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In Australia, marrying your cousin, marrying your cousin is not a problem!

In China, we knew from an early age that a close relative was going to get married. You can't marry a cousin, your cousin can't spend your life with you, and your cousin can't give you a husband-in-law. Even if you had to put together a couple, the children would be born with congenital diseases, in order not to harm others, but also to fundamentally stop close relatives from getting married.

But!However!Nevertheless! This is another thing in Australia!

In many states of Australia, you can marry your first cousin.


What exactly happened to first cousin? That is, you have common grandparents or grandfathers, but different parents, to say that you and your aunt, second aunt and third aunt, the old uncle's children, even if it is first cousin.

It is also written in the Australian Marriage Act that you can marry your brother and sister, both half-and half-mother. At the same time, you can also marry your nephew, niece, uncle or aunt.

So far, the marriage law says that marriage exists only between a man and a woman, but given that the federal government is voting on the legality of the homosexual love marriage, it is possible that future marriage rite will be adjusted accordingly.

In Australia, there are many cousins who marry each other.

Like this, she was found to be a sister at the wedding shop. The editor can only say that you really won't get acquainted with each other before you get married. Will you take the other half home and show it to your grandparents? But if you think about it, maybe it's all right to swap parents' names, and grandma's names sound weird.

Is it really okay to marry a close relative? the ABCNews report also says that although hundreds of years have passed, it does have an impact on genetic disease. David, a professor at the Murdoch Center for Children's Studies, said that marriage by close relatives, while increasing the risk of genetic disease, is not as dangerous as one might think.

Each of us has nearly 99.5% of similar genes, and about 1/8 are shared between cousins and close relatives.

In fact, in European history, in order to ensure the purity of the royal lineage, close relatives marriage is very common; Dubai royal princes with rich and handsome princes, that retained a good gene.


Of course, if there are no good genes to pass on or have the throne to inherit this, it should be fate.


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