need to stop banging the drum of systemic racism. If they would do that, nobody would need to talk about this stuff. The problem, I think, is that the people pushing it are doing it for their own benefit (financial, political, etc), which is why this solution I'm suggesting is probably unrealistic.

    • @MrSunrise-
      @MrSunrise- Před 2 lety +1

      Bingo.

    • @SirSardonic
      @SirSardonic Před 2 lety +3

      Wow, you really nailed it. I was struggling to summarize the entire podcast in my mind, and you did it perfectly. Thanks.

    • @hekskey
      @hekskey Před 2 lety

      @David Bradberry - Did you see my reply? It looks like it disappeared.

  • @eola8
    @eola8 Před 2 lety +17

    Is it such a refreshing thing to see a conversation where people disagree without getting angry but actually taking the chance to go deeper with their questions and arguments. Thank you both for your honesty and candor and for really listen and engage with each other. As a viewer, it has been a very enriching discussion. I hope you both have a beer together one day.

    • @georgeboehringer5530
      @georgeboehringer5530 Před 10 měsíci

      Stupidity can be managed and productive it approved it with a village idiot

  • @MrBryan1776
    @MrBryan1776 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I’m glad to see that both of you can leave a tough topic without demanding some sort of a “win”. This episode gave me a lot to think about.
    Thank you.

  • @rduse4125
    @rduse4125 Před 2 lety +2

    First and foremost, I appreciate the conversation. It’s awfully hard to correct a problem if some of the variables are taboo to even mention. Political correctness is probably the biggest hurdle for Americans to overcome in the 21st century.
    If we can speak openly, perhaps we can get past the ideology and work on genuine solutions.

  • @christopherpatrick6949
    @christopherpatrick6949 Před 2 lety +164

    Coleman Hughes has balls of steel.

    • @joanofarc33
      @joanofarc33 Před 2 lety +2

      No he is just verythoughtful.

    • @johnowen271
      @johnowen271 Před 2 lety

      metaphors abound... please explain what are balls of steel ?

    • @stanlearner5102
      @stanlearner5102 Před 2 lety +8

      or he is extremely naive and oblivious to the reality of why Murray wrote the book.

    • @DMWayne-ke7fl
      @DMWayne-ke7fl Před 2 lety +7

      @@stanlearner5102 Oh no, blacks might feel bad while white kids get struggle sessioned because of racial blood libels. Real big brained move there Coleman.

    • @petyrbaelish1216
      @petyrbaelish1216 Před 2 lety

      @@johnowen271 it means he's brave.

  • @elements1985
    @elements1985 Před 2 lety +74

    Before watching this, it's important to understand Murrary's thesis in "Coming Apart" IMO. I don't know what to make of black vs. white IQ, don't have an opinion. But it's fact that American economy is far more conducive to IQ and brain power in 2021 than ever before.... In the 50's, as Murray notes: the average math major could teach high school. Now they can work at hedge funds helping to create complex trading algorithms. IQ is an important topic in understanding today's class differences based on the information age/postindustrial economy..... How that translates to black/white IQ, I'll leave that to Murray.

    • @elements1985
      @elements1985 Před 2 lety +16

      @Antek Policmajster Yes and no. The Chinese are in some ways like the Nazi Germans: very good at math and science but more memorizers than innovators. We've been unable to liberalize China but that will come when/if we decouple and they have to innovate, creating a more open/creative society..... But you're right: our education system is a joke that offers neither strict memorizing or encourages innovation, it's just a colossal pile of ideological shit.

    • @DDeCicco
      @DDeCicco Před 2 lety +2

      @@elements1985 Really interesting point and something I've wondered myself re: China's inability to innovate. It seems America will need to lead the charge of decoupling as we may be the worst offenders at present.

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před 2 lety +10

      The Bell Curve was about IQ and its effects on social status and wealth, with Murray worrying about the *less intelligent* having fulfilling lives in a society where status and wealth is increasingly driven by IQ.
      The ruling class made it all about race in their usual diversionary tactic from how they have been looting the rest of society.

    • @DDeCicco
      @DDeCicco Před 2 lety +8

      @@buybuydandavis Agreed, and I'd add that for some it is a deeply scary concept that people are born unequal and in ways that we can measure. I believe they forget that we can draw a clear line separating someone's value as an individual and their intelligence as measured on an assessment

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před 2 lety +6

      @@DDeCicco
      Everyone knows that *people* are born unequal in IQ but get their panties in a wad over the suggestion that *peoples* are unequal in IQ.

  • @mrlinkus6593
    @mrlinkus6593 Před 2 lety +2

    Perfect, thank you, Coleman. Enjoying listening to your podcasts every time.

  • @isaklytting5795
    @isaklytting5795 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I agree with Murray. The dangers of moving from judging people as individuals to judging them as "members of a group" is much more dangerous than telling the truth about the reality of test scores. Please! There's no contest. Parents have to explain to their children all the time why they are not as beautiful as somebody else, or as rich as somebody else, etc. That's the plight of parents at all times. Learning that "your" group scores lower than "group C" or "group F" while scoring higher than "group H" shouldn't mean anything to any individual, exactly because he is NOT a group, he is an individual, the mean of the group has no influence on him as an individual! It could be that "your" group scored higher than all other groups so far compared to it, and it still wouldn't change a single thing about you as the individual you are! And it's the job of parents to explain that to a child, and of scientists to explain to journalists and others who for some reason don't want to accept that there are differences between groups, other than when they insist that there are differences between groups - much as depending on how the wind blows.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před měsícem

      Agreed. The beauty example is an important one. It's far more unfair than differences between IQ points, LOL!

  • @snippletrap
    @snippletrap Před 2 lety +35

    What's missing is the context of all the other biological racial differences. When you see the list, including different gestation periods, brain size, and infant development rates, then cognitive differences aren't too surprising. Why would anyone expect geographically separated subspecies to have identical traits? No one applies this logic elsewhere in biology.

    • @paulgabel1845
      @paulgabel1845 Před 2 lety

      Where can I find this

    • @woodsonsanders1112
      @woodsonsanders1112 Před 2 lety +3

      @@paulgabel1845 the book "Race" by John R Baker goes into it in exhaustive detail.

    • @annettewilcox5413
      @annettewilcox5413 Před 2 lety +1

      Anti black Racism goes in circles.
      Biological
      Intelligence
      Culture
      We’re now back to turn of 20th century biological racism

    • @almond5560
      @almond5560 Před rokem +2

      It's because some people already have an outcome that they're trying to prove with supporting data, not the other way around. They're afraid that the current system (and their worldview) would collapse if they're proven wrong. Examples of such cases are everywhere in the history of scientific research.

    • @blankname5177
      @blankname5177 Před rokem +2

      How are you establishing causation between biology and intelligence? and race itself is a socially construct category so how would that have biological effect?

  • @williamkeys6782
    @williamkeys6782 Před 2 lety +34

    I get frustrated with Coleman's inability/unwillingness to face the facts. The fact that individuals must be judged as individuals, that's it. Please resist the temptation of insisting on knowing the facts and then demanding that the same facts be denied. Murray's suggestion that only individual assessment is decent and will work. Nothing else will work.

    • @meditation4632
      @meditation4632 Před 2 lety +6

      But we all know that’s not what’s going to happen, people judging on individual assessments only

    • @williamerdman4888
      @williamerdman4888 Před 2 lety +3

      @@meditation4632 Why? I believe I live my life that way every single day.

    • @meditation4632
      @meditation4632 Před 2 lety +3

      @@williamerdman4888 Is that why everything is going so well between men and women, whites and blacks, democrats and republicans, elites and working class etc... because we're all judging people based on individuals and not groups??

    • @williamerdman4888
      @williamerdman4888 Před 2 lety +5

      @@meditation4632 John, the move to focus on identities groups over the individual is new (roughly coinciding with the past 10-12 years) and I would agree with you that right now, today, things aren't going well. This is because of identity politics and not a result of the individual focus I am thinking of. Our society made great, significant strides when following the words of Martin Luther King, who focused on the content of individual character.
      If you are unhappy with the state conditions in todays world, I would suggest that this is an obvious result of identity politics. And it will get worse before it gets better.

    • @meditation4632
      @meditation4632 Před 2 lety

      @@williamerdman4888 Yea, you're probably right man.

  • @edwardmeyer873
    @edwardmeyer873 Před 2 lety

    Still listening - just heard the intro so far. Thank you for keeping the integrity of your shows guidelines.
    Strong work Coleman! Thank you.

  • @evildaddysteve
    @evildaddysteve Před měsícem +1

    Coleman, you make an excellent point that the culture of an anti intellectual bias could be limiting the black American population. What’s the solution? Black American’s need to realize that this limiting culture must change from within. Hard work, intact families, and pursuit of a meaningful life, are not features of “Whiteness” but of being Americans.

  • @jamesjorgensen8595
    @jamesjorgensen8595 Před 2 lety +32

    If Coleman had two children and they both took IQ tests, one with IQ of 120 and one with IQ of 80 would he give both the same advice for career paths? I don't think so. On this topic the tests results don't seem to be in dispute. Averages are just averages. Each person has to judge their future on the abilities they have - channeling an 80 IQ student to college can be a disaster when they would be just as, if not more, successful in a specialized trade school. Our educational system fails to channel students to directed career paths based on ability. Agree with Charles that we need to have other narratives that CRT fails to consider.

    • @mohammadalirashed3103
      @mohammadalirashed3103 Před 2 lety +8

      This is between two individuals, the answer isn't as simple when it's between groups of millions.

    • @BS-np8xt
      @BS-np8xt Před 2 lety +5

      You will struggle in many trades with an 80 IQ. Might do well as a laborer or in a helper role to qualified tradesmen.

    • @amateurastronomer9752
      @amateurastronomer9752 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mohammadalirashed3103 My thoughts exactly

    • @tomasina10
      @tomasina10 Před 2 lety

      We are facing this in our family with much loved adopted family members …In a family of College graduates …The individual is what matters . The idea of social justice and salvation is NOT achievable and would require force to achieve . The blow back is coming and a civil war WILL end the Country , all these thoughts experiments won’t matter .

    • @southafricanizationofsociety20
      @southafricanizationofsociety20 Před 2 lety

      @@mohammadalirashed3103
      Incorrect.
      “Who employs most of these affirmative-action black university graduates? The answer will not surprise anyone who knows any- thing about economics or discrimination elsewhere. More than 60 percent of black American professionals work for the government compared to a quarter of white professionals.79 In fact, 22.8 per- cent of all blacks in the American labor force are government em- ployees, compared to 14.6 percent of whites, and black overrepre- sentation among government employees keeps growing.80”
      ----
      Journal of Libertarian Studies
      Volume 14, no. 2 (Summer 2000): 212, 2000, Ludwig von Mises Institute.
      PREJUDICE IS FREE,
      BUT DISCRIMINATION HAS COSTS
      by Steven Farron

  • @beavisjohnson7717
    @beavisjohnson7717 Před 2 lety +15

    Interesting how offended people are on IQ comparisons, but everyone has been talking about race and sports forever. In fact it’s common to hear black people are more able to excel in professional sports. Tv, comedy, movies- you name it. We see the data also. Remember the movie ‘white man cant jump?’

    • @severusfloki5778
      @severusfloki5778 Před 2 lety +5

      Exactly

    • @justinoz06
      @justinoz06 Před 2 lety

      It is due to the conclusions that may be drawn from the IQ debate, which are very different to sporting ability.

    • @kephartacus5454
      @kephartacus5454 Před 2 lety +3

      @@justinoz06 there is no iq debate lol

    • @justinoz06
      @justinoz06 Před 2 lety

      @@kephartacus5454 not sure what you mean, these two are discussing it, others have mentioned it, it is debated in many fora. There is general debate as to what constitutes iq and how to measure it, whether current measures are culturally bias, lots of debate going on. Maybe you missed out?

    • @twntwrs
      @twntwrs Před 2 lety

      @@justinoz06 The "debate" if at all would seem to be carried out somewhat somewhat sub rosa a bit removed from the mainstream prefaced and interspersed with profuse caveats, disclaimers and preemptive apologies.

  • @chuckufarlie8215
    @chuckufarlie8215 Před 2 lety

    Holy fucking shit! Never even heard of C. Murray but the first 7 minutes of this blew my fucking mind! _This_ is exciting discourse! I can't believe this exists! I'm as hyped as I was about that Tyson fight. *This* is quality content. Definitely subscribed, this is daring and real in a way you just don't see these days. Hoping this is better than Chomsky V. Foucault. I can already tell that it will be and I only heard the description. Damn!

  • @horseweldon
    @horseweldon Před rokem +24

    Its actually the second time I've listened to this conversation. Whilst I think Charles Murray has an important message, Coleman's leadership and ability to articulate sensitive topics is way way way beyond his years. I'm nearly double his age... and humbled !

    • @N.i.c.k.H
      @N.i.c.k.H Před 7 měsíci +1

      I think CH is great but "leadership"? He admitted that he had no idea how to proceed given the total failure of all programs since the '70s. A leader must have a direction, not just a goal. CM doesn't seem much of a leader but he does at least have a direction even if it is only the least bad one.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      @@N.i.c.k.H I rather trust someone who doesn't claim to have all the answers than someone who does. I agreed broadly with both Hughes and Murray. My only disagreement was Hughes' fears regarding this conversation being made public. Nobody can hide these facts. People already discuss them.

  • @andreashahr692
    @andreashahr692 Před 2 lety +24

    I don't really see the catastrophe of knowing there are group differences in IQ. It's not a secret that Ashkenazi Jews and east Asians top the charts. Does all hell break lose if a white kid hears from an Asian kid that Asians score higher in IQ-tests on average too? It's sad that the US is so divided along race lines though. You could be glad to have ethnic groups with higher average IQ on 'your team' too, just saying...

    • @ubuu7
      @ubuu7 Před 2 lety

      Hearing that a smaller pop group over performs is far less of an issue compared to a smaller group underperformed. It can lend fuel to arguments of separation and exclusion, and conservatives are far more natural prone to shutting people they think are unworthy and unfit out.

    • @janso7979
      @janso7979 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ubuu7 No, to the degree which arguments of separation and exclusion are being discussed on the right, it is in reaction to being constantly told they are morally evil, culpable for some perceived crimes of their ancestors from hundreds of years ago, and the cause of nearly all black problems. I spent decades as a Democrat, and I can say that in my experience liberals are far more obsessed with race than conservatives. White liberals are also at least as racist about blacks. They just express it in a condescending, "benevolent" manner. When it comes time to buy a home or send their children to school, you'll see what their true opinions are. Conservatives are far more likely to judge people on their individual merits. Not always, of course. You'll be able to find a cartoonish white racist now and then. In a nation of 350 million people you'll be able to find examples of any type of person you can think of. In reality, true "white supremecists" are exceedingly rare in America. There might be 50,000 in the whole country. And I'd guess that half of those are presently incarcerated.

    • @autonomousthought4106
      @autonomousthought4106 Před 2 lety

      No of course not, but we live in a black supremacist society, we have to put their concerns above ours

    • @ngarumurray
      @ngarumurray Před 2 lety

      @@janso7979 LOL what about adherents of Pat Buchanan like Nick Fuentes, Lauren Witzke, Scott Mcreer etc

    • @janso7979
      @janso7979 Před 2 lety

      @@ngarumurray What about Pat Buchanan?

  • @sanghoonlee5171
    @sanghoonlee5171 Před 2 lety +10

    There is a CZcams video (if it hasn't been taken down) that shows the results of a comparative IQ test, given to black and white students attending the same university in Johannesburg, S. Africa.
    The test consisted of 2 easy questions, and deliberately avoided written words and used only pictures so that the test takers' reading comprehension skills would have no effect on their performance. The students had to look at a geometric shape, then decide which one among the given choices was the SAME SHAPE, JUST PLACED AT A DIFFERENT ANGLE. And in every result of multiple tests conducted, black students performed roughly 1 grade level below white students on average.
    This video floored me, actually... The test questions and the choices were all shown in the video, so I could see for myself that the evaluation method was fair and free of bias. The test was easy and intuitive, not college-level difficulty at all. It was not a kind of test where your previous education could help you. I could not account for the performance difference except by assuming that some students simply failed to observe the pictures accurately.
    This issue is thorny as hell, to be sure. But if there is a population-level difference among races in physical height or athletic prowess (which is undeniable), we are kind of forced to accept that a population-level difference in intelligence is at least a possibility. And whatever we conclude about this topic, shutting down discussion or avoiding the matter altogether for fear of uncomfortable findings is neither scientific nor progressive.

    • @palermotrapani9067
      @palermotrapani9067 Před 2 lety +3

      DNA research is now showing genetics and ancient DNA admixture (Neanderthal in all Eurasians, Denisovan in Asian, etc) impact certain genetic pre-dispositions to certain diseases. So as you noted, there are population level differences in physical height, facial phenotypes, athletic ability (which is clearly visible) there is a large body of DNA research showing genetics impact diseases across population groups. There was a study that showed certain Asian populations (i.e. people in Tibet) get their ability to live in high Mountain areas do to some genes from the Denisovans.

    • @LemonLimes99
      @LemonLimes99 Před 2 lety

      link the video

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      @@palermotrapani9067 And people don't question the impact of genetics on disease, yet want to insist that it has little to no influence on intelligence.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny

      That sounds like a fascinating video.

    • @palermotrapani9067
      @palermotrapani9067 Před 12 dny

      @@Musicienne-DAB1995 I said nothing about intelligence in my post I do believe. So I was only saying what research has shown. I am agnostic regarding anything related to Intelligence, but if the evidence shows that then Ok.

  • @sarahg2653
    @sarahg2653 Před rokem +6

    you handled this with the utmost professionalism. thank you for having him on.

  • @williamedwards3002
    @williamedwards3002 Před měsícem +1

    This civil discussion was incredibly insightful for me, as far as helping me better consider the nuances on both sides of the discussion. Such a refreshing listen.

  • @zalacainbilbao
    @zalacainbilbao Před 2 lety +20

    It is much more useful to face up to reality, to the truth, and learn to cope with it, rather than to deny it.

    • @zalacainbilbao
      @zalacainbilbao Před 2 lety

      @Daniel why not?

    • @sacbeme
      @sacbeme Před 2 lety +2

      @@zalacainbilbao because... would you assume a random black person is of lesser IQ than a white person if you were an employer? To do so is racist, after all, this is an individual not a group. We recognize people as individuals. So of what use is it to bring up this topic. It functionally has no usage whatsoever.
      There are billionaires with lesser IQ than some MENSA members. How do we evaluate someone's contribution to music, science, business... it's not solely intelligence. It's things like perseverance, grit, cunning-ness, ability to adapt. There are far more significant traits that benefit society than pure _"intelligence"_ . Which is why you'll never find an Asian country ( _"higher intelligence"_ ) getting sucked into this debate. They know its of no significance.

    • @zalacainbilbao
      @zalacainbilbao Před 2 lety +1

      @@sacbeme I basically agree with you. But if something is true, it should still be faced up to.
      I especially agree with you that individuals should be judged on individual merits, not on those of their perceived group characteristics.

    • @terence4427
      @terence4427 Před 11 měsíci

      @@sacbeme Great points and even Charles said there is still a LOT of overlap in intelligence across groups. For instance, he said you will find some blacks with higher IQs than some white folks and some white folks with higher IQs than Asians

  • @nickparkison977
    @nickparkison977 Před 2 lety +30

    Coleman I think you might underestimate the damage being done by falsities already pervasive in the culture. These could probably be resolved if we embraced the truth, however terrible it may be. And like Murray says, we cannot address the problem without understanding the reality of the situation. Great interview! Keep it up!

    • @nickparkison977
      @nickparkison977 Před 2 lety +6

      @Paranoia Agent the problem to be addressed is people are being lied to just to make them feel better. This has a real effect in people's lives, taking away their agency and responsibilities, which fundamentally make the lives of lower income black folks worse. It's all in the data. I wish it was just because white people are being pressured. But white people blaming themselves won't do anything unless the problems are addressed. That's kinda what the whole video was about.

    • @nickc3856
      @nickc3856 Před 2 lety +2

      @Paranoia Agent you're projecting so hard and everyone who reads your comments can see it.

  • @gregoryallen0001
    @gregoryallen0001 Před 11 měsíci +3

    asking the most difficult questions and ARTICULATING OUR REAL BELIEFS is def the way forward. we should all welcome the opportunity to SAY IT OUT LOUD ❤️

    • @georgeboehringer5530
      @georgeboehringer5530 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Imperial results say them out loud

    • @gregoryallen0001
      @gregoryallen0001 Před 10 měsíci

      @@georgeboehringer5530 you in the imperial army? wow i'm in the rebel alliance don'r forget YOU LOSE it is your destiny 🧘🏻‍♀️

  • @jasonblack4208
    @jasonblack4208 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Your comment about how you want to promote open dialogue and have real conversations with people who hold controversial viewpoints is...exactly the reason why conversations on this topic need to be mainstreamed. Put simply: the truth is always going to get out eventually. It is the first people who spread the news that get to control HOW it comes out, and a libertarian like Charles Murray who stresses the value of the individual and evaluating them on a case by case basis is one of the best options for how we go about spreading that. If he doesn't, Richard Spencer types will.

    • @Musicienne-DAB1995
      @Musicienne-DAB1995 Před 12 dny +1

      Agreed- and the information is already out there. Nobody can avoid it or hide it.

  • @itosart
    @itosart Před 2 lety +14

    Thank you for being a civil person, we need more people like you

  • @jamesthomas1628
    @jamesthomas1628 Před 2 lety +27

    Coleman, a give to you the distinction of being "a minority of one."

  • @joedirt2862
    @joedirt2862 Před 2 lety +5

    What Coleman is worried about we've already accepted in physical athleticism.

  • @58frascatti
    @58frascatti Před 8 měsíci +1

    I’ve admired Charles Murray since reading The Bell Curve and over the years watching many interviews regarding his conclusions. Having lived among academics all my life, it’s been astonishing how few of them have even read the book, but will go on for hours about what they think he was saying! The danger of Murray’s ideas going mainstream is about as likely as an argument about quantum physics disrupting a hockey game! And we can thank God for that. But even the slightest chance that his ideas will make it possible for positive changes to be explored makes his contribution invaluable.