- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 38,343
Thought that this deserved it's own thread, if only because of it's potential for rage-inducement (which can be confined here, and drop like a stone if we choose) because I'm going to use the "i"-word in a not-entirely-positive manner.
However it does involve child death and inheritable congenital genetic issues that, sadly, exist in the first place, but also, by their very nature, spread. So worth talking about.
www.theguardian.com
I won't quote from it as the whole thing is worth it. But this is a problem of culture. Massive overrepresentation. And it's the guardian, so their chosen statistical analysis is quite gentle.
This is a problem that has short-term implications and (hugely expensive) long-term ramifications.
And, frankly, I don't feel comfortable talking about it even here because of the obvious conclusions people reach for (I'm not Job, I lived in Bradford, voluntarily, for over a decade).
But the question is - what should we do about it?
I mean. I suspect fuck all. But we definitely should be getting into the weeds of the cultural problems we've imported and, frankly, changing them.
Not just for their babies. But for the general health of the population.
However it does involve child death and inheritable congenital genetic issues that, sadly, exist in the first place, but also, by their very nature, spread. So worth talking about.
One in 14 children who die in England have closely related parents, study finds
Exclusive: Calls for ‘urgent action’ as study also finds stark ethnic and socio-economic disparities in child mortality and consanguinity
I won't quote from it as the whole thing is worth it. But this is a problem of culture. Massive overrepresentation. And it's the guardian, so their chosen statistical analysis is quite gentle.
This is a problem that has short-term implications and (hugely expensive) long-term ramifications.
And, frankly, I don't feel comfortable talking about it even here because of the obvious conclusions people reach for (I'm not Job, I lived in Bradford, voluntarily, for over a decade).
But the question is - what should we do about it?
I mean. I suspect fuck all. But we definitely should be getting into the weeds of the cultural problems we've imported and, frankly, changing them.
Not just for their babies. But for the general health of the population.
