Stuff You Should Know - Kissing Cousins: A History of Marrying Family
Episode Date: August 25, 2022Despite the overall creepiness of it, marrying family members is way more common than you might think, both historically and today. Ewwww!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh and there's Chuck and we're doing it today like we're
Brothers because this is stuff you should know
Okay
Okay, but we don't we don't make out that's that was my point. I was tell lighting everyone know that we don't make out
Yeah, I was hoping you were not gonna ask me where this idea came from because I honestly can't remember
Oh, I thought you're gonna say you prefer not to say
No, I remember Livia helped us with this one and she did great job. This is outstanding
But I remember sending the email, but I don't remember what happened just before I sent that email
I well all I remember is that that email was frantic and in all caps with a lot of misspellings
I had gone to lunch with my super hot cousin. I don't think that anything to do with it cousin Rhonda
Well, you know Rhonda, everybody knows Rhonda
There is no cousin Rhonda just so everyone knows that was a Josh joke. Mm-hmm. I don't have many cousins. Do you have a lot of cousins?
I don't know
Perfect I
Was just kind of thinking about this and I just don't have any my dad had one brother and he had three sons
One of whom passed away a few years ago the other two. I'm not close to or not even touch with actually
My mom's sister never had kids her brother
Never had biological kids, but I'm actually closest to my cousin David
Do you met in our show in Kansas? Mm-hmm. Oh, yeah
David was adopted and I'm like tighter with him than anyone sure and then my mom's other brother has two daughters and a son who
Seemed great. I just you know, we're sort of in touch when I was on Facebook
But we kind of fell out of touch over the years, but you know, they're good people. Is that Rhonda's family?
That's Rhonda, but I'm not one of these families that has like, you know, 20-something cousins
Yeah, I seem to remember as a child in Ohio having like a bunch of cousins, but it's not clear as an adult like if they were like
You know close friends of my mom's kids or that kind of thing. I know I have one cousin who's like in his 70s
It's just all over the place. It's a big mess basically. Gotcha. I'm not going to marry any of them
I'm already married and you mean I are verified not cousins
Correct, but as we'll see it's not that big of a deal at least with cousins
Depending on where you are absolutely and again, I don't remember what inspired this
But I looked into it a little bit before sending it off to Libya and found that generally speaking
Around the world through history and now marrying cousins and most of the world is fine
Yeah, they're cool with it. They like it and there's good reasons too
But if we're talking about so that is I actually saw a distinction here
So that is a what would be called a co sanguineus marriage
Second cousin or closer, right? Yes, exactly and that sanguine or is like blood, right?
So you're saying like it's a related blood or blood relative marriage is essentially what that is
Again, it depends on just how close you're going there people can be cool with it
But there is a definite stopping point
Almost around the world in every culture and not just the ones around today, but in
Throughout history
There's basically been a general taboo on you having
sexual relations with your nuclear family that siblings parents
Sons daughters all that stuff that when you're when you're that close you just should not be touching him improperly
Right as Hodgman would say hugging and kissing. Sure. That's his
He that's his stand-in for intercourse. I know it makes me more uncomfortable than if you just said sex
That's the thing he says that is not his real life, you know application
He'll go no one's ever gotten past first base with Hodgman. Oh, it's so sad
So Livia did a pretty smart thing
I think with this research and started out with animals because you would you know, if you want to look at
our our primate friends and other mammals, it's kind of a fun place to start and
generally speaking
animals also avoid
interbreeding and it depends on which species as to how
Kind of hard line they are about it and how much they try to avoid it and how much they try to avoid it seems to be
entirely based on
Because you know, they're not one to say like ooh, that's gross. That's creepy
Some animals might but most don't but it's entirely based on what's called inbreeding depression
Basically, like will it be bad for our species if we do this? Yes, so, you know
Anthropologists said well, you know, we're studying animals and animals show
Sexual aversion to siblings or parents
So if animals do it and humans are animals like does that just mean that all of these cultural taboos around the world and throughout?
history are basically the human version of
innate sexual aversion aversion tendencies that any animal would have that it's just the kind of the natural evolution of a
this biological imperative to not
Reproduce with our parents or siblings. That's right, but what have they found? Well, I mean, that's one very widely
Believed theory that that's what it is
Other people have said well, I think instead that what it is is humans are smart enough to see that
That there is a problem with you know inbreeding as well as we'll see later on
That the the offspring can have, you know problems that other offspring of non-cosaguineous
Yeah, marriages wouldn't have so we just observed this over time and made up these laws around it to make it taboo
For that reason, that's another theory, right?
Which I mean one of the people that put this forth is a gentleman named William Durham and it seems like he's saying like
Otherwise we would be doing this
Right. I I guess I guess so maybe yeah, okay
No, I don't want to put words in his mouth, but it just seems like the theory is basically that like
No, when it comes to humans, there is no natural aversion, but we just
Sort of invented this thing for good reasons, but yeah, but based on observations of you know
We tried it at first and it didn't really work out
So now we're seeing like we need to make some sort of universal law that can extend through the ages
You know because a taboo is a lot more than just a law. It's like
It's it's just it's a law plus, you know, I'm saying there's like a there's a real like
There's there's this guy named Jonathan hate. He used to be with you University of Virginia
I don't know if he is still or not, but he was studying moral intuition and one of the ways that he studied that is he would present
Study participants with this little
Scenario where I think it was Julie and Jack maybe
Our brother and sister they're traveling together in the south of France
They're in a cabin one day and they decided to feel like a penthouse letter. Oh buckle up, buddy
Um, they decide just to just to have a new experience that neither one has ever had and probably never will have again to have sex
Okay, even though they're blood brother and sister. Okay. Okay, so he puts a spin on this. He says
Julie is on the pill
Jack wore a condom
They both decided that they wanted to see how interesting this would be and that it wasn't going to harm anybody
there was no chance of producing offspring and they kept this as a secret to themselves that
Actually brought them closer together as brother and sister to have this shared secret. They never did it again. Is that okay?
And to a person people respond with no, that's not okay
And Jonathan height would say or hate would say why not and people couldn't
Couldn't put their finger on it. They just knew it was wrong because yeah, and there's been a lot of questions about that
It's like, you know, what study group are you talking about? What does that really show?
But it's a really kind of an interesting demonstration that totally. Yeah, we have this really
distinct feeling
Basically across the board at least, you know in most cultures in most societies that that is wrong
There's something very wrong with it. Even if we can't overtly say what's wrong with it
Even if there are wine coolers involved
Yeah, that's funny. You say that because I just saw a Seinfeld episode where George tries to come on to his cousin
Upset his parents and his cousin is drinking wine coolers in the back of the van right before they're about to do
That's really funny. Yeah, totally weird and it very much dates Seinfeld and myself. I guess for sure
Although all those like new
Fangled alcoholic beverages. Those are all just sort of the new wine cooler. Aren't they exactly? Yeah, all right
So we should talk about the Westermark effect. This is pretty interesting
It is there was a late 19th century
Sociologist from Finland named Edward
Vestermark, I guess I should have said the Vestermark effect and there was a hypothesis that makes a lot of sense that basically said
two kids that are raised together
Won't be sexually attracted to each other as they you know when they get older and then that was expanded to that also includes like parents in the house and
Studies have backed this up and then later it was even expanded further to be like you don't have to even be related if you were raised together
Then you're not gonna be attracted to each other later
Right and so that really supports the idea that our cultural taboos against
incest is a is it's from a biological imperative
Right that there's some part of growing up and reaching adolescents where some mechanism is triggered along the way or it's like
I don't I'm not attracted to you. You're my sibling kind of thing and there's plenty of studies that back this up actually
there's I
Think more often than not the studies tend to back it up
Although there have been studies that kind of showed the opposite, but there's so few and far between that it seems like the
Vestermark effect is possibly a real thing and it extends beyond
blood relatives
so that kids who are raised together that might not even be blood siblings but are raised in the same house or say like on a
Kibbutz they found that it's it's also apparent as well. They will have that same Vestermark effect too
Right, but they also found that it only because I was gonna make a joke about like Willis and Kimberley
mm-hmm, but
it wouldn't apply because it seems to only
be a thing if they were
Cohabitating before they were six years old
Which would not be the case with Willis and Kimberly. No and explains everything they could
They could fall in love
there is also
This thing called well, I don't even think it has a name actually
But just sort of like the the backward version of the Vestermark effect, which is and I've heard I feel like I've heard real life
stories about this unless it's just been in
TV shows and movies is when
Kind of like separated at birth situations where they meet each other later and have a very strong
Physical attraction to one another. Yeah, so they're but then they find out their cousins and or or maybe even siblings or first cousins
And then it's like oh in the movie version, but then they eventually find out
That of course it was just a big mistake and they are really in love and it's okay. Hooray. They can hug and kiss finally
Right, which I was gonna say the Royal Tannenbombs, but they were they were actually raised together
So that kind of flies in the face of Vestermark. I think they were actual. Oh, no
She was adopted. Yeah, that's right. So there actually is a term for this
It's called genetic sexual attraction and it's not just in movies, dude
There's this really interesting government handout. You can go search the Cumbria
Cumbria City Council
Genetic sexual attraction and it'll bring up a PDF that they give to people who have been adopted
Who are going to reunite with family members that says hey, we really want to tell you about this
Really strange experience that you might have where you find you are powerfully
Attracted to your biological mom who you're just meeting your biological sister or brother
Yeah, and that yes, it's very weird and it's going to make you feel weird
But don't follow it through to its, you know, seemingly logical conclusion of having sex with them because you're going to ruin your lives
You're gonna put a strain on this new relationship and it's not really you're not really sexually attracted
We think we think that it's just such a powerful
Like connection that you're saying yeah, that as an adult you accidentally
Mis-translated into a sexual attraction because that's the only thing it could possibly explain it just does not compute
Right, but it's really really interesting and it does seem to be a real thing that you have to like take in into account when you reunite with a
biological family member
Where's Cumbria and why Cumbria?
I'm just gonna leave that it is in the UK. Oh, okay. I'm pretty sure does it matter?
They've got a great handout. No, I just wondered if it was
This is an especially problem like a problem there, especially or doesn't it seem like
Yeah, definitely. Maybe it is just a Cumbria problem. I don't know
I got the impression that it was you know genetic or biological
Well, no, I mean that it happened there a lot so they're like, I guess we need a pamphlet now, right?
It's a it's a well done pamphlet, too. Or maybe they have a I'll never mind
I'm just gonna drop that one. I think that's best. In fact, maybe we should just take a break
I think that's best as well, and I'm gonna think about what I almost did
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All right, so I guess if we want to that was a pretty good setup I think I
Think if we want to go back in time
It gets pretty interesting because depending on where you are in the history of humans and where you are on planet Earth
It's sort of gone from
People didn't really do it. Some people did some people frowned upon it or
Generally, nobody really frowned upon it for a little while. I guess you could even almost classify it as a fad in some cases
But if you look at religion certainly throughout time, there are all kinds of
Interfamily sexual unions from
Zeus and Hera who were siblings?
all over
Muslim and Jewish and Christian traditions, you know, there's an explanation due
When Adam and Eve have Cain and Abel and then sort of look around at each other
Go, well, wait a minute. We're supposed to populate the earth, right? So
Various religions have explained that away as there were also
twin daughters born and
That's how the earth was originally populated and maybe Cain even slew Abel
Because I guess he got he got the hot one, right? I want myth mythy
Yeah, it sounds like a money python sketch or something like it really does
There's this classic princess beauty and then like the in fact, I think that was a money python sketch
Probably I don't know the one but I'm guessing yeah
So the thing is is that they have found most historians tend to agree that
even though like deities or you know
Ancient figures and in religious texts were involved in incest that among common everyday people
They were not it was not a widespread phenomenon. It was almost
relegated to the elite
And by almost I mean it absolutely was it's not like if you were an elite family
You were definitely engaged in incest no matter what culture or what period you're in but you are far more likely in in history
to
If you were an elite to have an incestuous relationship, then if you were just an everyday shmoe cutting stones to build a pyramid
Yeah, and you know, it's it's the same as what we'll you know, we'll talk about royals later on
It was a way to keep it all in the family and keep that power consolidated
And
We'll see evidence of
Economic reasons for doing that as well as just sort of being the elite ruling class
And in fact in some cases with the elite ruling class
They touted it as like sort of like we are this special that we are
Almost required to do this. I mean not just above the law above the taboos. Yeah, like that is yes
They are definitely creating an elite status for themselves and it does like it's definitely been shown
scientifically documented now that all all of these kind of
folklore and
Histories and religious texts are being proven like two-tone commons parents have been shown to have been brother and sister
Based on histories
We're pretty sure Cleopatra married both of her brothers at different times and that her parents were probably brother and sister
So it definitely did happen just to what extent is is unclear
That's right
And I think there was one exception as far as the commoners go and that was during the Roman
Egyptian period first a third century CE where I
Guess that might have been a fad thing because the census shows that there were a lot of common people that were in
You know sibling marriages basically
Yeah, but we don't know what everybody thought of that
But if it was that widespread, I guess people weren't that down on it, you know, right?
And then in Iran or Persia at the time Zoroastrian Persia from the 5th century BCE to the 11th century CE
They had something called
ex-Wedota
Which basically said this is a really spiritual powerful ritual you can you can engage in
On a Friday night with your brother or sister and that they they said that you get a lot of power
spiritually from this act and they think possibly it's because you you were having to overcome, you know
You're aversion to incest and supposedly you gain some power from that
That's right, and it wasn't necessarily like a marriage, right? No, it was like ritual sex
Sure, like Alistair Crowley style exactly in the desert
So that's generally like what we've kind of been talking about is sibling stuff
And how that's gone through history when it comes like we said at the beginning when it comes to cousins
That's really a different story even today in many parts of the world
Cousins, I mean not from the beginning of time because it is interesting that they did studies of ancient people and
Found DNA evidence and this is just last year in 2021
From almost 1,800 ancient humans going back about 45,000 years or at least as far back as that
Only 3% it looked like were even cousin marriage
So it's something that got more popular after ancient humans, which I think is really interesting
Yeah, they think it started around the time that history did which is usually where we place, you know
A thousand or two years after agriculture and they think that it was a result of agriculture of settling down
That you would have a much greater aversion to marrying your cousin in hunter-gatherer societies because there would be much less
Genetic diversity, but when you take a bunch of different people and pull them into the same place
Yeah, they might be related by marriage or you know, their cousins a couple times removed
But because of the increased genetic diversity, there would be far less chance of there being some sort of
Genetic mishap from the mating of those cousins. Yeah, and I guess one thing we didn't point out is that
Previous to this when people were
Engaging in like the elites and sibling marriage and things like that. They generally avoided
Genetic mishaps because as you'll see it's still pretty rare. We'll get to that later
But they did things to discourage that kind of stuff
Like some of the marriages were celibate and stuff like that and it was really all about
Consolidation of power and not like all right and now we'll have 12 kids right exactly with eight heads
This one stat kind of alarmed me though, and this is of course just one person's opinion
But there's an anthropologist at Rutgers named Robin Fox who estimated that 80% of all marriages in history
May have been second cousin or closer, which that seems really high
Yes, but they make a really good case and they say that until we had
Segways and trains and stuff like that
You when you went courting you probably didn't court much more than about five miles away from home
Sure, because you had to walk there and back it usually in a day
So within that five mile radius you were much more likely to encounter cousins
And so as a result the cover cousin marriage probably was like
Taking place at a really high rate. I don't know where they came up with 80%
But it is a it's a pretty interesting hypothesis at least. Yeah, absolutely
And we're gonna jump around sort of all over the world to you to see what has happened in other cultures and China is one
That's pretty noteworthy and that for a lot of China's in fact most of their history
If you were first cousins and you wanted to get married it was generally okay
Unless they were they were the kids of two male siblings and they just reckoned because you had the same family name
It was a little too weird
They think they thought that like
Brothers with the same family name were kind of considered more relatives
Then say a brother and a sister with two different last names because the sisters been married off
Which is just not true. No, it's not but I mean, it's a cultural thing, you know
Yeah, but this also came about in the early 80s with the PRC marriage law
banning first cousin marriage and
It was about birth defects and it was the same time as sort of their I
Don't know what I mean. Do we call it eugenics?
They said that they wanted to improve quote the quality of the population. So yeah, I'd say that's eugenics
Okay, but it was in lockstep with the one child policy and that's basically when China started getting like super in everyone's business
Yeah, as far as the child rearing goes
But what's interesting is that's about a hundred years after America started passing laws on that kind of thing, too
Yeah, that's true. So there's another there's a really cool hypothesis by a guy named Joseph Heinrich who's an evolutionary
biologist and he traces a really big change back to
506 CE
when the Catholic Church
The people leading the church basically said hey
You cannot marry anyone closer than your third cousin from now on which is interesting because we we consider a co-sanguinist
Relationship second cousins are closer, right? So maybe that's where that comes from
But they they are not entirely certain where why they said that but they said that and it was a big time rule and the
Catholics started running the show around that time all over
Europe so this applied to a lot of people and Heinrich's hypothesis is that that
Changed things so much that it led to the modern world basically
right with the idea that
I guess the family bonds took a hit people were encouraged to be a little more individual
Listic, I don't know why I put a big pause in the middle of that and
and basically trust other people such that
Societies were able to form because it wasn't like well. I only trust my family, you know
they started it really came down to human trust as far as branching out and and
Larger groups of non-related people kind of getting along and trusting each other
Yeah, because if you only trust and care for and take care of your kin
You know a kin network can only be so large
So your society can only be so large, but if you remove that kind of kin network stuff
Like by saying you need to marry outside of your kin network
Then you can't support a larger and larger society too and then they think also that led to things like
Free market competition that we might not have had that or an emphasis on that kind of thing
But like you said individualism that it basically whatever we think of as the West today
Traces its roots back to that and it all had to do with not being able to marry members of your king group
Which is the opposite of the Josh Clark motto, which is never trust families
Another little sidebar here that I thought was interesting was the
Some people think that the tradition at a wedding of saying if anyone has any objections
to the marriage is sort of a
Evolution of the question. Does anybody know if these two are related? Yeah, I thought that was amazing
Yeah, yeah, so Heinrich wrote a book if you're like I need to know more about this. It's called how the West became weird
Weird as in Western educated
industrialized rich and democratic
Right not Austin weird. No, but I think he also says like kind of Austin weird too. Yeah, okay
So we talked about you know when people think of like
Like incest and royalties or even you know intra family marriage
Like you you tend to think of things like the Habsburg jaw and I know we've talked about that before but I don't remember
Did we do like a short stuff on it or something? No, I tried to think of it. I think I'm pretty sure it was a video
one of our videos that we did because I remember
flashing images of these
Humongous underbites Chuck I swear to you we've talked about in the last year
Really? Yes, I swear and either that or my sense of time has been so messed up in the last couple years that well
I'm just I'm just done basically, right? So the Habsburgs
were royals who inbred so much that they had like you said what was known as the Habsburg
jaw and
What I said, which was a big time underbite and like I have a bit of a
Even bite not quite an underbite
And I've always been a little self-conscious about it, but when I saw the Habsburg jaws, I was not
Nothing to worry about. Yeah, Charles II of Spain
Was described as quote swallowing all he eats whole for his nether jaw stands out so much
That his two rows of teeth cannot meet
Yeah, that's the Habsburg jaw for you. I'm pretty sure you can chew your food, right?
No, no, no, I'm fine. I'm a little more Bruce Springsteen and not quite Habsburg
So the the the much bigger problem that the Habsburg faces that their children had an infant mortality rate of about 18%
Yeah, which was high even at the time
But it was specific for that family and what they were doing
I think you touched on it earlier was they were consolidating power
They were making sure that some other family from some other country didn't worm its way into the Habsburgs and take over
Germany or Saxony or
Austria wherever the Habsburgs were ruling and they they just kept it in the family
And so there were some problems genetically
But they were far from the only family to try this and some of the greatest
Economic dynasties that the world has ever seen did the same thing for the same reasons too. Yeah, the Dupont's
Pierre Samuel Dupont
Said in 1810 quote the marriages that I should prefer for our colony would be between the cousins and that way
We should be sure of honesty of soul and purity of blood
in quote and that was you know, it's not only about
Power but I think keeping the money in the family. Yes being wary of strangers coming in because they're rich
That kind of thing. So I think it was at least how I read it was a little less like a
Eugenics pure bloodline thing and a little more like we got to keep our own
Yes, it was the same thing for the Rothschild the Jewish banking family
It basically the exact same thing and so the Dupont's which were founded, I believe in France
Dupont's first name was Pierre Samuel back in 1810 the Rothschild
I know where I believe in France. I know I believe they were from France and
The Habsburgs basically ruled Europe for you know, quite a while centuries, I believe and so in Europe the idea of
intra-family
marriages and inbreeding between close relations was kind of looked at as like if you were well to do you kind of did that thing
So there wasn't nearly enough as much an aversion to it as there was in the United States
Which is why the United States was one of the first countries to really start passing laws
against marrying
Close relations actually
Yeah, 1875 is when things started to kind of I think people just started to
Not do it as much culturally in the US and then as far as laws on the books
They did even started a little bit before that and what was the very first state Josh Kansas
Yeah, the Jayhawks leading the way in incest laws
That's that don't do it in 1858 and by the mid 1920s
Most of the states had laws on the books
Olivia points out that if you were a western state
You were a little more likely to be ahead of the curve because they were newer states
And they were just writing their laws for the first time so they kind of you know had to go through everything
Right, and this was a time when they everyone in the country. It's just started looking at the laws around
marriages basically in a health and safety manner and not so much like we just want to be in your business thing right and it's strange to
Think of today and especially as an American, but apparently America has long had a outlier preoccupation with
Like close relatives marrying like elsewhere in the world as we'll see it's not a thing
But even in parts of Europe, it's all it's a much more modern aversion than it has been in America
Like I guess around the world we're known as like we got a real problem with cousin marrying like almost like me thinks
They doth protest too much. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I know what you mean
25 states in the US today have banned first cousin marriage only half
Seven more have some restrictions and I think Arizona's is love it fairly adorable because they allow it if you're both at least
65 years old or older
Or if you can't reproduce so I guess they're like, you know, I guess you really couldn't find anyone else
Or you really really loved each other. Just don't make any babies
That's that's the Arizona law. Yeah, absolutely
So and again, we're talking co sanguinist marriages in most laws. That means second cousins are closer
and
Again around the world. This is not considered a problem that cousin marriages
Apparently as much as 10% of the global population
practice
marriages of second cousins are closer and then in some Middle Eastern provinces, it's as high as 80%
Yeah, and it's interesting when you look at this
I
Guess it was a study. It was they were interviews in
Pakistan in 1995
Around this and the reasons that these women gave were they make a lot of sense
They they said that a few different things that they were more compatible
Not compatible compatible
With family than strangers, which makes sense. Yeah
That their in-laws were kinder to the brides if they were from the same family and that
Within if you had a I guess a co sanguinist marriage, you were less focused on physical appearance and looks. Yeah
that's that was the the
Pakistani surveys
Respondents like take on the whole thing that they just didn't consider it like that and then the other thing is they were suspicious of
People who wanted to marry outside their family because in a society like that where there was a lot of intra marriage or intra family marriages
It was a real red flag when somebody outside of your family was like, hey
You want to marry me because it would say that their family found them unfit to be married
So they've got real problems, right? So so yeah, it would you would just not want to marry something like that in that in that sense
Shall we take a break?
Yeah, let's all right. We'll talk about some more famous examples and then get to the bottom of the health risks right after this
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I'm Mangeh Shatikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology
But from the moment I was born it's been a part of my life in India
It's like smoking you might not smoke but you're gonna get second-hand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams cancelled marriages K-pop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are gonna change too
Listen to skyline drive and the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
So Chuck before we get started again
I want to say something because I came across the
Kind of a working definition of incest is way different than the just kind of the general
Way that we're using it. I've tried to pepper this with you know
Intra marriage or cosanguinist marriage, but incest specifically which most people just think of as like
sexual relations between very close family members is
supposedly defined as
Like it's a dominant version of that
It's it's an abusive version of that where somebody in a position of power like an older brother and older sister or a father or mother
Basically molests like one of their family members
It's a very specific kind of sexual relations among family members and probably the darkest of all the kinds
So that's the true definition. That's what I saw. Oh interesting. Yeah, I always thought that it could also mean consensual
Yeah, I think that's what most people think that's why I wanted to share that because that's what I thought too until you know
Yesterday when I was running across it. All right
Thanks for clearing that out. You're welcome
So let's talk about the the elephant in the room, which is the health risks
that's sort of the
the unspoken thing people always think about in the back of their head when they hear of
Of like, oh, I have family members that married each other and their third cousins
And the very first thing that probably pops into someone's head is is like, is this gonna be problematic when they go to have kids and
As we will see that doesn't necessarily mean that it will isn't that astounding. Yeah. Yeah, it's crazy
Like I my entire view of this thing has been completely upended in the last two days because it depends on
Well, we'll get into in a second
But when most people think of like close relations marrying you just think of children born with abnormalities birth defects
possibly
Genetic disorders and all that can happen
But the reason it happens isn't because brother and sister, you know had sex and automatically God punished them, you know, right?
That's not that's not how it works
What it is is the brother and the sister are much more likely to be carriers of a certain recessive gene and
And so when you put those two together and produce a an offspring that offspring is almost certainly going to have that
genetic disorder or abnormality or whatever and so that that that's just likelier to happen
But even among
intra marriages or intra family marriages
That's a really rare outcome to be honest
Yeah, I mean these genetic disorders that we're talking about which are everything from sickle cell anemia to
cerebral palsy I
Guess cystic fibrosis some of these things they're rare to begin with so even if you're doubling up your chances
It's it's not like it makes it likely. It's still gonna be rare
Right, and it's the case where like this is the thing that reveals that recessive gene
Mm-hmm, you know because the the brother and the sister don't have this disease. That's why it's recessive, right?
So they don't know this going in and then all of a sudden they have a kid that has a spurt defect and they you know
They maybe do genetic testing and it's unraveled, right?
So the thing is that can happen to two non-related people to sure because there's so many
Recessive genes out there in the general population, but because there's so many and there's so many people that the chances of two
Unrelated people is much less like you said it might be double for people who are related
But still in absolute terms, it's not that that much of a risk
Numbers-wise, but what you're saying is when you get to two non
Like if you're not marrying a family member
You're actually engaging in more of a genetic crapshoot than you are as a
Marrying a family member because you could know probably what's likely or to happen if right unless you've done like you said genetic counseling
You have no idea how your genes are going to match with somebody else's that again. We have so many genes
There's so many different possible mutations and there's so many people in the in the
Reproductive pool that the chances are just very low that it's going to produce some sort of genetic disorder
Abnormality or something like that. Yeah, and I think historically it's been a lot more common in
in
Very small rural communities
Where the gene pool period is just a lot smaller, right?
And you know, it's just math basically you're just gonna be more at risk. Okay, so I read this this study
I read the abstract I have to fess up. I didn't read the whole study
But it was from the University of Natural Sciences Lahore in Pakistan and they basically said
Which whether cosanguinous or non-cosanguinous marriage, which one is preferable depends on which level you're looking on on the
Individual level or on the population level and then on a population level and this is stone cold eugenics speak, right?
So I just want to preface it with that but on a population level
You're actually better off having your population marry relatives
because
There will be a huge upsurge initially in children who are born with
You know
genetic disorders who might not survive infancy and who won't go on to reproduce
The ones who do survive and go on to reproduce will actually be potentially genetically fitter because they're good alleles
They're good genes mixed with their sister's good genes and they're producing offsprings with like super genes basically
So on a population level, it's great on an individual level. It's not so great
Interesting and so they concluded overall on for populations until we learn to treat genetic disorders like through gene therapy or something like that
We should really just keep outlawing cosanguinous marriages, right? Wow. When was that? It was a recent paper
I'm not exactly sure but it was in the last ten years for sure
Well, should we finish up with just some
Bulleted points and factoids. That's how we do
Well, I guess we could talk about some famous people who very famously married
Very close relatives. Mm-hmm Edgar Edgar Allan Poe did so in 1835. He married I believe a first cousin named Virginia Eliza Clem and
Apparently the outrage there was the fact that she was 13 right and he was 27
So even in 1835 that was a pretty a pretty big age gap
And I guess people were creeped out and I guess Poe's walking around super creepy anyway
Sure
What can I do to creep people out further? Yeah, exactly
Jesse James married his first cousin in 1874, which again, it's right on the precipice of when when America started to be like
We're not cool with cousin marrying anymore. Oh, yeah, that's right there, isn't it? HG Wells 1891
Yeah, and then Einstein. I didn't know he married his cousin. Did you I did not know that married his cousin Elsa
in 1919 and I think both of them it was their second time around marriage wise and
You know, I don't think it went went so well. I think he wasn't a great husband apparently
Yeah, so Livia found it all that's an interesting article. That's really depressing and disturbing because it I had no idea
But Einstein seems to have been a really terrible husband like cruel even you could say yeah
Yeah, so if you really want to just keep liking Einstein and only think of him like that poster with his tongue sticking out
Do not read that all that is interesting article on or a lovable shaggy Tim Robbins. Yeah, what was that from?
He was in the movie Meg Ryan played his daughter. No, that was Walter Mathau that played Einstein
Oh, she got together with she got together with Tim Robbins. That's right
Robbins got another good 20 years before he starts playing Einstein. Yeah, or Meg Ryan's dad and I was way confused
Bathout he was a great on style man. He was great the most lovable
Did you ever see the couch trip with Dan acroyd him? Sure. I'm big Walter bathout fan. That was a wonderful movie
And I think that might be one of his better performances, too. Yeah, he was amazing
What what can we go over here some other sort of taboos around the world? These are interesting. I think yeah, I agree. So
Different cultures have kind of come up with like taboo plus like really complex stuff to basically say, okay
You can marry this person. You can't marry the that person it goes beyond just you can't marry your second cousin or closer and
One of the one of the ways that the the Muslim religion has done this is to come up with something called a milk kinship
Where if you
Breastfeed a child who's unrelated to you at least three to five times then you and that child are considered mahram
Which means you are you cannot marry, right?
Even though you're not a blood relative
You might not have any blood shared between you because you breastfed you can't marry that that person
Right, which seems like duh
Because you're raising this, you know kid from a baby, but I don't think we mentioned at the beginning
there have been cultures through history where it was a common practice to
adopt and raise a baby and
Also marry them like you marry the baby and then raise them up to adulthood baby bride
Baby bride. It's it's it's very hard to wrap your head around or baby groom. I saw in at least one culture
Yeah
Again, it's it's hard to wrap your head around here in 2022, but that's something that happened
So this was a big deal in the Muslim culture because you don't have to wear
He job if you are mahram. So
It's sort of a workaround when you raise this
adopted baby
It all of a sudden when they get old enough, you don't have to wear that he job around them anymore, right?
Right because you're mahram, which is kind of fun to say it is and then there's something called the leverate marriage
I had I think it has to do with Levi from the Bible Old Testament stuff
But basically it's a law that is found in a bunch of different disparate cultures that says if you are married to a man
And that in your husband dies your brother-in-law has to marry you
Mm-hmm, and it was it seems to have been a way
Not to you know marry off an unmarriable brother a brother-in-law. I should say
But instead to take care of women from what I can tell
Yeah, I feel like I've seen this not as a requirement, but it's just a plot line in like Old West movies
Like the husband dies and so the widow marries is you know
The brother comes into town for the funeral and then they fall in love or something is it Tim Robbins. I don't think so
He had really shaggy hair. I know I've seen that before but as far as the required the Old Testament version
There was a stipulation where if the brother-in-law said it no, thanks
Then the widow I guess an offense takes off his sandals and then spits in his face
Mm-hmm, and then his bloodline is forever known as the family of the unsandled
Which I guess you would not want to be known as that I guess so I also saw so there's a
Culture called the Chukchi from eastern Siberia and they they practice levered marriage
Where you know if you're if your husband dies you marry his brother and this is a way of taking care of women in a place
That's like really unforgiving
climate-wise
And they actually have a backup to that they have wife swapping where very close friends will create a pact and they will
Share their wives and then all of the children born are all that groups, you know responsibility
There's not like a delineation and that supports women whose husbands don't have a brother
So if their husband dies, they're still taken care of by this other husband and his wife and their family
Interesting. Yeah, it's pretty smart. I always think of raising Arizona whenever here are the two words wife swap
It's impossible not to you know
Me and Dottie are swingers you got anything else. I got nothing else
I don't either which means this is the end of our marrying cousin episode
Since I talked about marrying cousins one last time that means it's time for listener mail
I'm gonna call this adoption language and this is something that
Made me feel bad in a good way if that makes sense
It's something I never considered as a as a dad who has an adopted kid and I'm really glad that Frank
Opened my eyes to this. Hey guys, my wife Katie and I were listening to the Roe v. Wade episode and we have a minor tangential note
We notice that you use the phrase gave up
when referencing adoption a few times like gave up their baby for adoption, which is
You know, it's a very common thing people say like I say it all the time, too
Yeah
My wife is a social worker for an adoption agency in the Chicago area
and I learned from her that the phrase is really frowned upon in the adoption community as it can have a negative connotation of
Quitting on a child when that is not the case and they encourage people to say instead that the mother made an adoption plan for the baby
In fact, our agency had a campaign a few years ago called to give up giving up
Hmm, I never thought twice about it until I learned about it from my wife
And I think it'd be great for your listeners to know and that is from Frank and Frank. I
I
Very glad you let me know this because this is something that we've even said in our house and
we have tidied that up because
When I think about it, that is not the right thing to say. Yeah
I mean, yeah, you could see it reflecting on the child
Especially when they get old enough to start thinking in those terms, but also on the the parents who?
Who adopted off their child, you know, like like they did something shameful or something like that. Yeah, absolutely
Then way to go Frank. So I think it's one of the situations where it's just sort of
The way it's always been said and I love it when people point out like no, there's a better way forward
Yeah, like when that dude told us to stop using dark ages
Same thing yeah
If you want to get in touch with us like Frank or the dark ages dude, you can send us an email
Wrap it up spank it on the bottom unless it's a second cousin or closer and send it off to stuff podcast at iHeartRadio.com
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What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place because
I'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band or each week to guide you through life
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I'm Munga Shatikler and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to believe
You can find in major league baseball international banks K-pop groups even the White House
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject something completely
Unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed whether you're a skeptic or a believer
Give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too listen to skyline drive on the iHeart radio app
Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
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