@[email protected] to Today I [email protected]English • 9 months agoTIL that up to 3.7% of pregnancies have misattributed paternity where the child (and possibly the mother) thought the father was someone elsewww.newyorker.commessage-square22fedilinkarrow-up1135
arrow-up1135external-linkTIL that up to 3.7% of pregnancies have misattributed paternity where the child (and possibly the mother) thought the father was someone elsewww.newyorker.com@[email protected] to Today I [email protected]English • 9 months agomessage-square22fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish3•9 months agoI’ve read that genetic-testing showed that in the poorest neighborhoods, it is over-50%, and that the deliberately stopped doing the testing, because they didn’t want to be liable for any problems this information would be producing. Obviously, when you trash people’s validity, & meaning, they become more sensation-seeking, & more careless. Poverty is a manufactured on some populations condition.
I’ve read that genetic-testing showed that in the poorest neighborhoods, it is over-50%,
and that the deliberately stopped doing the testing, because they didn’t want to be liable for any problems this information would be producing.
Obviously, when you trash people’s validity, & meaning, they become more sensation-seeking, & more careless.
Poverty is a manufactured on some populations condition.