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HunkaHunkaBurnerLove
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Not how it works. He’ll never be tried for this crime. Once they said he was not guilty he could have screamed at the top of his lungs, in the courtroom- “HAHAHA, I actually did it. Fooled you all. The glove totally DID fit!” and they couldn’t have done anything about it.

Well, to be fair they wanted to keep it in step with the amount of leading roles/awards Asian actors get.

For the viewers at home.

Why are there different categories for male and female acting awards though?

I look forward to other articles in this series including:

That’s not what I mean. Humans as they first evolved are still humans. They still follow the rules of biology. We understand it better and can circumvent it in some cases, but we still follow the same rules.

Actually, this study was trying to look at reasons for a long PRLS and test previously proposed hypotheses.

I’m pretty sure they don’t really. Humans seem unique among primates.

Then you would expect it to be more common.

“They act as if we still abided by millenia old biological rules”

yes, but menopause had to evolve in humans or be lost in chimps from our MCRA as their females are reproductively involved until the end of life. So there must have been some pressure for it to develop in humans or be lost in chimps/bonobos.

Then you would expect menopause to exist in other long-lived mammals like elephants, chimps, and bonobos; but it does not.

That’s part of my problem with this piece. The title of the original article though is-

It’s interesting in as much as there hasn’t been a sufficient answer, at least not to this trio of researchers.

But most animals ARE reproductive throughout their entire adult life and the loss of fertility is usually accompanied with degeneration of overall fitness.

Yeah, no. Human females are relatively rare in their post-reproductive lives. And you saying “give a hot second’s thought” seems to imply that evolution has a logical direction, which it doesn’t, but I digress.

members of the species that had a problem during development who will not pass their faulty genes on.

Males that are born sterile, or suffer some injury, and are not able to reproduce will not pass on their genes, but they do not have a pre-programmed time in their life where they lose the biological ability to have children. There was a problem in the development of their sexual organs, but that would be considered

Healthy males do not have “post-reproductive life spans!” You aren’t using that the correctly.