Banned
in Boston! (by the Herald!!)
Peter Brimelow writes:
Jon Entine,
author of Taboo:
Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We’re
Afraid to Talk About It [PublicAffairs,
200], just
released in paperback
, is as I understand it a perfectly harmless
liberal. Nevertheless, sheer intellectual honesty has
caused him to blunder into the issue of human
differences, and from there into being banned by the
Boston Herald (the “conservative” alternative to
The Boston Globe). This article was commissioned to
run the weekend of April 14-15, in time for the Boston
Marathon on Easter Monday, which is celebrated in
Massachusetts as Patriots’ Day…for now. Through
the miracle of the Internet, you get to read it on
VDARE! File
(not for the first
time) under “Diversity vs. Freedom.”
Why Kenyans Win the Boston Marathon (And Why We’re Afraid To Talk About It)
By Jon
Entine
It's the
passion of the adoring crowds at the National Stadium
in Nairobi. Coaches comb the countryside for a rising
generation of stars, who are showered with special
training and government perks. It's no exaggeration to
call Kenya's national sport a national religion.
After 10
straight Kenyan victories in the men’s division of
the Boston Marathon, and four consecutive wins by
East African women, even casual fans are familiar
with this success story. According to conventional
wisdom, East Africans dominate because they ran to
school as children, train torturously at high
altitude, and are desperate to escape poverty.
It’s in their culture.
There's only
one problem: The national sport, hero worship, and
social channeling speak to Kenya's enduring
obsession with not running but soccer.
Unfortunately, Kenyans (and other East Africans) are
regularly trounced in the Africa Games by West
African countries. It’s just not in their genes.
Science does
not support the speculation that Kenyans dominate
because of social factors, myths widely peddled by
the media. "I lived right next door to school,"
laughs Wilson Kipketer, world 800-meter record
holder, dismissing such cookie-cutter explanations.
"I walked, nice and slow." Some kids ran to
school, some didn’t, he says, but it’s not why
we succeed.
And for
every Kenyan monster-miler there are others, like
Kipketer, who get along on less than thirty. "Training regimens are as varied in Kenya as anywhere in the world,"
notes Colm O’Connell,
coach at St. Patrick’s Iten, the famous private
school and running factory in the Rift Valley that
turned out Kipketer and other Kenyan greats.
O’Connell eschews the mega-training so common
among runners in Europe and North America who have
failed so miserably in bottling the Kenyan running
miracle.
Though
individual success is about fire in the belly and
opportunity, genes set possibilities. East Africans
win in large measure because elite runners have a
near perfect biomechanical package for endurance:
lean, ectomorphic physiques, large lung capacity,
and a preponderance of slow twitch muscle fibers.
That’s a poor anatomical profile for sprinting
(the best Kenyan 100 meter time is a pokey 10.28),
soccer, weightlifting, and field events, sports in
which Kenyans are laggards.
"Kenyans
are born with a high number of slow twitch
fibers," states Bengt Saltin, director of the
Copenhagen Muscle Research Center, one of the top
experts in this field. "They have 70 to 75 percent
of their muscle fibers being slow. Very many in
sports physiology would like to believe that it is
training, the environment, what you eat that plays
the most important role. But based on the data, it is
in your genes whether or not you are talented or
whether you will become talented."
Not
surprisingly, East Africans win more than 50 percent
of top endurance races. Almost all trace their
ancestry to the 6,000-8,000 foot highlands that
snake along the western edge of the Great Rift
Valley. The loosely-named Kalenjins, roughly 1.5
million Kenyans, win 40 percent of international
distance events. The Nandi district, 500,000
people–one-twelve-thousandth of Earth's
population–sweeps an unfathomable 20 percent,
marking it as the greatest concentration of raw
athletic talent in the history of sports.
"If you can believe that individuals of
recent African ancestry are not genetically
advantaged over those of European and Asian ancestry
in certain athletic endeavors," notes retired
molecular biologist Vincent Sarich, "then you
probably could be led to believe just about
anything. But such dominance will never convince
those whose minds are made up that genetics plays
not role in shaping the racial patterns we see in
sports. When we discuss issues such as race, it
pushes buttons and the cerebral cortex just shuts
down."
Why do we so
readily accept that evolution has turned out blacks
with a genetic proclivity to contract sickle cell
and colo-rectal cancer, Jews of European heritage
who are one hundred times more likely than other
groups to fall victim to the degenerative mental
disease Tay-Sachs, and whites who are most
vulnerable to cystic fibrosis and multiple
sclerosis, yet find it racist to acknowledge that
the success of East African distance runners,
Eurasian white power lifters, and sprinters of West
African ancestry can be explained, in part, by
genetics?
Acknowledging
any innate differences runs head-long against the
American myth that everyone has an "equal
possibility" at success, when the Constitution,
and science, commits only to "equal
opportunity." Advances in population genetics
makes it quite clear that in some important ways
humans are different, certainly in the proclivity to
many diseases and in athletic skills. This is not
"scientific racism," as some assert. Scientists
who have documented anatomical differences between
populations reject notions that physical ability and
mental acuity are inversely linked. There is simply
no denying that genes can matter.
"Differences
among athletes of elite caliber are so small,"
notes Robert Malina, Michigan State anthropologist
and editor of the Journal of Human Biology,
"that if you have a physique... it might be
very, very significant. The fraction of a second is
the difference between the gold medal and fourth
place."
To
underscore the magnitude of such an advantage,
Professor Sarich calculated, based on population
statistics alone, the probability that all of the
last ten Boston Marathon winners would hail from the
same region in Kenya:
0.0000000000000000000000000000000000002. That’s
functionally equivalent to the last ten winners all
coming from Idaho.
Despite
overwhelming scientific evidence, the popular myth
persists that there are no meaningful genetic
differences. In his State of the Union address in
2000, President Clinton declared that "We are
all, regardless of race, 99.9 percent the
same," apparently trying to allay fears about the
potential misuse of data generated by advances in
genetic science. Well, there is no detectable
genetic difference between a wolf, a Labrador, and a
poodle–zero–but no one would dare suggest that
their body type and behavioral differences are
cultural, rather than innate. Differences are
grounded in gene sequences and proteins and are
activated by obscure environmental triggers.
All the
training in the world is not likely to turn an Inuit
Eskimo, programmed to be short and stout, into an
NBA center or a Nigerian (or for that matter an
African American who traces his ancestry from West
Africa) into an elite marathoner. The world's most
elaborate sports factory combined with
state-supervised illegal drug supplements still
could not turn even one East German sprinter into
the world's fastest human. Highly heritable
characteristics such as skeletal structure,
musculature and metabolic efficiency are not evenly
distributed across population groups.
Yet,
hypocrisy abounds, even among many scientists. Just
last week at a conference on race and sports,
Harvard professor Stephen Jay Gould, renowned for
his political correctness as much as for his
scientific acumen, apparently attempted to score
some media points with his declaration that there is
no "running gene." Of course, no scientist
claims there is a "running gene." Geneticists
and anthropologists assert only that genetics plays
a role in some patterned differences between
populations, including in shaping body type and
physiology.
Gould’s
circumlocution seem designed to play to the popular
myth of equal possibility. Reuters fell for the ruse, headlining its story:
"Athletic Achievement Isn't in the Genes." Yet,
even Gould didn’t go that far. Buried in the
article was Gould’s admission that sports success
is a complex combination of social, environmental,
and biological factors, none of which can easily be
teased out and isolated. That’s of course exactly
what geneticists and anthropologists have shown
repeatedly. In other words, humans are different, a
product of the intertwined and inseparable
relationship of genes and environment. Such nuance
is apparently too controversial to trust with the
media.
But hard
scientists who actually experiment with genetic
variation, such as Arizona State University
evolutionary biologist Joseph Graves, Jr., reject
such equivocation as obfuscation. "The fact that
monolithic racial categories do not show up
consistently in the genotype does not mean there are
no group differences between pockets of populations.
It varies by characteristic. It doesn't necessarily
correlate with skin color, but rather by
geography," notes Dr. Graves, an African
American and author of The
Emperor’s New Clothes, a book about
race science. "Populations with roots in
equatorial Africa are more likely to have lower
natural fat levels. That is likely a key factor in
running. It's an adaptive mutation based on climate.
But that's a long way from reconstructing century
old racial science."
Caution over
the potential misuse of genetic research is
certainly warranted. After all, pseudo-science and
claims that certain "races" are genetically
superior and destined to dominate has historically
been evoked to justify colonialism, slavery,
apartheid and the Holocaust. It’s not clear,
however, that disingenuity, deception, and even
censorship are the tools to guarantee against such
potential misuse.
Popular
thinking, still reactive to the historical misuse of
"race science," lags the new bio-cultural model
of human nature. The question is no longer whether
genetic research will continue but to what end.
"If decent people don't discuss human
biodiversity," warns Walter E. Williams of George
Mason University; "we concede the turf to black
and white racists." Sports offer a
non-polemical way to convey this message and
de-politicize what has sometimes been a vitriolic
debate.
Jon Entine (http://www.jonentine.com)
is author of Taboo:
Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We’re
Afraid to Talk About It [PublicAffairs, 200], which
was just released in paperback.
April 15,
2001