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Jesuit Reductions
June 24, 2023
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Ruins of Jesús de Tavarangue, a Jesuit Reduction

Benjamin Franklin once wrote of the surprising event of those who return to Indian society in a letter:

When an Indian Child has been brought up among us, taught our language and habituated to our Customs, yet if he goes to see his relations and make one Indian Ramble with them, there is no perswading him ever to return, and that this is not natural [to them] merely as Indians, but as men, is plain from this, that when white persons of either sex have been taken prisoners young by the Indians, and lived a while among them, tho’ ransomed by their Friends, and treated with all imaginable tenderness to prevail with them to stay among the English, yet in a Short time they become disgusted with our manner of life, and the care and pains that are necessary to support it, and take the first good Opportunity of escaping again into the Woods, from whence there is no reclaiming them.[1]

The reason behind this is because Indian tribes offered a community that the Protestant ethic could not provide. It cannot solve the decline in social capital that sociologist Robert Putnam has documented in Bowling Alone. The assimilation of ethnic foreigners into tribes is also a successful example of how diversity need not necessarily result in conflict. Aristotle noted the perils of diversity: “Another cause of revolution is difference of races which do not at once acquire a common spirit; for a state is not the growth of a day, any more than it grows out of a multitude brought together by accident. Hence the reception of strangers in colonies, either at the time of their foundation or afterwards, has generally produced revolution.”[2] At the same time, he also identified friendship as a unifier: “For friendship we believe to be the greatest good of states and the preservative of them against revolutions; neither is there anything which Socrates so greatly lauds as the unity of the state which he and all the world declare to be created by friendship.”[3]

The communal aspect of these tribes was further enhanced by the fact that every person had a specific role to play in the community. The hunters would provide meat, farmers the agriculture, etc. If someone could not work, they would still be cared for, but since each person’s role directly affected the immediate community, they could not live an isolated life like modern capitalist society, where a person can work and not have any civic participation.

By living as the Indians did, the white outsiders were accepted. However, life wasn’t completely idyllic, for tribal warfare still existed. Nonetheless, life in Indian societies was seen by many as superior to the developed English society outside. As David Graeber and David Wengrow write:

Some emphasized the virtues of freedom they found in Native American societies, including sexual freedom, but also freedom from the expectation of constant toil in pursuit of land and wealth. Others noted the ‘Indian’s’ reluctance ever to let anyone fall into a condition of poverty, hunger or destitution. It was not so much that they feared poverty themselves, but rather that they found life infinitely more pleasant in a society where no one else was in a position of abject misery.

Still others noted the ease with which outsiders, taken in by ‘Indian’ families, might achieve acceptance and prominent positions in their adoptive communities, becoming members of chiefly households, or even chiefs themselves. Western propagandists speak endlessly about equality of opportunity; these seem to have been societies where it actually existed. By far the most common reasons, however, had to do with the intensity of social bonds they experienced in Native American communities: qualities of mutual care, love and above all happiness, which they found impossible to replicate once back in European settings.[4]

Slaving in monotonous jobs does not result in a sense of belonging or meaning in life. Capitalist society is not the only option for governance in the modern world. Although we cannot go back to more primitive tribal societies that require ownership of large swaths of land and hunting for sustenance due to human population increase, the communal society can still be incorporated today. We can even avoid the violence between tribes if civilized Catholicism is incorporated as the basis of their culture and way of life. This civilizing effect can be seen successfully with the Jesuit Reductions.

The Jesuit Reductions in Paraguay is one example of retaining the close bonds natives held while improving their quality of life with proper economic techniques. Aristotle observed that “The equalization of property is one of the things that tend to prevent the citizens from quarrelling,”[5] and the Reductions are a perfect model of a successful community, where everyone is cared for:

The land and all that stood upon it was the property of the community. The land was apportioned among the caciques, who allotted it to the families under them. Agricultural instruments and draught-cattle were loaned from the common supply. No one was permitted to sell his plot of land or his house, called abamba, i.e. “own possession.” The individual efforts of the Indians, owing to their indolence, soon proved to be inadequate, whereupon separate plots were set aside as common fields, called Tupamba, i.e. “God’s property” which were cultivated by common labour under the guidance of the Padres. The products of these fields were placed in the common storehouse, and were used partly for the support of the poor, the sick, widows, orphans, Church Indians, etc., partly as seed for the next year, partly as reserve supply for unforeseen contingencies, and also as a medium of exchange for European goods and for taxes (see below). The yield of the private fields and of private effort became the absolute property of the Indians, and was credited to them individually in the common barter transactions, so that each received in exchange the goods he desired. Those abamba plots which gave a smaller yield because of faulty individual management were exchanged from time to time. The herds of livestock were also common property.[6]

The natives of the Christian commonwealth had all the jobs that would be expected of a prosperous society:

Some were carpenters, joiners, wood-turners, builders; others blacksmiths, goldsmiths, armourers, bellfounders, masons, sculptors, stone-cutters, tilemakers, house-painters, painters and gilders, shoemakers, tailors, bookbinders, weavers, dyers, bakers, butchers, tanners, instrument-makers, organ-builders, copyists, calligraphers etc. Others again were employed in the powder-mills, tea-mills, corn-mills etc.

Unlike other Indians, those of the Reductions had a respect for authority and government, and thus order was maintained. One Jesuit writing in 1644 records the general problem of Indians in relation to authoritative figures:

I do not believe that there is any people on earth freer than they, and less able to allow the subjection of their wills to any power whatever – so much so that Fathers here have no control over their children, or Captains over their subjects, or the Laws of the country over any of them, except in so far as each is pleased to submit to them. There is no punishment which is inflicted on the guilty, and no criminal who is not sure that his life and property are in no danger.[7]

The Jesuit Reductions mitigated these problems. Catholicism was the foundation of the Reductions, and thus a moral framework encompassed their entire lives, a major contrast compared to their surrounding enemies who sought to destroy their lifestyle:

The Reductions of Paraguay are justly called a model of a theocratic commonwealth. Religion ruled the entire public and private life. The entire community attended Holy Mass and the evening devotions daily. Prayers and religious songs accompanied and encompassed work and recreation alike. Religious instruction was given daily for the children, on several days each week for catechumens, and every Sunday for the entire parish. Through the medium of easily sung catechismal hymns the doctrines and the principal events of the life of Christ and those of the saints were impressed upon the minds of the people. A sort of religious handbook bearing the title “Ara poru aguiyey haba yacoa ymomoeoinda” (On the Proper Use of Time) written by P. Jos. de Insauralde (born at Asunción; d. 1730), printed at Madrid in 1759-84 in two volumes, and which was very popular, gave directions concerning the performance of various acts at home and in church in a holy and meritorious manner.

Public religious life in the splendid churches found its expression in an exceedingly brilliant manner, particularly on feast-days. Church music was carefully cultivated, especially under the direction of Italian and German Fathers, and its production would have been, according to the testimony of Don Franc. Xarque, a credit to any Spanish cathedral. In consequence, the church choirs of the Reductions were frequently invited to the Spanish cities. The reports of the celebration of the Feast of Corpus Christ, the patronal feasts, the Rogation and penitential processions, the devotion to the saints (particularly to the Blessed Virgin), the representations of the Crib and the Passion, mystery-plays, sacramental dances, and so on, convey a charming picture of the religious life in the Reductions. Religious societies also, especially the Sodalities of the Blessed Virgin, attained to a remarkable growth. The reception of the sacraments, after the Reductions had become firmly grounded, and a solid body of older Christians had been obtained, was, according to the annual reports, and in accordance with ecclesiastical practice of the times, very good. The members of the religious societies received Communion monthly, many of them weekly. The early marriages (boys were obliged to marry at 17, girls at 15), strict discipline, and surveillance fostered chastity among the natives, which aided the natural increase of the race, ordinarily not very fruitful (the average number of children in was four). Careful control and strict segregation of all objectionable elements did the rest. “Such innocence prevails among these people,” Bishop Faxardo wrote, 20 May 1720, from Buenos Aires to Philip V, “who are composed exclusively of Indians naturally inclined to all kinds of vices, that I believe no mortal sin is ever committed there, the vigilance of the shepherds foreseeing and preventing even the slightest fault.” A number of authentic testimonials of bishops and royal visiting inspectors speak with the greatest admiration of the religious zeal, the devotion, purity of morals, Christian brotherly love, and conscientiousness of the Indians, as well as the unshirking devotion and the edifying lives of the priests.[8]

So forward-thinking were the Jesuits in their planning that they never resorted to capital punishment, with “Crimes deserving capital punishment, which occurred but rarely, were punished by expulsion from the Reduction and surrender of the perpetrator to the Spanish authorities.”[9]

The Jesuits and the Indians, although of different ethnic backgrounds, lived peacefully together. “The fact that these tribes, so enamoured of liberty, did not undertake a single uprising against the missionaries, while on the other hand revolts among the encomienda Indians were very frequent, and the additional circumstance that two or three Fathers were sufficient to keep a population of 1000 to 2000 souls in order and discipline, surely speaks very strongly in favour of the system and proves the untruth of the accusation of Jesuit despotism.”[10] Because of the success of the Reductions, the perils of diversity that Aristotle warned of were avoided. Catholicism, which promoted love for fellow man, was crucial to this lasting peace.

Even after the Jesuits were suppressed and expelled from the Reductions in the latter half of the eighteenth century, the Reductions continued to have beneficial societal results. For example, professor Felipe Valencia Caicedo studied 30 Jesuit missions in South America, focused on the areas around Reductions. His conclusions may be surprising to those who know little of the effectiveness of the Jesuits:

He discovered that in everything from literacy and skills training to overall levels of education, the areas around the former Jesuit missions continue to show significantly higher levels of achievement than equivalent communities without missions—with median years of schooling and literacy levels 10 to 15 percent higher, and modern per-capita incomes nearly 10 percent higher. These areas also show the persistence of skills that can be quite specific, and Mr. Valencia offers the example of embroidery. “We know for a fact that this was introduced to the area by Jesuit missionaries, who were mostly coming from the Low Countries,” he explains. “They bring this European technology or distraction or hobby, this innovation. And it turns out today there is more embroidery in former Jesuit municipalities” than elsewhere in Brazil.

“They’re there for 150 years,” he says of the Jesuit missions. “By the time they leave there are eight generations that have been trained and educated in these Jesuit ways, so to speak.” And apparently, the impact on local culture was more or less permanent. “There are these mechanisms of transmission of knowledge that are still present today,” Mr. Valencia says, including parents passing on knowledge to their children.[11]

Valencia also noted that these descendants had a higher sense of ethics and were more charitable than those outside the Reductions. To summarize, Catholicism and practical education go a long ways to develop successful communities, where people can work together and live faithful lives. The legacy of the Jesuit Reductions is a testament to their fruitful work.


[1] https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-04-02-0173

[2] Aristotle, Politics, 5.3.

[3] Aristotle, Politics, 2.4.

[4] Graeber, David. The Dawn of Everything (p. 20). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Kindle Edition.

[5] Politics, 2.7.

[6] https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12688b.htm

[7] Graeber, David. The Dawn of Everything (pp. 41-42). Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Kindle Edition.

[8] https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12688b.htm

[9] https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12688b.htm

[10] https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12688b.htm

[11] https://www.americamagazine.org/politics-society/2018/12/11/centuries-later-jesuit-missions-south-america-are-still-strengthening

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Jack Day

February 06, 2024
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The Hypocrisy of Ben Shapiro on Radical Muslims

In 2011, Ben Shapiro produced a video titled “The Myth of the Tiny Radical Muslim Minority.” The purpose of this video is deceptive. There is nothing incorrect about saying that many Muslims throughout the world hold radical views. The problem is that Ben portrays radical beliefs as something unique to Muslims, or at least to a level more extreme than can be found among other nations or religions. He makes this point clear in the beginning of the video:

There’s plenty of violent material in the Old and New Testaments. Hey, I’m an Orthodox Jew, I read the Old Testament a lot. But believers in those particular texts are not currently ramming airliners into towers or beheading journalists or mutilating female genitalia.[1]

There are many Jews who commit similar actions. Rather than suicide attacks with airplanes, Israelis use the weaponry from their planes for terrorist activities, such as the attack on the USS Liberty[2] and the destruction of hospitals in Gaza.[3] Alison Weir writes,

In Israel’s 2009 “Operation Cast Lead” Israeli forces used these weapons systems to carry out more than 2,360 air strikes on Gaza, in its 2012 “Operation Pillar of Defense” Israel carried out 1,500 strikes on Gazans, in it’s 2014 “Operation Protective Edge” Israeli forces launched 4,762 strikes across Gaza, and in 2021’s “Operation Guardian of the Walls,” Israeli forces carried out 1,500  air strikes on Gaza. Altogether, these killed at least 4,288 Gazans, a large percentage of them women and children. Gazan resistance groups during the same “wars” killed 99 Israelis.[4]

Female genital mutilation is not a practice among Jews, but Israelis do engage in organ harvesting of Palestinians. Until 2008, when Israel’s Knesset “banned the purchase and sale of human organs,”[5] Israel was known as one of the top countries where organ harvesting traffickers conducted their business, according to Nancy Scheper-Hughes, the founder of Organ Watch.[6] Targeting of Palestinians for organ harvesting continues to this day.[7]

As for Ben’s specific claims of Muslims “ramming airliners” into towers, he is presumably referring to 9/11. The 9/11 hijackers were members of Al Qaeda, a terrorist group espousing an extreme Wahhibist interpretation of Islam that is exported from Saudi Arabia, an ally of the U.S. Although no one would say the U.S. is a Muslim country, it maintained its relationship with Saudi Arabia, even though “The intelligence community identified [Saudi Arabia] as the primary source of money for al Qaeda both before and after the September 11 attacks,” the 9/11 Commission reported.[8]

As Ben lists the beliefs of Muslim countries in support of his claim of a radical Muslim majority, there is a question as to whether nations like the Christian-majority U.S. and Jewish-majority Israel are “moderate” when compared to Muslim-majority nations. It seems that the claims of radicalism can be applied to these Western countries as well.

For example, after President Biden’s withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, 42% of Americans held that this was the wrong decision.[9] This is in spite of the fact that hundreds of thousands of Afghans have been killed in that war.[10] 48% of Americans believe that torture is acceptable in some circumstances.[11] 62% of Americans say they support abortion.[12] Among Jewish Americans, support of abortion is at 83%.[13]

32% of U.S. Jews “believe God gave the land that is now Israel to the Jewish people,” and among Orthodox Jews like Ben, this number rises to 87%.[14]

56% of Jewish Israelis support abortion.[15] According to Pew Research, “roughly half of Israeli Jews (48%) say Arabs should be transferred or expelled from Israel.”[16] This is a view Ben himself at one point publicly supported. In a 2003 article, he wrote, “If you believe that the Jewish state has a right to exist, then you must allow Israel to transfer the Palestinians and the Israeli-Arabs from Judea, Samaria, Gaza and Israel proper. It's an ugly solution, but it is the only solution. And it is far less ugly than the prospect of bloody conflict ad infinitum.”[17] Probably due to backlash, he later repudiated this position: “Some on the right have proposed population transfer from the Gaza Strip or West Bank as a solution. This is both inhumane and impractical. Moving millions of Palestinians out of areas they have known for their entire lives will certainly not pave the way to peace.”[18]

Only 21% of Israeli Jews believe there is discrimination against Muslims.[19] This is surprising in light of the fact that Israel imposed a starvation diet on Gaza,[20] continuously bombs Palestinian hospitals and schools, bulldozes their homes, and indiscriminately massacres them under any conceivable pretext. Apparently, Israelis do not believe this radical behavior counts as discrimination.

An October 18-19, 2023, poll given during the assault on Gaza showed that 47% of Israeli Jews thought that Israel should “not at all” “take into consideration the suffering of the civilian Palestinian population in Gaza when planning the next phases of fighting there.”[21] By the beginning of November over 9,000 Palestinians in Gaza were killed, more than 3,700 being children.[22]

Ben says nothing of the Israeli military’s shared belief in the liceity of targeting civilians. For example, a booklet was published by the Central Region Command of the Israeli Army, and included the following quote by the Command’s Chief Chaplain:

When our forces come across civilians during a war or in hot pursuit or in a raid, so long as there is no certainty that those civilians are incapable of harming our forces, then according to the Halakhah they may and even should be killed ... Under no circumstances should an Arab be trusted, even if he makes an impression of being civilised ... In war, when our forces storm the enemy, they are allowed and even enjoined by the Halakhah to kill even good civilians, that is, civilians who are ostensibly good.[23]

As Israel Shahak notes, influential rabbis with followers in the Israeli army label Palestinians as Canaanites and Amalekites, and advocate genocide by quoting Deuteronomy: “you shall save alive nothing that breathes, but you shall utterly destroy them.”[24]

Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel, said of Gentiles:

“Goyim were born only to serve us. Without that, they have no place in the world – only to serve the People of Israel.”

“In Israel, death has no dominion over them… With gentiles, it will be like any person – they need to die, but [God] will give them longevity. Why? Imagine that one’s donkey would die, they’d lose their money.

“This is his servant… That’s why he gets a long life, to work well for this Jew.”

“Why are gentiles needed? They will work, they will plow, they will reap. We will sit like an effendi and eat… That is why gentiles were created.”[25]

Rabbi Eliezer Kashtiel, an educator “at the state-sponsored military prep-academy Bnei David in the West Bank settlement of Eli,” spoke of Palestinians as goyim that need to be enslaved:

Abolishing legal slavery has created deficiencies. No one is responsible for that property. With God’s help it will return. The goyim (non-Jews) will want to be our slaves. Being a slave of the Jews is the best. They must be slaves, they want to be slaves. Instead of just wandering the streets, being foolish and harming each other, now he’s a slave, now his life is beginning to come into order.[26]

The Rebbe Menachem Schneerson, a leader of the Hasidic movement who has been celebrated with a national holiday by every U.S. president since Carter, said, “Two contrary types of soul exist, a non-Jewish soul comes from three satanic spheres, while the Jewish soul stems from holiness.” He also said, “The entire creation [of a non-Jew] exists only for the sake of the Jews.”[27]

Many of these Muslim countries that Ben lists as having radical beliefs, such as support of Osama bin Laden or honor killings of women, have been supported by Western nations both economically and politically. If the West is supporting these extremist countries, are they not complicit in radicalism?



[1]

[23] Shahak, Israel. Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years (Get Political Book 5) (p. 92). Pluto Press. Kindle Edition.

[24] Shahak, Israel. Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years (Get Political Book 5) (p. 110). Pluto Press. Kindle Edition.

 
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August 20, 2023
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Death Penalty Doctrine

In 1979, Father Anselm Günthör wrote that “the statements of the ecclesial Magisterium [on the death penalty] are occasional assertions and do not represent a fully definitive position; we must not undervalue them, but nor should we consider them to be unchangeable and perennially valid Magisterial statements.”[1] In other words, there was never any infallible teaching on the death penalty at that point.

There was a unanimous consensus among the Church Fathers on the death penalty. The Fathers allowed for the liceity of the death penalty, yet many still called for forgiveness. For example, St. Augustine, who was not averse to capital punishment in principle, still called for the forgiveness of criminals.

During the trial of the murderers of two priests, Saint Augustine asked the judge not to take the life of the assassins with this argument: “We do not object to your depriving these wicked men of the freedom to commit further crimes. Our desire is rather that justice be satisfied without the taking of their lives or the maiming of their bodies in any part. And, at the same time, that by the coercive measures provided by the law, they be turned from their irrational fury to the calmness of men of sound mind, and from their evil deeds to some useful employment. This too is considered a condemnation, but who does not see that, when savage violence is restrained and remedies meant to produce repentance are provided, it should be considered a benefit rather than a mere punitive measure… Do not let the atrocity of their sins feed a desire for vengeance, but desire instead to heal the wounds which those deeds have inflicted on their souls”.[2]

It should be noted that an unanimous teaching of the Church Fathers does not necessarily entail the teaching is infallible. As Jimmy Akin observes in his book Teaching with Authority: How to Cut Through Doctrinal Confusion & Understand What the Church Really Says,

It … isn’t sufficient to produce a catalogue of quotations from churchmen spanning many centuries to show that a teaching is infallible by the ordinary and universal magisterium. For that, the quotations must indicate that the teaching is definitively to be held. If, in their own day, the churchmen only taught in a way that required “religious assent of will and intellect” then the matter would be a longstanding teaching but not an infallible one. As in every other exercise of magisterium, definitiveness—not length of time—is the key to infallibility.[3]

We do not see a definitive magisterial statement on the death penalty in the first millennium. We see statements approving of the liceity in several local councils and statements of popes, but these cannot be considered definitive. As E. Christian Brugger notes in his book Capital Punishment and Roman Catholic Moral Tradition, “the early-fourth-century Spanish Synod of Elvira and the late-fourth-century Council of Rome were local rather than universal councils, and the relevant writings of Popes Gregory I and Innocent I were personal letters, not documents promulgated with the specific intent to solemnly define doctrine.”[4]

Brugger further writes,

Pope Innocent III in 1210 had required members of the Waldensian sect as a condition of their reconciliation with the Church to profess (among other things) “that the secular power can (potest) without mortal sin impose a judgment of blood provided the punishment is carried out not in hatred but with good judgement, not inconsiderately but after mature deliberation”.... Did this constitute an infallible proclamation? It did not. The profession in which the statement appears was published in a personal letter to the group’s leader and not in a papal bull to the universal Church. If some proposition in the profession was not already a matter of faith, its inclusion in the Waldensian oath did not constitute it as such. So Innocent’s statement could have been mistaken.

It is not unprecedented for a non-dogmatic profession to teach error. The fifteenth-century “Decree for the Armenians” in the bull Exsultate Domino by Pope Eugene IV taught that the sacrament of Holy Orders is “conferred by handing over the chalice with wine and the paten with the bread”.... This, of course, is an error since the Sacrament of Orders is conferred by the laying on of hands by a Catholic bishop. Neuner and Dupuis confidently conclude that the Decree for the Armenians is “neither an infallible definition, nor a document of faith.” The same could be said of the Waldensian profession. The death penalty’s legitimacy has never been defined by a pope or ecumenical council.[5]

There was also the Roman Catechism commissioned by the Council of Trent. This catechism likewise approved the death penalty, but this section was not written with language to have defined the subject definitively. Moreover, the section relating to the death penalty mentions that civil rulers can without sin lawfully resort to the death penalty for “The end of the [Fifth] Commandment is the preservation and security of human life.”[6] But since prison systems have improved, resorting to the death penalty is unnecessary. Since a murderer can be imprisoned successfully to prevent further murders, the death penalty would be immoral, for it unnecessarily takes a life, even if that person is a murderer. Prison allows redemption, a strong message of the Gospel.

Pope Francis legitimately developed the doctrine on the death penalty when he updated the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which now reads, “the Church teaches, in the light of the Gospel, that “the death penalty is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person”, and she works with determination for its abolition worldwide.”[7] The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith confirmed that “the new formulation of number 2267 of the Catechism expresses an authentic development of doctrine that is not in contradiction with the prior teachings of the Magisterium.”[8]

Even though prescriptions for the death penalty were recorded in the Old Testament, Jesus teaches forgiveness:

“You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, Do not resist an evildoer. But if anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other also; and if anyone wants to sue you and take your coat, give your cloak as well; and if anyone forces you to go one mile, go also the second mile. Give to everyone who begs from you, and do not refuse anyone who wants to borrow from you.”[9]

God forgave Cain, David, and Paul for their involvement in murders instead of having them put to death, and we are called to do the same. This is why the current doctrine on the death penalty derives from the message of forgiveness from the Gospel.



[3] Akin, Jimmy. Teaching with Authority: How to Cut Through Doctrinal Confusion & Understand What the Church Really Says (pp. 220-221). Catholic Answers Press. Kindle Edition.

[4] E. Christian Brugger, Capital Punishment and Roman Catholic Moral Tradition (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame, 2014), 143.

[9] Matthew 5:38-42.

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July 09, 2023
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Black IQ

Cardinal Sarah is an extremely well-read and insightful prelate, who has displayed his brilliance in books like The Power of Silence and God or Nothing. He was born in northern Guinea, which as of 2020 has an average IQ of 67.[1] Yet, he is a man who speaks three languages fluently, has degrees in theology and Sacred Scripture, and has distinguished himself by his orthodoxy.

He began seminary training at the age of 12 and has continued to avidly learn since then. It is evident that Catholic education is a powerful tool for developing the mind into an industrious intellect that seeks truth and success. And although many in traditionalist circles find refuge in him, he has maintained Catholic orthodoxy, such as when he said that “whoever is against the pope is, ipso facto, outside the church.”[2]

Cardinal Sarah is not some genetic outlier among the Guinea people. A healthy environment and dedication to success can create many more Sarahs.

The category of a Black race is arbitrary due to the spectrum of genetic variation, and the only objective identifier for race is the singular human race. Nevertheless, for ease of discussion this blog post will refer to those who identify as Black/African, although these terms in regard to IQ studies ultimately become meaningless, as will be shown.

According to hereditarians like Charles Murray, low Black IQ is due to genetics and cannot be significantly improved. This position is completely false. The Eyferth study is proof that the primary cause of IQ discrepancies is the environment:

In the 1950s, German psychologist Klaus Eyferth speculated that Black children raised apart from both the racism and ghetto culture that were then unfortunately prevalent in Black America could be expected to perform intellectually on par with whites. To test this thesis, he administered a German-language version of the standard Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) test to hundreds of children fathered by American servicemen with German mothers. Eighty-three of the children were white, and ninety-eight were mixed-race: the daughters and sons of Black GIs and white German girls. As a culturalist would predict, the children had almost identical SAT scores. The white boys beat the Black/mixed boys by four points—101 to 97—but the mixed-race girls whipped the white girls 96 to 93.

Some might object that selection by the U.S. Army of only soldiers within a certain IQ range slanted the results of the test, but we know from the work of Sowell and others that the IQ averages of different racial groups within the U.S. Armed Forces have ranged between 80 and 105, and generally reflect the IQ distributions in our larger society.[3]

This wasn’t the only study to show that race had a negligible effect on IQ:

According to a 2017 Brookings Institution report by Jonathan Rothwell, data from the 2015 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) show that there is “no [longer] any test score gap between white and multiracial high school students.” In reading and reading analysis, in fact, “multiracial students outperform other groups, including Asians” by a statistically significant margin.

This high performance was not due to any uniquely high level of socioeconomic status enjoyed by biracial teens; the average multiracial high school student comes from a family making $72,000, as opposed to $118,107 for whites and about $60,000 for Blacks. Nor are multiracial children an “exotic” population, resulting mainly from marriages between small high-performing groups like Asians and Jews. Most are just Black and white. According to Rothwell, “[n]early half of multiracial students aged fifteen to eighteen report having Black ancestry, and Black-white combinations are the most frequent interracial origin of multiracial children.”[4]

Reliable adoption studies have shown no significant difference in IQ:

A superior adoption study and one not discussed by the hereditarians was carried out at Arizona State University by the psychologist Elsie Moore, who looked at black and mixed-race children adopted by middle-class families, either black or white, and found no difference in I.Q. between the black and mixed-race children. Most telling is Dr. Moore’s finding that children adopted by white families had I.Q.’s 13 points higher than those of children adopted by black families. The environments that even middle-class black children grow up in are not as favorable for the development of I.Q. as those of middle-class whites.[5]

Further studies into IQ have elucidated other reasons for the apparent gap:

Important recent psychological research helps to pinpoint just what factors shape differences in I.Q. scores. Joseph Fagan of Case Western Reserve University and Cynthia Holland of Cuyahoga Community College tested blacks and whites on their knowledge of, and their ability to learn and reason with, words and concepts. The whites had substantially more knowledge of the various words and concepts, but when participants were tested on their ability to learn new words, either from dictionary definitions or by learning their meaning in context, the blacks did just as well as the whites.

Whites showed better comprehension of sayings, better ability to recognize similarities and better facility with analogies when solutions required knowledge of words and concepts that were more likely to be known to whites than to blacks. But when these kinds of reasoning were tested with words and concepts known equally well to blacks and whites, there were no differences. Within each race, prior knowledge predicted learning and reasoning, but between the races it was prior knowledge only that differed.[6]

Eugenicist Richard Lynn has noted that Scrabble is a cognitively demanding activity:

Scrabble is another cognitively demanding game involving combining letters to make words. It has been shown by Toma, Halpern and Berger (2014) that top scrabble experts have “extraordinarily high levels of visuospatial and verbal working memory capacities” and score 1.23d higher than elite college students who scored at the 93rd percentile of the quantitative SAT. There have been 38 winners of the American National Scrabble Championships 1978-2016 and 16 winners and runners-up of the Canadian National Scrabble Championships 1996- 2013. All of these have been men.[7]

Although the top players in Scrabble have high IQs, it turns out that Nigerians dominate competitive Scrabble, even though many live in poverty. Two of the top ten ranked players are from Nigeria, and 28 are in the top 100.[8]

James Flynn wrote of the closing Black-White IQ gap, noting how for the years 1970-2002, “Blacks gained 4 to 7 IQ points on non-Hispanic Whites between 1972 and 2002.”[9]

Rick Nevin has identified what may be the main cause of the Flynn effect: lead poisoning. It is known that “additive exposure to urban air lead and lead paint in deteriorated housing” has severe effects on the brain. An increase in violent crime is one example, and decreasing IQ is also drastic:

Extensive research shows a dose-response relationship between blood lead and IQ later in life. Preschool blood lead of 10 mcg/dl is associated with 7.4 IQ points lost relative to blood lead of one mcg/dl. Another 1.6 IQ points are lost with blood lead of 15 mcg/dl relative to 10 mcg/dl, and each mcg/dl over 15 lowers IQ by 0.23 points, on average. Therefore, blood lead of 40 mcg/dl is associated with an average loss of 15 IQ points, and a 60 mcg/dl level lowers IQ by almost 20 points.

The percent of children ages 1-5 with blood lead over 5 mcg/dl fell from over 31% in 1988-1991 to 2.6% in 2007-2010.

In the late-1970s, the average blood lead for black children under age 3 was 50% above the average for white children, but black children were six times more likely to have blood lead of 30–39 mcg/dl and eight times more likely to be over 40 mcg/dl. Those children were juveniles in the early-1990s, when the black juvenile burglary arrest rate was 60% higher than the white rate, but the black juvenile violent crime arrest rate was five times higher, and the black juvenile murder arrest rate was eight times higher than the white juvenile rate. The percent of black preschool children with blood lead above 30 mcg/dl fell by 90% from the late-1970s to the late-1980s, and the black juvenile murder arrest rate then fell 83% from the early-1990s through 2004, and fell to 87% below its early-1990s peak in 2012. The “chaotic families” hypothesis provides no insight into this stunning decline in black juvenile homicide arrests over the past two decades: The percent of black children living in two-parent families was 38% in 1990 and in 2012.[10]

As regulations to remove lead were incorporated in US law, the average IQ of Americans rose. The toxic chemical problem, while still not being completely eradicated from older homes and so low blood-lead levels in children still exist, has largely been solved. There have also been major improvements in developing countries. The United Nations reported in 2011 how a

California State University study cites the massive benefits the phase-out has brought, including more than 1.2 million fewer premature deaths annually, 125,000 of them of children, with tests showing lead in blood levels dropping dramatically by 90 per cent or more, particularly in cities.

Some 58 million crimes have been averted and IQs (intelligence quotient) have risen, with research indicating that children with lots of lead in their blood are much more likely to be aggressive, violent and delinquent. It is estimated that $2.4 trillion in costs have been saved each year, equivalent to 4 per cent of global gross domestic product (GDP).

The UN World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that between 15 and 18 million children in developing countries currently suffer from permanent brain damage due to lead poisoning and, according to the results of the research, leaded petrol was responsible for some 90 per cent of human lead exposure.[11]

With improvements in the standard of living, it appears the trend of increasing Black IQ will continue.


[1] https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/average-iq-by-country

[2] https://www.archbalt.org/cardinal-sarah-to-oppose-the-pope-is-to-be-outside-the-church/

[3] Reilly, Wilfred. Taboo: 10 Facts You Can’t Talk About (p. 68). Regnery Publishing. Kindle Edition.

[4] Reilly, Wilfred. Taboo: 10 Facts You Can’t Talk About (p. 69). Regnery Publishing. Kindle Edition.

[5] https://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/opinion/09nisbett.html

[6] https://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/opinion/09nisbett.html

[7] https://www.unz.com/article/nigerians-jews-and-scrabble-an-update-on-the-iq-debate/

[8] https://www.unz.com/article/nigerians-jews-and-scrabble-an-update-on-the-iq-debate/

[9] https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01802.x

[10] Nevin, Rick. Lucifer Curves: The Legacy of Lead Poisoning. BookBaby. Kindle Edition.

[11] https://news.un.org/en/story/2011/10/393292-phase-out-leaded-petrol-brings-huge-health-and-cost-benefits-un-backed-study

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