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echo: mens_issues
to: All
from: `masculist` masculist{at}gm
date: 2005-03-18 21:00:00
subject: Re: Women Genetically More Different From Men Than Chimpanze

Turin wrote:
> Hyerdahl wrote:
> > Masculist wrote:
> >
> > > "Carrel and Willard published their results in Nature this week.
> > > Commenting on the findings, Chris Gunter, senior editor at
Nature's
> > > Washington office, compared women to calico cats."
> >
> > No, it did not.  What it DID say was about female abilities over
male
> > abilities in the XX vs XY scenerio.    Thus, if women were being
> > compared to female cats, men would have to be compared to male
cats,
> > eh?
> > >
> > > In the LA Times article today the researcher said there were
> greater
> > > genetic differences between men and women than between men and
> > > chimpanzees.   Watch the feminists come out of the woodwork on
> this.
> >  Their whole legal claim to mandated sexual equality is based on
> little
> > > or no sex differences.
> >
> > Not so.  The claim to legal equal rights is based on the fact that
> > human beings are human beings, and the notion that one social group
> has
> > no right to be OVER the other, asshole. Here is one of the articles
> ver
> > batem and it does not say anything about  chimps.  :-)
>
>
> Of course it didn't.  Thomas is part of the Irrelevant Crowd.  Lying
> his ass off is the only way that he can push reaction buttons,
anymore,
> for his quota of attention.

The chimp comment was by a researcher quoted in the LA Times article.
Gee Turin, you sound kind of bitter today.  Did Hyerdahl break up with
you?

> Others of his cowardly bourgeois ilk have been dodging the Men's
Issues
> by glutting themselves on vicarious killing of socialists.

You're still here.

> (Check out the link below to grasp the true motives carried by these
> children of whores, in their tough little imaginary
> "provider/protector" uniforms.  Another new low for
"our" American
> Boys).

My three ex wives were all professionals like myself.  I gave them
permission to be so as long as they cleaned the house and made dinner


> Tom, the cliched broken record, though, is still giving encores to an
> empty audiotorium of taking stale sexist shots at the 1990s feminist.
> "...DIS'LL get dose femwits' panties in a twist! ...huh-huh-huh ...me
> funny. everybody mad at me!!"
>
> ......what retards those guys all are.

I'm sorry you feel that way Turin.  Hyerdahl will take you back...don't
worry.

Women may be chimps, but what's your excuse?

Tom

>
http://www.ogrish.com/archives/dog_shooting_in_iraq_for_fun_Mar_16_2005.html

Huh?

>
> > Perhaps you're
> > just off your nut.
>
>
> Tom is one.
>
>
>
> - - -
>
> His wisdom is exceeded only by his courage to speak it:
>
> Turin
>
>
> I have such sites to show you...
> ------------------------
> http://members.fortunecity.com/turinturambar/
> http://groups-beta.google.com/group/Men_First/
> ------------------------
>
> "He who changeth, altereth, misconstrueth, argueth with, deleteth, or
> maketh a lie about these words or causeth them to not be known shall
> burn in hell forever and ever...."
>
> -----
>
>
> > X Chromosome May Explain Difference Between Sexes
> > By MALCOLM RITTER, AP
> >
> > (March 17)-- Women get more work out of hundreds of genes on the X
> > chromosome than men do, and that might help explain biological
> > differences between the sexes, a new study says.
> >
> > The results imply that women make higher doses of certain proteins
> than
> > men do, which might play out in gender differences in both normal
> life
> > and disease, researchers said.
> >
> > So far, however, none of the genes identified in the study has been
> > linked to any such observable differences, said senior study author
> > Huntington Willard of Duke University.
> >
> > He and Laura Carrel of Pennsylvania State University describe their
> > analysis of the X chromosome genes in Thursday's issue of the
journal
> > Nature.
> >
> > A second paper in the same issue presents a comprehensive analysis
of
> > the chromosome's DNA, in which an international team of scientists
> > found 1,098 genes.
> >
> > Chromosomes are the threadlike packages of genes and other DNA
found
> in
> > cells of the body. People have 24 kinds, numbered 1 through 22 plus
> the
> > X chromosome and its runty partner, the Y. Women carry two copies
of
> > the X chromosome, one inherited from each parent, while men have
one
> X
> > plus one Y chromosome.
> >
> > Long before birth, females permanently turn off one copy of their X
> > chromosome in each cell, so that like males they operate with just
> one
> > copy functioning. The choice of which X chromosome is inactivated
is
> > random, an effect made visible in the unusual coats of calico cats.
> >
> > But scientists have long known that inactivation isn't perfect.
Some
> > genes on the inactivated copy continue to function, sending out
> > chemical orders for the cell to manufacture specific proteins.
> >
> > The work by Willard and Carrel suggests the inactivated chromosome
> > contains 200 to 300 such genes, in two categories.
> >
> > First, they found that 15 percent of the inactivated chromosome's
> genes
> > continue to function to some degree. More surprising, Willard said,
> was
> > what researchers discovered about another 10 percent of the genes.
> For
> > each, the activity level varied widely from one woman to the next,
> from
> > zero in some women to varying levels in others.
> >
> > That contrasts with the relatively consistent activity levels one
> sees
> > in X chromosomes from men, or in other chromosomes in either sex,
> > Willard said.
> >
> > In fact, when the study compared the inactivated X chromosomes of
40
> > women, each of them showed a different pattern of gene activity,
> > Willard said.
> >
> > Dr. Jeannie T. Lee, who studies X chromosome inactivation at
Harvard
> > Medical School, said the study provides a better estimate than
> > scientists had before of how many genes escape inactivation. And
she
> > agreed that the variability between women was a surprise.
> >
> > The work raises the possibility that varying activity of genes on
the
> X
> > chromosome can account for not only some differences between the
> sexes,
> > but also between women, she said.
> >
> >
> > 03/17/05 09:04 EST
> >
> > Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. The information contained in
the
> > AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
> otherwise
> > distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated
> > Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.



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