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TRAIN_00125.eml
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NoneNoneYeah, I know the party line. The evidence for it is extremely meagre.
New Worlders had two entire continents and tens of millions of people,
which is a plenty big enough reservoir for infectious diseases to thrive
in. Their records show that they were plagued with them long before 1492.
Take Ireland in the early 1800s. Assume a population of circa 8
million. Take Ireland around 1900. Assume a population not much
above 3 million. Ignore natural variations between mortality and
natality. Omit emigration. Observe the Great Famine in the middle.
Deduce that it killed 5 million (actually about 1). Transpose to 16th
century Mexico. Grossly inflate estimates of pre-contact population,
because nobody has a damn clue what it was anyway. Underestimate
later population levels. Deduce that 10's of millions died. Lather,
rinse, repeat.
R
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