BR549
This is filth! FILTH!!
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"No. Um. And it would be unwise for me to sire more than a couple in any case. They would all be half-brothers and half-sisters, so the risk of-."
Okay, they're farmers, so I'm going to assume that they know that inbreeding is bad, even if they don't know what genes are, but a technical explanation using words that Themysciran Greek doesn't have isn't going to help.
But actually, Jingles...
Inbreeding and linebreeding - the breeding of descendants of multiple generations back to an original ancestor - are standard animal husbandry practices, for the fixing of desirable traits in offspring.
For instance, say you have a white hen. One day, it lays a clutch of eggs, and one hatches into a black rooster. Once it matures, you mate the that rooster back to that hen (inbreeding), in order that - ideally - the eggs from that will produce multiple black roosters. You then mate those back to the original hen (linebreeding) to further fix the 'black rooster' genes.
At this point, you start bringing in outside blood to avoid the odds of negative traits expressing going crazy. So - they would know that excessive inbreeding is bad, being farmers, it being a bad thing in humans overall is not necessarily something that would come up.
...of course it's not necessarily entirely bad, or at least dangerous from a biological/genetic standpoint, in humans either. Things like-
When it comes to inbreeding? I have two words to remember, Blue Fugates.
- and the Habsburgs are the result of multi-generational inbreeding; a 'first generation' child would be very unlikely to show any significant negative genetic traits (unless both sets of grandparents had matching negative recessive genes, which if they were unrelated should be unlikely). The 'they'll have a third eye and webbed feet!' stereotypes are exaggerated to reinforce the societial negativity.
Which is, of course, a rather important point, and the fact Paul isn't interested in doing so at all is the even bigger concern.
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