Genocide Report (March 27, 2018)

  • Mitt Romney: I’m ‘more of a hawk on immigration’ than Trump

    Want to see the free market at work in politics? Trump cut out ahead of the team by daring to talk about immigration and demographic replacement, so now former cucks are realizing that in order to compete and not get cut out like recent failed Republican candidates for local elections, they will have to take the lead back from Trump. Mitt may someday realize that his “47% comment” was his chance for the presidency and when he backed down off of that, he did irreparable damage to his brand. Maybe he can revitalize it however.

  • Zinke tells employees diversity isn’t important
  • You can tell that an idea is a walking corpse when people start viewing it as optional. In this life, what is not necessary is dead, and diversity has proven useless for finding high quality staffers, so it is being discarded. As this spreads, there will be a challenge to affirmative action, and if that falls, what makes this country so attractive to immigration will be effectively reduced. If the welfare state also falls, relatively few will want to come here.

  • Israeli chief rabbi calls black people ‘monkeys’
  • Across the globe, nationalist and xenophobic sentiment is rising. Why? Diversity is genocide, and people do not want to be genocided. Sometimes it takes the unfortunate form of rancor or scorn for other groups, but this will quickly be seized by saner minds who realize that all they have to do is say that diversity does not work.

Possible Reason For Bipedalism

Early ancestors of humankind may have taken to bipedalism for any number of reasons, but a gorilla at the Philadelphia Zoo recently found a new one: cleaner food:

When Louis has his hands full of tomatoes or other snacks, he walks upright like a human to keep food and hands clean, rather than the typical gorilla stance of leaning forward on his knuckles.

This suggests a possible interesting path in evolution. Early ancestors of humanity may have chosen bipedalism for the ability to carry food and other objects, marking a transition to the tool-making era of our forebears.