Sure, I understand this take on “domestication” but I meant it a bit more clinically. I don’t think this is how dogs were domesticated for example. Or in a small anarchical group of humans, where there is someone who you thought would be a friend but turned out to be a serious harm to you, you might banish them from the group to likely die without the protection and support of the group, this act “domesticated” humans by removing their genes from the gene pool and keeping someone more cooperative in the gene pool. Or a group of monkeys could do the same to anyone that gets too abusive within their group. We have been doing this for as long as the species has been able to decide who they will freely associate with. So yes I understand the use of domestication as a deliberate shaping of a “subspecies” for the benefit of another. But there is also a subtle domestication that is just apart of life and the voluntary actions of all. And it’s not just humans, any member of any species which fails their mating rituals is culled from the gene pool.