Title: Why Do Men Prefer Virgins? – MGTOW
Created On: November 16, 2023 at 11:45AM
From: Sandman
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Hi Everyone Sandman Here,
This video is brought to you by a donation from Kam (the Scholarly Ape) and here’s what he has to say: “Hello Sandman, While watching your 32nd “Memes Of The Week” episode you showed a screenshot of a research paper about how a previous sexual partner can influence another man’s offspring at around the 09:54 mark. I immediately searched the web for it and downloaded its original publication (which has a different title – “Revisiting telegony: offspring inherit an acquired characteristic of their mother’s previous mate”). For those unfamiliar with it the paper it discusses experiments conducted on Neriid flies proved that the nutritional condition (i.e nutritionally rich diet versus nutritionally poor diet) of a female’s first male sexual partner can affect the phenotype of the offspring sired as much as 2 weeks later by the female’s second male sexual partner and that these effects can persist into the offspring’s adult phenotype. All of this occurs when the first male mates with the female while her ovules or eggs are immature and permeable by the molecules in the first male’s semen then influences the development of the female’s ovules. In this way, when the female’s ovules become mature and she mates with a second male whose sperm actually fertilizes one of her eggs, the resulting offspring exhibits the qualities of its father (the second male) but also the influence of the phenotype of the mother’s first sexual partner. I emailed the lead author to say that I really enjoyed it and to ask some of my questions concerning it. To my astonishment, she replied by saying that she was unable to obtain research funds to continue the research and no longer works in science. I then asked her “Could it be that the people making the funding decisions did not like these sorts of questions or the revelations that could emerge from them?” She didn’t respond. The study was conducted on Neriid flies, the authors did NOT rule out the possibility that humans are subject to a similar phenomenon. The last sentence of our discussion section literally says, “The potential for such effects exists in any taxon characterized by internal fertilization and polyandry, and such effects could influence the evolution of reproductive strategies.” Human females’ fertilization takes place internally and they generally have multiple male sexual partners during their reproductive years, so according to the paper such telegonous effects can and almost certainly exist in humans. For example, another point from the paper explains that the demonstrated influence of the female fly’s first male sexual partner on the offspring’s phenotype could have effects on both male and female dating strategies. It is in their youth that they bang the bad boys. This is consistent with the 80-20 and 90-10 rules. I wanted to know whether follow-up studies investigated the nature of the phenotypic effects offspring flies acquire when multiple males mated with their mother while her ovules were immature then later fertilized at maturity by their father. Is the acquired phenotype the average of those of initial males or simply that of the most dominant of the initial males.
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