#192 How Now New World Cow (Bret Weinstein & Heather Heying DarkHorse Livestream)
Sep 27, 2023
01:28:20
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Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying discuss the origins and domestication of cattle in the New World, the decline of journalism, the influence of money on scientific research, and the role of Ralph Barrick in gain-of-function research. They also express gratitude and emphasize the importance of accountability.
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Quick takeaways
African and African American cowboys played a significant and unrecognized role in the early years of cattle ranching in the Americas.
New research challenges the prevailing narrative that European settlers brought cattle expertise to the New World.
The presence of African cattle in the Americas at least a century earlier than previously believed highlights the African contribution to the agricultural landscape and challenges the notion of European sole expertise.
Deep dives
African Cattle Introduced to the Americas Earlier Than Previously Thought
New research suggests that African cattle were brought to the Americas at least a century earlier than historians had realized. The analysis of DNA from 400-year-old cow bones excavated in Mexico and on the island of Hispaniola supports the conclusion that African and Afro-descendant people played a central role in establishing open-range cattle ranching in the Americas. This challenges the traditional narrative that Europeans had all the knowledge and skills when it came to cattle ranching in the New World. The evidence suggests that African and African American individuals were likely the first cowboys in the Americas.
Historical Misconceptions: African Contribution to Cattle Ranching Dismissed
The commonly-held view that African and African American slaves in the New World had little knowledge or involvement in cattle ranching is being challenged by new research. Quite the opposite, evidence indicates that these individuals had pre-existing expertise with cattle and actively participated in establishing open-range cattle ranching. The presence of African cattle in the Americas at least a century before previously thought suggests that African cowboys played a significant and unrecognized role in the early years of ranching.
Revisiting the Origins of Cattle Ranching in the Americas
Recent study findings challenges historical narratives surrounding the origins of cattle ranching in the Americas. It has been revealed that African cattle were introduced to the Americas much earlier than previously thought. These genetically distinct cattle were brought to the New World by African and African American cowboys who played a crucial role in establishing open-range ranching. This overturns the notion that European colonizers had sole expertise and highlights the African contribution to the agricultural landscape of the Americas, particularly in cattle ranching.
Early Ranching in the Americas: African Cattle and Cowboys
A groundbreaking study reveals that African cattle were imported to the Americas earlier than previously believed. This challenges the prevailing narrative that European settlers brought cattle expertise to the New World. In fact, African and Afro-descendant cowboys played a significant role in early ranching, demonstrating deep knowledge of open-range cattle herding. The genetic evidence from 400-year-old cow bones supports the view that African herders and their descendants were crucial in establishing the ranching industry in the Americas.
Barrick's Flawed Hypothesis on the Origin of SARS-CoV-2
Ralph Barrick, a primary architect of gain-of-function research, has proposed an unfalsifiable hypothesis on the intermediate host for SARS-CoV-2. He suggests immunosuppressed individuals contracting the virus from pangolins or other rare wildlife as a nearly untraceable pass-through species. However, this hypothesis ignores the discredited notion that pangolins were the intermediate host. It conveniently aims to exonerate the lab and lacks scientific validity. This misleading claim reflects the troubling trend of covering up the lab leak scenario.
Faulty Assumptions About Bats' Role in Transmitting Viruses
Scientific American published an article incorrectly suggesting that bats worldwide are primary transmitters of deadly viruses to humans. This flawed claim has gained traction despite being debunked by numerous studies. The sensationalist narrative persists, feeding into baseless scapegoating of bats for human diseases. It is crucial to recognize that bats comprise a diverse group of over a thousand species, and attributing virus transmission to bats as a whole is scientifically inaccurate. Such misconceptions perpetuate fear and hinder our understanding of zoonotic diseases.
In this 192nd in a series of live discussions with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying (both PhDs in Biology), we discuss the state of the world through an evolutionary lens.
In this episode we discuss how cattle got to the New World, and when and from where, and what that implies about the first cowboys. We discuss the fact that Nature published this compelling piece of research, and Science reported on it all wrong. We marvel that Nature admits that “scientists are under attack for someone else’s political gain”—but are not surprised to find they’ve got it backwards. Meanwhile, the pangolin vector hypothesis for SARS-CoV2 is being revived, and bats are hung out to dry (metaphorically), based on bad, debunked research that was done by researchers with perverse incentives.
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Mentioned in this episode:
Delsol et al 2023. Ancient DNA confirms diverse origins of early post-Columbian cattle in the Americas. Scientific reports 13(1): 12444. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-39518-3
Sluyter 2015. How Africans and their descendants participated in establishing open-range cattle ranching in the Americas. Environment and History 21(1): 77-101.https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/whp/eh/2015/00000021/00000001/art00005
Science goes full click-bait: https://www.science.org/content/article/america-s-first-cowboys-were-enslaved-africans-ancient-cow-dna-suggests
Peter Hotez in Nature: scientists are “under attack for someone else’s political gain”: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02981-z
Ralph Baric revives the pangolin vector of SARS-CoV2 hypothesis, but you weren’t supposed to notice: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41564-023-01476-x
Scientific American stokes fear of bats: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-secret-weapon-in-preventing-the-next-pandemic-fruit-bats/
Merlin Tuttle’s defense of bats: https://www.merlintuttle.org/response-to-misleading-american-scientific-bat-story/
Bret on bats in UnHerd, June 2021: https://unherd.com/2021/06/why-we-should-welcome-the-lab-leak-theory/