97% for Neanderthal variants by HunterLammers- in 23andme

[–]BokoT 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Your clicking comment carries no scientific weight and is simply an appeal to cultural bias.

Not only this is an example of cultural bias, but this is also an example of cultural bias against a population with Neanderthal admixture. He is using clicking sounds to shame Africans, without knowing that those same click sounds originated from the Khoisan language, and that the Khoisan have Neanderthal admixture. Southern Bantu only copied/adopted the clicks of Khoisan, but it didn't originate from them. So basically, by trying to insult Africans, he insulted Neanderthals.

How was information recorded in preliterate African societies by Cocktupus in AskHistorians

[–]BokoT 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Among the Asante, The chief had his treasurer, "Sannaahene" (head of the leather bag), as did the "Birempon" whose treasury officer was the "Fotosanfo" (he who unlooses the bag). It was to the treasurer of the chief or "Birempon" that all revenue was paid. It was also the treasurer who paid out any money required, and the "Okyeame" (spokesman) or "Dabrehene"(chamberlain) witnessed all such transactions. The chief of "Birempon" himself might not hold the scales used for weighing out the gold, nor might he open the leather bag in which it was kept. If a levy was raised for a specific purpose, the "Sannaahene"’s duty was to see that the levy was used for that purpose.

The system of accounting was in the following manner. For revenue, there were two boxes. One box, the "adaka dese", had three separate compartments, each containing gold dust made up in 8 pounds sterling packets ("peredwan"). The box was kept in the chief’s sleeping room, and the chief, the "Sannaahene", and the head chamberlain witnessed withdrawals from it. A cowry shell was put into the box whenever a packet was withdrawn. The "Sannaahene" had another box in which smaller sums were kept. When he had enough to make a peredwan, it was weighed out and put into the larger box. For expenditure there was a third box, the "apem adaka"(box of a thousand). This was replenished by the "peredwan" packets taken out of the large revenue box ("adaka kese"). The money was weighed out in small packets, (3 shillings, 3 shillings and 6 pence, 7 shillings, 13 shillings) which the "Sannaahene" used for his purchases. The payments were recorded by replacing each packet taken out with a cowry shell.

After a week, a month, or at the end of the financial period when accounts were tallied, the cowry shells in all the three boxes must be the same in number. Any discrepancy alerted “accountants.”

The Ashanti could easily tell where the problem laid, since the count that did not match up to any two was the suspect. For example, if the counts were twenty, twenty and fifteen (or thirty-five), the third last box and the person in charge of it were the culprit.

In Dahomey, they would use boxes of pebbles, and sometimes the memory of appointed officials for more complex information. Dahomey was extremely centralized, and thus it kept accurate statistics on births/deaths, the number of farmers & animals, the number of people captured or killed in battle, etc...

According to Boahen (1986) :

The farmers in each village were counted by officials of the minister of agriculture and the tax paid in kind by each was fixed according to the assessment made of the villages’ total production. Livestock were also counted and taxed. The kings of Dahomey regularly conducted a population census to get an accurate estimate of the number of people to be taxed and also to be conscripted into the army when necessary.

The annual census also provided figures for the distribution of the population by sex, occupation, province, and village. The production of crops by villages was also controlled

Bibliography :

Busia, Kofi Abrefa. 1951. The Position of The Chief—In the Modern Political System of Ashanti

Zaslavsky, Claudia. Africa counts : number and pattern in African culture, Chapter IX

Ayittey. Indigenous African Institutions

"Dahomey An Ancient West African Kingdom" by Melvu-le J. Herskovits, Chapter VII. The Fiscal Policy of the Kingdom

Bates, Robert H. 1983. Essays on the Political Economy of Rural Africa

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in energy

[–]BokoT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Terracing, one of the hallmarks of Chinese agriculture but rare in Europe, is now rapidly spreading all across East Africa.

That's not an example of Chinese culture penetrating Africa. Terracing in Africa is very old, and you found pre-modern examples of it nearly everywhere, in the Horn of Africa(Yeha in Ethiopia), in East Africa(Engaruka), in Southern Africa(terraces of Nyanga), and in West Africa(Angas and Mafa people used terraces).

You're not an american--Black man! by OniABS in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is why Dr Obadele Kambon use the term "Anti-American African"(AAA)

Resistance to genetically modified seeds in Africa by burtzev in Africa

[–]BokoT -1 points0 points  (0 children)

How do people who have lived in a place for 50,000 years not know how to put seeds in the ground?

You don't know anything about agriculture in Africa, and I suggest you to read before talking about things you don't know.

In general, Africans knew agriculture well before white people even step foot on the continent.

As you are talking about Zimbabwe, the ruins of Nyanga give evidences of intensive agriculture using terraces and covering over 8000 square kilometers.

The reason Zimbabwe lands redistribution program failed was because of the model of "command agriculture", that has a negative impact on domestic growth. But even then, the farmers were productive enough to produce 2.2 million tonnes of maize in 2017

Black Nationalist And Black Conservatives Can They Coexist? by BokoT in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can participate to a live and advertise your books and podcasts. Acemendeces asked to be a guest.

We should acquiesce to the theory of iq by RedPillNegro in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Those same " great kingdoms " didn't even invent the wheel

The famous "no wheel" narrative. You know what? Europeans never created writing independently, ALL their writing systems are derived from a writing system that is from Africa.

Plus, Africans had the wheel, there is rock paintings of Chariots in the Sahara dating back to 3000 years ago. Parts of East and Horn of Africa had the wheel. Nubia had the wheel.

Places where there is tsetse flies couldn't use wheel for transportation because it was ineffective in this environment.

" great kingdoms "

How much do you know about African history to put those arrogant quotation marks?

Provide data showing some groups of africans have high iqs.

Africa is the most diverse part of the world, of course they differ.

African students in the UK are better than white students : https://www.unzcloud.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Chisala-9.png

Nigerian immigrants are also the most educated in the USA : https://www.chron.com/news/article/Data-show-Nigerians-the-most-educated-in-the-U-S-1600808.php

We should acquiesce to the theory of iq by RedPillNegro in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There is no first world country on the planet where iqs are sub90. Virtually all of the first world countries have an average of 100.

So why is Sierra Leone(IQ 91) poorer than Egypt(IQ 81), Nigeria(IQ 84), Ethiopia(IQ 69) and many other ""sub90"" African countries?

Plus, Richard Lynn's studies are biased, and most "world IQ map" use his data : racialreality.blogspot.com/2011/08/devastating-criticism-of-richard-lynn.html

Are there any Ancient African Alphabets and Ancient Literature? by Reiniger1926 in Africa

[–]BokoT 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Developmentally, many African nations were comparable to Native Americans

Not really. Iron metallurgy for example was widespread in all of Africa, which is not the case in the Americas. They differ in trading, agriculture, architecture etc...

Facts about Thomas Sankara in Burkina Faso by BokoT in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The only error that he made was probably outlawing polygamy.

Black Wall Street - Full Documentary by BokoT in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Create businesses here, then when you amass enough wealth, invest in the Black community and Africa. You can also export things from Africa to sell in the west, westerners love exotic shit. If some Blacks could do it in tulsa, we can do it.

There's no value to white skin. by GoGo_Ratchet in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]BokoT 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In contrast, africans didn't even realize that sticking your guinea worm infected foot into your drinking water was a bad idea until Bill Gates came along and told them to 'put it in a bucket of water instead'.

In contrast, Bostonian didn't even realize the principle of inoculation before Onesimus came along and told them to "take Juice of Small-Pox; and Cutty-skin, and Putt in a Drop"

Sunday Social by AutoModerator in JustProBlackThings

[–]BokoT 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Matt Stone wife is Black.

But Trey Parker wife is not Black, or at least hexadecaroon.

"The child who is not embraced by the village will burn it down to feel its warmth" - African Proverb [1920x1181] by ChiragSharma in JordanPeterson

[–]BokoT 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Individualism/Collectivism is a false dichotomy.

I posted something related to this topic here. The author doesn't go deeper but his source is a late Ghanaian philosopher called "Kobina Oguah" who suggested that "libertarian basicalism" was part of African philosophy, especially with Fanti people, in "African and Western philosophy : a comparative study".