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Guest
Guest
Hello. As an African-American that's now retired, I must confess I find this site and these threads a bit stimulating. Yes, there does indeed seem to be an unfair caste system in modern professional sports. When I was at JSU teaching biological physics, this was a topic under much discussion and, hence, the subject of much investigation and experimentation by myself and my staff. We even, during a 7 month period, got a writ from the governor to exhume the bodies of criminals for our experiments. Now, that was an adventure, let me tell you. But to stick with the study at hand, I can only tell you people on this forum that yes, indeed, there does seem to be a caste system in sports, but it is not quite what you think.
You see, the result of our findings after subjecting many a cadaver to the--how shall I say this?--the "crunch test", was that, indeed, the bones in the specimen cadavers ofafrican-american males tended on the whole to be markedlymore densethan in the specimen cadavers which were european-american. I believe the readings were, roughly, about 50psi in africans, to about 30psi in europeans, if memory doesn't fail me.
What was the result of the paper we finally published, and what portent did it have for professional sports? Just this: If the findings in the study were true, then we would expect to find those swimmers of European descent to be completely dominating the sport of swimming--due to their ligher bone structure. And this is indeed what we do see in overall society. This should be a positive boon for most of you on this site who are supporters, as I take it, of European-Americans in sports.
Contrastly, when it comes to most, or more likely all, contact sports, we would expect to find those of African descent excelling here, often at the expense of intermittent broken bones of those European contestants risking their health and bones in a contest for which they probably were not designed. And yes, from time to time, this is exactly what we do see, as illustrated by the link below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEVaRrWL4Hg
Such events commonly occur in contact sports between african men and european men.
If you would like, I could forward you the findings we came up with. JU does all its own experiments, mind you. If you have a computer that opens PDF forms, see for yourself if you like. I must confess, I was a little daunted by the prospect of swimming a local pond out back of JU, after we did the study (this was from '80-84). To think that Europeans swim so well for a reason, and Africans can never do that. Makes me more wary of these here alligators, let me tell you. That's why I stay here, sipping my coffee, reading up on websites and my morning paper. Well good day to you all, and hello again.
Dr. Malcolm T. Motembe
Professor Emeritus
Jackson State University
Edited by: Dr.M.T.Motembe
You see, the result of our findings after subjecting many a cadaver to the--how shall I say this?--the "crunch test", was that, indeed, the bones in the specimen cadavers ofafrican-american males tended on the whole to be markedlymore densethan in the specimen cadavers which were european-american. I believe the readings were, roughly, about 50psi in africans, to about 30psi in europeans, if memory doesn't fail me.
What was the result of the paper we finally published, and what portent did it have for professional sports? Just this: If the findings in the study were true, then we would expect to find those swimmers of European descent to be completely dominating the sport of swimming--due to their ligher bone structure. And this is indeed what we do see in overall society. This should be a positive boon for most of you on this site who are supporters, as I take it, of European-Americans in sports.
Contrastly, when it comes to most, or more likely all, contact sports, we would expect to find those of African descent excelling here, often at the expense of intermittent broken bones of those European contestants risking their health and bones in a contest for which they probably were not designed. And yes, from time to time, this is exactly what we do see, as illustrated by the link below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEVaRrWL4Hg
Such events commonly occur in contact sports between african men and european men.
If you would like, I could forward you the findings we came up with. JU does all its own experiments, mind you. If you have a computer that opens PDF forms, see for yourself if you like. I must confess, I was a little daunted by the prospect of swimming a local pond out back of JU, after we did the study (this was from '80-84). To think that Europeans swim so well for a reason, and Africans can never do that. Makes me more wary of these here alligators, let me tell you. That's why I stay here, sipping my coffee, reading up on websites and my morning paper. Well good day to you all, and hello again.
Dr. Malcolm T. Motembe
Professor Emeritus
Jackson State University
Edited by: Dr.M.T.Motembe