Quote:
Originally Posted by Celestial Child
After the initial Club of Rome meeting in the 1970's it was concluded that there were too many people and Aids appeared on the scene. Before that Bertrand Russel one of the most admired philosophers in the Anglo Saxon sphere had said, in his book Marriage and Morals that "In extreme cases there can be little doubt of the superiority of one race to another…. There is no sound reason to regard negroes as on the average inferior to white men, although for work in the tropics they are indispensable, so that their extermination (apart from questions of humanity) would be highly undesirable." so there was an intellectual debate wether to kill off all blacks, to exterminate.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertrand_Russell
Then people wonder why blacks are suspicious,
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A round of applause to Bertrand Russell for helping to save Monday Night Football.
Do conspiracy theories offer some twisted paradoxical form of comfort in this day and age? Must AIDS be some form of nefarious James-Bond-movie scale overture orchestrated in order to effect the elimination of the black race, instead of a grievous medical error involving the incubation of the polio vaccine in the serum of monkeys and then its subsequent unwitting administration to the infirm?
Well, if that was the intention, chalk that up to another big f-up, because for starters, Freddie Mercury was one of the first to go, and he was about as black as Martha Stewart.
In all honesty, stopping for a minute and
thinking, without seeking refuge in abominable notions, does that really make sense?
Part of the problem is that this society watches so many movies and plays so much X-Box that art exceeds the simple
imitation of life. We need to stop feeding on this calumny propogated by attention mongers.
The oversaturated mass media needs to shave off the BS. Let's pull out Occam's Razor and git 'er done.
If it sounds stupid, it most likely is stupid.