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Science Monday: The Economics of Sex


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2015 Sep 19, 9:14pm   39,499 views  95 comments

by Dan8267   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.youtube.com/embed/cO1ifNaNABY

Yep, it all changed with the pill. Video is spot on about everything.

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37   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 21, 2:28pm  

justme says

they end up alone.

Not quite alone :)

Seriously, though, if Beta Males were so undesirable, there sure are a lot of them, many with kids of their own. And yeah, some of them were tricked, but there are just too many kids who look like their dad to believe it's extremely high..

38   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 21, 2:41pm  

The extreme end of what Justme describes is Susan Smith, who was willing to kill her children because she thought if she was childless, the big Alpha in town would marry her.

She had an extremely supportive network, a great relationship with her Ex and his family, but she decided that she needed to remove her children in order to get a shot with Mr. Alpha, even though Mr. Alpha was a player and made it clear to all he had NO INTEREST in having a family.

http://www.alabamapress.org/uploads/Cat%2012%20Div%20A_Feature.pdf

39   mell   2015 Sep 22, 1:36pm  

justme says

Now you are getting the point. Women refuse to accept that there is a huge gap between the kind of guy that might sleep any of them once or twice, and the guy that will sleep with one of them AND STAY. The 95% of women who are all trying to get the 5% guy to stay simply refuse to acknowledge the mathematics of the situation, the simple fact that their equation does not have a solution, so to speak. And feminism is what enables women to do this from age 15 to age 30+, at which point their marital value (being still unmarried) drops like a rock, and they end up alone.

That is very true and a direct consequence of fully, legally and societal endorsed female hypergamy.

40   Rew   2015 Sep 22, 1:43pm  

• college educated (sometimes advanced degrees)
• single for longer, married later
• working in tech/eng, often in management, and often officers of corporations

I just described both sexes as I encounter them in the late 20s to 40s crowd here in California.

The video portrays a very lopsided view of sexual power dynamics. Its oversimplification is that women control the physical act but men somehow control more of the marriage/lasting relationship equation. In truth both sexes control major segments of both of those realms.

The declining women's happiness trend is so complex, and doesn't point to feminism making women more miserable, or any one thing someone could point at as “the cause". It has far less to do with sex and the pill, than it does with equality in workplace, rights to vote, and be treated as a full equal person. Women can now compare themselves to broader segments of people/lifestyles, have more to seek in life, live more complex and richer lives, and might just be being more honest about their happiness now. It’s absolutely ludicrous to think my mother and wife’s generations aren't more happy now than the previous two generations before them. In sheer life burden alone, that's just beyond untrue.

The actual big secret is that women and men aren’t that different at all, where much of sexual desire, life goals, etc. are concerned. They may be approaching things at slightly oblique angles, but motivations and desires are much more similar, than they are different, at their core. And yes, I am casually writing off all the “men are from mars, women are venus” comparisons we love to make, down to brain waves, socialization, and hormones. Well and truly, there are differences (bless the differences!), but at the end of the day for relationships/sex/work/marriage/life : the goals aren’t diametrically opposed, they are aligned. If they weren't, the war of the sexes wouldn't sound so sexy.

Heraclitusstudent says

Probably more 15 yrs old are like that than unmarried 23 yrs old.

False. It's college and up where body modification and sexual activity are higher. 15 is way young in "maturity", especially in America. The difference between 15 - 18 isn't as great as 18 - 21 in experiences and self identity (again, for the USA).

There is some crazy stuff written about women, by men, on pnet

41   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Sep 22, 2:31pm  

Rew says

There is some crazy stuff written about women, by men, on pnet

They say women are far more than the little mammal described on pnet. Women are at least the equal of the horse.

42   mell   2015 Sep 22, 3:18pm  

Rew says

It’s absolutely ludicrous to think my mother and wife’s generations aren't more happy now than the previous two generations before them. In sheer life burden alone, that's just beyond untrue.

If you go back far enough before suffrage and other changes it may seem so (though we don't know for sure). However if you take you take the generation that were roughly from the 60s to 80s in their prime and family-building years and compare that to Gen X/Y or millenials, you assertion seems wrong - can't blame this on honesty. More likely influence of radical feminism and economic decline of the middle-class. What good is a director position if you need two to pay off your bay area shack?

43   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 22, 6:55pm  

We need to start insisting that women and their families bear the consequences of their actions, and pass a law requiring the mother and her immediate family (her parents) to exhaust their resources before providing assistance to Single Mothers. And my Beloved "One is a mistake, Two and it's hysterectomy time in order to continue to qualify for benefits, since we are obligated to care for children but are NOT going to allow you to burden society further." policy.

Why reward Bastard Factories with their own home and living, when they can live off mom and dad?

"Gee, if I get pregnant with the local petty pot dealer, I can get my own place, food stamps, and some EBT cash, and party hardy! My house, my rules, screw you Mom!"
"Well, worst thing that happens if Bob the Bouncer impregnates me, I can get additional government assistance on top of my waitressing job."

44   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 5:31am  

And South Africa is hugely more developed than Europe of the 15th Century, much less the Dawn of Civilization, much less Hunter-Gather era where the Homo Sapiens, Habilis, and Erectus spent 90% of it's the genus Homo's existence.

45   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 5:35am  

marcus says

More like at least 50. And even then, surely people occasionally lived decades beyond that.

No. Even in the Napoleonic Era, for a working class male to reach 40 was an accomplishment. Most Kings of England up till the 19th Century seldom saw more than 50 years, many saw less than 40.

Only 2 (TWO) of Edward I's 19 (NINETEEN) progeny lived past 50:
http://www.sarahwoodbury.com/sick-kids/

The median for the extremely well off noble children of the most powerful and elite family in all England was 38 for men, 35 for women.

Anglo-Saxon Grave Sites 400-1000AD have almost no burials of ordinary folk whose bones date past the age of 45, out of hundreds of skeletons.

This is the era of widespread Agriculture, Fishing Boats, Settled Communities, etc. Imagine how much shorter it was back in the pre-Stone Age, before Agriculture.

46   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 5:43am  

Call it KKKrazy says

As long as you understand you're flouting God's Plan.

You know who would really get hit under my plan? Those Mormons dudes with 5 wives, all of whom are on welfare.

47   Y   2015 Sep 23, 5:54am  

Men stayed happy due to the saturation of drive-up fast food chains and the proliferation of "Merry Maids Metros"...
thunderlips11 says

Men lost their "Dinner waiting when I walk in the door" and "Spotless House", stayed happy.

48   Y   2015 Sep 23, 6:06am  

Ignorance is bliss...

HydroCabron says

By the way: your statement that no man would want a woman who has had a lot of partners is completely false. I know plenty of married former sluts.

49   Y   2015 Sep 23, 6:09am  

this is damning evidence...

justme says

The real use of the pill was not casual sex with strange men. That was always easy, condoms or cervical caps have been available for a long time. The real use was that a woman could have unprotected sex with her husband and still avoid getting pregnant by him, while keeping secret that she was in fact impregnable.. She could then get pregnant by her preferred man by skipping the pill strategically. Or she could do the "save the marriage" thing and get pregnant just when her husband was about to leave her, for whatever reason.

50   Y   2015 Sep 23, 6:11am  

IOW, hollywood and liberalism.
It's ok...we all know...you can say it.

HydroCabron says

I would guess that feminism is only partly responsible for this, because non-feminist women sometimes suffer from it. I believe part of the blame lies with movies and television.

51   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 6:12am  

SoftShell says

Men stayed happy due to the saturation of drive-up fast food chains and the proliferation of "Merry Maids Metros"...

Yep. Men are about finding solutions. Women are about expressing feelings.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/-4EDhdAHrOg

52   HydroCabron   2015 Sep 23, 8:46am  

thunderlips11 says

Beta Males

The alpha/beta wolf concept is now regarded as an embarrassment by the man who created it, and is thought to be inapplicable in human societies by anthropologists and other social scientists.

It turns out that similarity to one's alcoholic, physically or sexually abusive father is the primary characteristic women seek in a man. A prison record on top of it - especially if you're actually physically in prison - is a huge plus.

I have seen too many pathetic whiny alkies, bellies distended with their bloated livers, who keep their beautiful devoted wives. I don't believe that status markers, or even having your shit together, play a role in keeping a woman around.

One woman resented me because I earned twice what she did. Who knows how this stuff works?

53   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 10:02am  

thunderlips11 says

No. Even in the Napoleonic Era, for a working class male to reach 40 was an accomplishment. Most Kings of England up till the 19th Century seldom saw more than 50 years, many saw less than 40.

You might want to do more research. Going back to antiquity it was not THAT unusual to make it to 70. There is a lot of different research on this, but many come to this conclusion.

Obviously infection or violence were far more likely to kill you before the advent of antibiotics. But I believe you are wrong and it's easy to find research that supports my opinion.

What does your common sense tell you ?

I might have been a little high in asserting that at age 20, one could expect to live to at least 50. Maybe it was only a 60% chance they made it to 45, and then at 45 the average life expectancy was another 12 to 24 years.

Try removing the confusion and bias everyone has about life expectancy at birth, then be open minded, do some research and get back to me.

YOu might start here http://www.anth.ucsb.edu/faculty/gurven/papers/GurvenKaplan2007pdr.pdf

54   RC2006   2015 Sep 23, 10:49am  

I figured a lot of men delay on or never marry because they have seen their fathers get fucked over by the modern feminist culture. Delaying marriage until a later age also exposes the crazy side of women in general and there lack of ability to hide their crazy side.

55   HydroCabron   2015 Sep 23, 11:11am  

rpanic01 says

the crazy side of women in general and there lack of ability to hide their crazy side.

I find they can hide it for over a decade, depending on the perceived size of the diamond at the end of the waiting period.

They are incredibly skilled at hiding selfishness and indifference to the fate of others.

56   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 2:01pm  

marcus says

I might have been a little high in asserting that at age 20, one could expect to live to at least 50. Maybe it was only a 60% chance they made it to 45, and then at 45 the average life expectancy was another 12 to 24 years.

marcus says

Try removing the confusion and bias everyone has about life expectancy at birth, then be open minded, do some research and get back to me.

You're confused. The numbers I gave for Anglo-Saxon Dark Age Britain were the lifespans of ordinary individuals measured by the ages of hundreds of skeletons in the grave - if anything it's biased upwards by not counting all the stillborn and dead and abandoned infants left in the woods (or the ones eaten by wolves, died and left to rot on the battlefield, etc.).

https://books.google.com/books?id=hBNr765THaIC&pg=PA26&lpg=PA26&dq=anglo+saxon+graves+lifespan&source=bl&ots=yaz2-ODDw8&sig=GooXSHGf7MJVRm5Pwo-xfK_5htw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0CB4Q6AEwAGoVChMIk4OnnIeOyAIVgayACh2Z-Qj5#v=onepage&q=anglo%20saxon%20graves%20lifespan&f=false

If my aunt had balls, she'd be an Uncle. If a soldier didn't die from a bullet, and didn't die from sickness, and wasn't sunk in a transport on the way home, he'd survive the war... If, If, If.

Children are humans. When they die, it counts towards the average. If you get a 100 on one test, and a 15 on the other. You can't say "Oh Teach that don't count, you can only count test scores over 30, because that 15 would distort my grade." But even if you don't count the "15" test scores, the average grade of people who "passed the class" was a D+ or C-, compared to the "B" average of people today.

57   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 2:18pm  

EDIT: Make that tens of thousands of skeletons.

58   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 2:24pm  

Life span of Hunter Gathers as counted and studied over the long term by Anthropologists, along with the numbers of people over 50.
http://www.anth.ucsb.edu/faculty/gurven/papers/GurvenKaplan2007pdr.pdf

You'll see the person-years for the over 50 crowd is a fraction of than the person-years overall in each population.

Swedes from a decade in the mid 18th is given for comparison; it's in the same ballpark as the Hunter-Gatherers.

Everything backs up the "to get past 50 is rare" theory.

59   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 3:13pm  

thunderlips11 says

You're confused. The numbers I gave for Anglo-Saxon Dark Age Britain were the lifespans of ordinary individuals measured by the ages of hundreds of skeletons in the grave

Some conclusions from the Hunter Gatherer Paper (link) I shared for you to check out:

A fundamental conclusion we draw from this analysis is that extensive longevity
appears to be a novel feature of Homo sapiens. Our results contradict
Vallois’s (1961: 222) claim that among early humans, “few individuals passed
forty years, and it is only quite exceptionally that any passed fifty,” and the
more traditional Hobbesian view of a nasty, brutish, and short human life (see
also King and Jukes 1969; Weiss 1981). The data show that modal adult life
span is 68–78 years, and that it was not uncommon for individuals to reach
these ages, suggesting that inferences based on paleodemographic reconstruction
are unreliable.

http://www.anth.ucsb.edu/faculty/gurven/papers/GurvenKaplan2007pdr.pdf

thunderlips11 says

Swedes from a decade in the mid 18th is given for comparison; it's in the same ballpark as the Hunter-Gatherers.

Everything backs up the "to get past 50 is rare" theory.

No.

OR try Wikepedia and its sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_expectancy

This directly contradicts you.

Having survived until the age of 21, a male member of the English aristocracy in this period could expect to live:[24]

1200–1300: to age 64
1300–1400: to age 45 (due to the impact of the bubonic plague)
1400–1500: to age 69
1500–1550: to age 71

Maybe you can get to where you realize that you might be wrong. Again, what does your common sense tell you ? DO you really think we evolved that much in a few centuries, or a couple thousand years. Sure environments and other conditions have often made it difficult for humans to live for their natural lifespan, but that natural lifespan is and has been in the neighborhood of 6 to 7 decades probably for thousands of years. Current diets, less stress, medicine, and so on have added a few years to this. And of course antibiotics and big reductions in infant mortality have made it possible for way more people to make it to a full lifespan, bringing the averages way up.

60   Heraclitusstudent   2015 Sep 23, 3:29pm  

For evolution to optimize the age at which they have children, you would need to consider a life expectancy that will cover most females (i.e. below average) in pre-historical times. Preferably over a couple millions years.

61   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 3:33pm  

marcus says

Maybe you can get to where you realize that you might be wrong.

The Chart you posted excludes a large group of humans, including many of reproductive age, under 15. In traditional times, plenty of "Children" under 15 had children of their own

Again, it's the old "If my aunt had balls..." type of measurement to make the primitive era look better than it was.

The is a reason modern society population graphs are a rectangle, and going back prior to WW2 it's a Pyramid. How could this be if so many people were living so long?

High Child and Childbirth mortality is even more of a reason to reproduce early and often.

62   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 3:43pm  

thunderlips11 says

Chart excludes humans, including many of reproductive age

I give up. I don't know what you're looking at.

63   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 3:46pm  

thunderlips11 says

The is a reason modern society population graphs are a rectangle, and going back prior to WW2 it's a Pyramid. How could this be if so many people were living so long?

???

Clearly you know what the hell you're talking about, but I don't. Sounds almost like Math or logic. Whatever you do, don't elaborate enough to clarify how nonsensical it probably is.

DO you mean that there used to be less old people than young people ? Compared to now ? Sure that's true, simply because of infections, disease or violence or whatever taking their lives before they made it to old age. But they were far more likely to make it to old age than you think, at least in places where life styles allowed for it.. And it's been our underlying potential all along.

64   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 3:53pm  

marcus says

I give up. I don't know what you're looking at.

I'm looking at your chart; read the fine print. It's a "We're not counting any test scores under 30%" chart - they exclude child deaths as well as those 12, 13, 14 year old girls who were of reproductive age who could have died in childbirth. Read the fine print under the chart.

Same problem here.
marcus says

Having survived until the age of 21, a male member of the English aristocracy in this period could expect to live:[24]

That's the great distortion!

As I showed with Edward I's progeny, only 2 of his 19 descendents lived past 50.

Also note "Aristocracy", to boot.

If we exclude all deaths to disease, we find that most soliders in history died of combat wounds...

65   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 3:57pm  

Also the bible tells us that before the flood, people used to routinely live 800 years or more.

But seriously there are many records in ancient Greece, Rome, China and elsewhere of people living to 80 or higher. I'm sure it might have been somewhat rare, but I doubt that 60 was rare.

66   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 4:03pm  

thunderlips11 says

That's the great distortion!

Why ? It's what we've been talking about all along. Not expectancy at birth, or taking in to account being killed in wars.

thunderlips11 says

As I showed with Edward I's progeny, only 2 of his 19 children lived past 50

And that just happens to coincide with the plague, right ?

Look, you either believe the scholars and their conclusions on this or you act like the typical dimbulb AMerican that knows more than the experts because of a couple small pieces of data. In the case of this subject, it would seem that the opinion of experts has shifted in the pasy 50 years. Don't blame me. I'm not the experts, I'm just reporting what the experts now say. But it does fit with what my common sense tells me.

67   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 23, 4:03pm  

marcus says

But seriously there are many records in ancient Greece, Rome, China and elsewhere of people living to 80 or higher. I'm sure it might have been somewhat rare, but I doubt that 60 was rare.

Nobody disputes that some people saw 80, even 90 once in a blue moon.

Here is the past 100 years of population distribution for the USA via the Census. The percentage of people living over 50 today versus 1900 isn't even close. It's a multiple.

68   marcus   2015 Sep 23, 4:18pm  

thunderlips11 says

The percentage of people living over 50 today versus 1900 isn't even close. It's a multiple

THat graph is about more than what you suggest it is. In the 1900 pyramid, the 75 year old had 4 or 5 children, the 55 year old child of his in the same pyramid also had 4 or 5 children, as did his kids. Also there was ridiculous amounts of immigration going on of people that came here and then had children. So I'm not sure what you can infer from that about longevity.

SImilarly in the 2000 chart. The difference between the people in the 40 - 44 group versus the 65 to 69 group that looks less than half the size has almost nothing to do with them dying off, and everything to do with the boomers being a bigger generation.

THe 1900 pyramid and it's low number of people oiver 60 would even be affected by the civil war.

69   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 24, 11:25am  

marcus says

SImilarly in the 2000 chart. The difference between the people in the 40 - 44 group versus the 65 to 69 group that looks less than half the size has almost nothing to do with them dying off, and everything to do with the boomers being a bigger generation.

THe 1900 pyramid and it's low number of people oiver 60 would even be affected by the civil war.

Marcus, the point is that senior citizens were rare prior to modern medicine. I bet 1800 vs 2000 is more dramatic, if we had those kind of accurate numbers. 1900 already has a whole century of industrialization and massive technological gains built in.

Finland 1917 - Today

Mali Vs. Germany - which shape is closer to pre-Industrial Society?

70   Ceffer   2015 Sep 24, 11:31am  

Wow, so many men pretending to be some kind of alphafuck douche to get laid. No wonder God invented hookers.

71   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 24, 11:57am  

Blackfriars, London Burial Site. Skeletons buried 1230-1320AD. 126 Skeletons recovered. The breakdown:

Merton Priory, Skeletons 1100-1500AD. Around 670 Skeletons. The Breakdown:

72   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 24, 12:27pm  

Again, the problem is assigning the responsibility.

Since women control the easiest and dominant forms of birth control (The Pill, Abortion), and yet are insulated from the effects of having a child they can't support via Welfare, there is no reason for many of them to "Choose Wisely."

The simple reform of not allowing women under the age of 18 from leaving their parents' house and demanding that the woman's immediate family disburse all their income for child support prior to being eligible for assistance is a good measure. Many parents who look the other way, including welfare ho grandmothers, would begin to demand their uncontrollable or irresponsible daughters take birth control or get an abortion.

Mandatory Sterilization of bastard factories, those women who have had 2 children while being on state support and/or under 18 in order to continue to receive or be eligible for benefits in the future, would go a long, long way to crushing crime, child abuse, idiocracy, lower educational outcomes, income inequality, and general disappointment.

And yeah, dudes who father more than 2 kids out of wedlock without the ability to pay child support should also be sterilized.

Creating two kids you can't support = Exercising your right to reproduce. No More. Just like we take driver's licenses from repeat DUIs.

73   marcus   2015 Sep 24, 5:29pm  

thunderlips11 says

Marcus, the point is that senior citizens were rare prior to modern medicine.

Well your graphs don't show that. They mostly reflect infant mortality dropping hard and populations growing fast.

When this is going on:

you're going to get what you call those pyramid shaped graphs (in some places), because each successive generation is exponentially larger. IT's true that more people are making it past 65, but how many more is not something that can be inferred from your graphs.

I have to assume you're trolling me, because I think you know better. thunderlips11 says

Remember there were 600,000 in that same age group (over 65 in 1900) that were killed in the civil war).

Again your graphs don't tell us by how many more are making it to over 65 now. Just very rough guesstimating would tell me that if the population was stable, and everyone was dying around 83 average, then I would expect about 18% of the population to be over 65%. But if everyone was living to the same age (say 83 average) and the population was doubling every 30 or 40 years, like it was before 1900, then I would expect the number over 65 to be well under 10%.

I"m guessing at the most twice as many people make it past 65 now compared to 1900. Maybe slightly more, because antibiotics really are amazing, and during that entire interval of childhood to old age, antibiotics save many lives.

thunderlips11 says

Blackfriars, London Burial Site. Skeletons buried 1230-1320AD. 126 Skeletons recovered. The breakdown:

OKay, you've convinced me that you had reasons for being so wrong about this.

74   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 24, 7:19pm  

marcus says

Remember there were 600,000 in that same age group (over 65 in 1900) that were killed in the civil war).

"You forgot Finland" 1917 or America, 1920, where ACW wasn't or no longer was a factor.

Here's Scotland, 1861, by numbers of people.

Here's Britain, 1911, by numbers of people

Looks a lot like India, Brazil, Mali, etc. Today.

75   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Sep 24, 7:21pm  

marcus says

Again your graphs don't tell us by how many more are making it to over 65 now.

Dude, that's exactly what the graphs show. The percentage of people by age group.

Of course they are. Cancer Treatments, Bypass Surgery, Powerful Antibiotics, Water Treatment, Sewers, Food Inspections.

Yeah, back in the wonderful Elysium of Hunter Gatherdom, those who hit the genetic lottery and avoided being bludgeoned, infected by scratching themselves on a dirty thorn bush, having their teeth rot and spreading an infection to the brain dying an incredibly painful and agonizing death that today is easily solved by the most underequipped, most backward third world with only the most basic supplies and a half-trained nurse health clinic, people could and did reach 60, 70, even 80.

Just not that many - and you don't have to go into the distant past to see it.

You have to have some serious blinders on if you don't believe that modern health care, esp. since the 1950s, has had an unbelievable impact on humanity. If you think the difference is only just better pre/post natal care - that's just a one factor among many.

People who push the "If you discount all the Napoleonic Era soldiers who didn't die of disease, then the number of soldiers who died in the Military of the Time was surprisingly small" version are doing a disservice, and they're doing it to create a False Image of a Bucolic Life as Medieval Peasants or Happy Noble Savages that never existed.

marcus says

OKay, you've convinced me that you had reasons for being so wrong about this.

Right, total coincidence that these charts and others from medieval cemeteries are dominated by 36-45 year olds. You can go anywhere in the world prior to the Modern Era, and see that ordinary burials are dominated by the graves of those in their 30s and 40s.

76   marcus   2015 Sep 24, 7:36pm  

thunderlips11 says

You have to have some serious blinders on if you don't believe that modern health care, esp. since the 1950s, has had an unbelievable impact on humanity.

What the fuck. I agreed like seven times that a lot more people make it old age than 100 years ago. Maybe even twice as many or so. You don't even read my comments do you.

But what you conclude from your graphs is wrong. As for the burial grounds ?

marcus says

Some conclusions from the Hunter Gatherer Paper (link) I shared for you to check out:

A fundamental conclusion we draw from this analysis is that extensive longevity

appears to be a novel feature of Homo sapiens. Our results contradict

Vallois’s (1961: 222) claim that among early humans, “few individuals passed

forty years, and it is only quite exceptionally that any passed fifty,” and the

more traditional Hobbesian view of a nasty, brutish, and short human life (see

also King and Jukes 1969; Weiss 1981). The data show that modal adult life

span is 68–78 years, and that it was not uncommon for individuals to reach

these ages, suggesting that inferences based on paleodemographic reconstruction

are unreliable.

See the bold part ? Thats the part that refutes your supposed burial data.

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