Madison Avenue weasels weave tangled webs
Hey, America! Go ahead. Take the red pill. Phone in reservations for a reality check.
As a culture, we're drinking the Kool Aid, Jonestown flavor, and don't know it.
It's not nice (or smart) to fool with human nature. And intrinsic to our nature is that widely diverse cultures simply cannot get along when plopped down adjacent to or amongst each other. The farther apart cultures are in values, mores, religion, education - and modernization - the more likely it is for there to be intractable conflict when they are forced into close proximity.
By now, most of us have learned of a recent extreme example of such a cultural clash. Weeks after the devastating tsunami, group of "Stone Age tribal people" were discovered alive on a remote island. When aid helicopters arrived, the people began shooting arrows at their rescuers. I look at the incident as a snapshot of a broader reality that applies to all cultures.
An aside:
Good for them. They're better off without us and our interference. The worst thing we could do is allow scientists to study them. We should apply Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle (mere observation disturbs the observed in such unpredictable ways that we will always be uncertain about the appearance of reality) before we ruin these people. They made it through the tsunami just fine without us. What sort of "help" might we be able to give them that will not do more harm than good?
If one considers the truth and history of the nature of cultures, it isn't hard to predict what will happen when two or more divergent groups are artificially forced to coexist.
A few years ago, the town of Lewiston,PA was put upon to host an unexpected influx of Somali Bantu tribespeople. Sure, before the UN brought them to the US, they were taught how to use doorknobs and not to light wood fires in their electric ovens. Sure, they were resettled and disbursed in small numbers, supposedly to facilitate their assimilation. But instead they followed their tribal custom of seeking out the best living situation - in this case, sending out scouts to look for a town with underutilized social services - and moved en-mass to exploit it.
After these transplants get settled, what is in store for the good citizens of Lewiston down the road? Our leaders assume we're gullible enough to not notice when the newcomers prove unable to deeply grasp our more esoteric key concepts. They and their children may eventually come to understand some book definitions of liberty, freedom, individualism, etc., but it makes no sense to believe that they will ever be enabled to take them to heart.
Without more and significant threads of common cultural experience to bind them to us, they will forever remain outsiders - even when they are among us for extended periods and generations.
Today, we have too many recent examples of liberal, compassionate stupidity we can examine to get a glimpse of what is in store for Lewistonians. Many towns and cities across America over the last four decades have been fundamentally changed because we've allowed the UN, Liberal Churches and multiculture-promoting organizations to import peoples and cultures into countless uneasy, unwelcomed coexistences with Americans.
Why is it that nobody ever asks townspeople whether or not they want to have their lives turned upside down? Why is questioning whether or not radical cultural change is in a community's best interest considered a politically incorrect taboo, while every cultural resettlement is unquestionably "good" for those being resettled?
Since they're in the news, let's take a look at the Laotian Hmong people that we've been importing to California, Wisconsin and Minnesota since the end of our involvement in Vietnam.
'Bullets were flying' outside the pool hall:
Matt Mckinney, Jim Adams and David Chanen, Star Tribune
Edwin S. Rubenstein, VDARE.com
But the multiculturalists just won't stop until they've finished their nasty deed. Emboldened, Madison Avenue (all mainstreamed stupidity requires an assist from Madison Avenue) is now feeding us loads of ever increasing fantastic drivel.
Multiracial ads called false
Erin Texiera, AP National Writer
Me? I took the red pill about 15 years ago and it is just about to reach maximum efficacy. And I'm finding a lot more friends who've had their eyes opened wide by the truth.
The truth is, we all just can't "get along." Yes, it is unfortunate that humans cannot yet aspire to such utopian notions; it will be millennia before humanity reaches that point, if ever.
It is simplistic and dangerous to assume otherwise.
As a culture, we're drinking the Kool Aid, Jonestown flavor, and don't know it.
It's not nice (or smart) to fool with human nature. And intrinsic to our nature is that widely diverse cultures simply cannot get along when plopped down adjacent to or amongst each other. The farther apart cultures are in values, mores, religion, education - and modernization - the more likely it is for there to be intractable conflict when they are forced into close proximity.
By now, most of us have learned of a recent extreme example of such a cultural clash. Weeks after the devastating tsunami, group of "Stone Age tribal people" were discovered alive on a remote island. When aid helicopters arrived, the people began shooting arrows at their rescuers. I look at the incident as a snapshot of a broader reality that applies to all cultures.
An aside:
Good for them. They're better off without us and our interference. The worst thing we could do is allow scientists to study them. We should apply Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle (mere observation disturbs the observed in such unpredictable ways that we will always be uncertain about the appearance of reality) before we ruin these people. They made it through the tsunami just fine without us. What sort of "help" might we be able to give them that will not do more harm than good?
If one considers the truth and history of the nature of cultures, it isn't hard to predict what will happen when two or more divergent groups are artificially forced to coexist.
A few years ago, the town of Lewiston,PA was put upon to host an unexpected influx of Somali Bantu tribespeople. Sure, before the UN brought them to the US, they were taught how to use doorknobs and not to light wood fires in their electric ovens. Sure, they were resettled and disbursed in small numbers, supposedly to facilitate their assimilation. But instead they followed their tribal custom of seeking out the best living situation - in this case, sending out scouts to look for a town with underutilized social services - and moved en-mass to exploit it.
After these transplants get settled, what is in store for the good citizens of Lewiston down the road? Our leaders assume we're gullible enough to not notice when the newcomers prove unable to deeply grasp our more esoteric key concepts. They and their children may eventually come to understand some book definitions of liberty, freedom, individualism, etc., but it makes no sense to believe that they will ever be enabled to take them to heart.
Without more and significant threads of common cultural experience to bind them to us, they will forever remain outsiders - even when they are among us for extended periods and generations.
Today, we have too many recent examples of liberal, compassionate stupidity we can examine to get a glimpse of what is in store for Lewistonians. Many towns and cities across America over the last four decades have been fundamentally changed because we've allowed the UN, Liberal Churches and multiculture-promoting organizations to import peoples and cultures into countless uneasy, unwelcomed coexistences with Americans.
Why is it that nobody ever asks townspeople whether or not they want to have their lives turned upside down? Why is questioning whether or not radical cultural change is in a community's best interest considered a politically incorrect taboo, while every cultural resettlement is unquestionably "good" for those being resettled?
Since they're in the news, let's take a look at the Laotian Hmong people that we've been importing to California, Wisconsin and Minnesota since the end of our involvement in Vietnam.
'Bullets were flying' outside the pool hall:
Matt Mckinney, Jim Adams and David Chanen, Star Tribune
"When the Tibetan group entered the crowded pool hall at about 9:30 p.m., they were confronted by the Hmong gang members who spoke English, but used "gang speak" to ask what gang the Tibetans were in, said Sheriff's Capt. Bob Aldrich.Hmemo to Hmayor Kelly: Take a Closer Look at the Hmong
The Tibetans seemed confused and said they weren't looking for trouble, but one of them called a friend. Soon a carload of Tibetans arrived, boosting their numbers to more than a dozen, Aldrich said.
The group again told the gang members they just wanted to play pool, but that didn't satisfy them, he said. Both groups grabbed pool cues and balls and began fighting, the charges said. Pro Billiards owner Jimmy Wetch told the two groups to leave, a hall manager said Friday.
Aldrich said the victims ran out of the building as the gang members followed, firing at them"
Edwin S. Rubenstein, VDARE.com
Bottom line: importing Hmong has been a disaster for America, and for the Hmong themselves?even before the recent news that the influx has been suspended because it?s caused the outbreak of a particularly unpleasant form of tuberculosis.The future of the Hmong, the Bantu and every other imported culture in America today is predictable and knowable. The more each one differs from America's core European, Protestant roots, the less likely it is to be good for our nation in the long run.
In contrast, the French policy of settling Hmong in virgin Caribbean jungle seems to have worked quite well. (?Hmong?s new lives in Caribbean,? by Bethan Jinkinson, BBC, March 10, 2005).
But that would deprive the American Refugee Industry?and their political mouthpieces?of clients.
And victims.
But the multiculturalists just won't stop until they've finished their nasty deed. Emboldened, Madison Avenue (all mainstreamed stupidity requires an assist from Madison Avenue) is now feeding us loads of ever increasing fantastic drivel.
Multiracial ads called false
Erin Texiera, AP National Writer
"Though the proportion of ethnic minorities in America is growing, experts say, more than superficial interaction between groups is still relatively unusual. Most Americans overwhelmingly live and mingle with people from their own racial background."So, take the blue pill if you think everything is just hunky-dory with all of this. Be a liberal and bury your head in the clouds.
Me? I took the red pill about 15 years ago and it is just about to reach maximum efficacy. And I'm finding a lot more friends who've had their eyes opened wide by the truth.
The truth is, we all just can't "get along." Yes, it is unfortunate that humans cannot yet aspire to such utopian notions; it will be millennia before humanity reaches that point, if ever.
It is simplistic and dangerous to assume otherwise.












