2005, http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/08/10/iran.iaea.1350/index.html.
282. Deadlines have passed: C. Krauthammer, “In Iran, arming for Armageddon,” Washington Post, Dec. 16, 2005. By 2009: Y. K. Halevi & M. Oren, “Contra Iran,” New Republic, Feb. 5, 2007.
283. Ahmadinejad interview: M. Ahmadinejad, interview by A. Curry, NBC News, Sept. 18, 2009, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32913296/ns/world_news-mideastn_africa/print....
284. “Wiping Israel off the map”: E. Bronner, “Just how far did they go, those words against Israel?” New York Times, Jun. 11, 2006.
285. Predictions of consequences of North Korean nukes: Mueller, 2010a, p. 150.
286. Unlikelihood of nuclear proxies: Mueller, 2010a; Procida, 2009.
287. “Too precious to waste killing people”: Schelling, 2005.
288. Climate stress as bad as nukes: T. F. Homer-Dixon, “Terror in the weather forecast,” New York Times, Apr. 24, 2007.
289. Climate change justifies war on terror: Quoted in S. Giry, “Climate conflicts,” New York Times, Apr. 9, 2007; see also Salehyan, 2008.
290. Climate change may not lead to war: Buhaug, 2010; Gleditsch, 1998; Salehyan, 2008; Theisen, 2008.
291. Terrorists are not subsistence farmers: Atran, 2003.
Chapter 7: The Rights Revolutions
1. Rough-and-tumble play: Boulton & Smith, 1992; Geary, 2010; Maccoby & Jacklin, 1987.
2. Recreational fighting: Geary, 2010; Ingle, 2004; Nisbett & Cohen, 1996.
3. Deadly ethnic riots: Horowitz, 2001.
4. Anatomy of a pogrom: Horowitz, 2001, chap. 1.
5. Reading the Riot Act: Payne, 2004, pp. 173–75.
6. American pogroms: Payne, 2004, pp. 180–81.
7. History of American lynching: Waldrep, 2002.
8. Antiblack communal violence: Payne, 2004, p. 180.
9. Decline of rioting: Payne, 2004, pp. 174, 180–82; Horowitz, 2001, p. 300.
10. Strange Fruit: “The best of the century,” Time, Dec. 31, 1999.
11. FBI hate crime statistics: http://www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/civilrights/hate.htm.
12. No more deadly ethnic riots in the West: Horowitz, 2001, p. 561.
13. 1960s riots weren’t race riots: Horowitz, 2001, pp. 300–301.
14. End of deadly ethnic riots in the West: Horowitz, 2001, p. 561.
15. Ruby Nell Bridges: Steinbeck, 1962/1997, p. 194.
16. No epidemic of hate crimes or church burnings: La Griffe du Lion, 2000; M. Fumento, “A church arson epidemic? It’s smoke and mirrors,” Wall Street Journal, Jul. 8, 1996.
17. No fatal violence against Muslims: Human Rights First, 2008. The closest examples were (1) the fatal assault of a Danish teenager of Turkish descent, but the police ruled out racism as a motive, and (2) video footage of the execution-style slayings of two men, possibly Dagestani and Tajik, by a Russian neo-Nazi group.
18. Policing riots: Horowitz, 2001, pp. 518–21.
19. Discriminatory policies predict ethnic violence: Gurr & Monty, 2000; Asal & Pate, 2005, pp. 32–33.
20. Decline of ethnic discrimination: Asal & Pate, 2005.
21. Discrimination around the world: Asal & Pate, 2005, pp. 35–36.
22. Discrimination in decline: Asal & Pate, 2005, p. 38.
23. Prediction of African American rampages: A. Hacker, The end of the American era, quoted in Gardner, 2010, p. 96.
24. “huge racial chasm”: Quote from p. 219.
25. Bell on racism: Quoted in Bobo, 2001.
26. Attitudes of whites toward blacks: Bobo, 2001; see also Patterson, 1997.
27. Dropped from questionnaires: Bobo, 2001.
28. Religious tolerance: Caplow, Hicks, & Wattenberg, 2001, p. 116.
29. Racist Bugs Bunny: Search for “racist Bugs Bunny” on Youtube.com.
30. Funny Face: http://theimaginaryworld.com/ffpac.html.
31. Speech codes on campus: Kors & Silverglate, 1998. See also Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, www.thefire.org.
32. Self-parody: “Political correctness versus freedom of thought—The Keith John Sampson story,” http://www.thefire.org/article/10067.html; “Brandeis University: Professor found guilty of harassment for protected speech,” http://www.thefire.org/case/755.html.
33. Racial “insensitivity”: Kors & Silverglate, 1998.
34. Rape in riots and genocides: Goldhagen, 2009; Horowitz, 2001; Rummel, 1994. Rape in war: Brownmiller, 1975; Rummel, 1994.
35. Traditional conceptions of rape: Brownmiller, 1975; Wilson & Daly, 1992.
36. Rape wisecrack by legal scholars: Brownmiller, 1975, p. 312.
37. Rape wisecracks by the police: Brownmiller, 1975, pp. 364–66.
38. Women barred from juries: Brownmiller, 1975, p. 296.
39. Interested parties: Thornhill & Palmer, 2000; Wilson & Daly, 1992; Jones, 1999.
40. Sexual economics: A. Dworkin, 1993, p. 119.
41. Sexual selection: Archer, 2009; Clutton-Brock, 2007; Symons, 1979; Trivers, 1972.
42. Harassment and rape in other species: Jones, 1999.
43. Risk factors for rape: Jones, 1999, 2000; Thornhill & Palmer, 2000.
44. Pregnancies from rape: Gottschall & Gottschall, 2003; Jones, 1999.
45. Sexual jealousy: Buss, 2000; Symons, 1979; Wilson & Daly, 1992.
46. Sex differences in jealousy: Buss, 2000.
47. Women as the property of men: Brownmiller, 1975; Wilson & Daly, 1992.
48. Changes in rape laws in the Middle Ages: Brownmiller, 1975. Current vestiges: Wilson & Daly, 1992.
49. Illicit jury deliberation: Brownmiller, 1975, p. 374.
50. Husband of rape victim: quote from Wilson & Daly, 1992. Divorce not uncommon: Brownmiller, 1975.
51. Evolution of abhorrence to rape: Symons, 1979; Thornhill & Palmer, 2000.
52. Agony of violation: Buss, 1989; Thornhill & Palmer, 2000.
53. Principle of autonomy: Hunt, 2007; Macklin, 2003.
54. Changes in rape law: Brownmiller,