Source: Original Site Post

  • September 12th, 2018 9:09 AM From James Santagata: Imagine we are like a GTA sim

    September 12th, 2018 9:09 AM From James Santagata:

    Imagine we are like a GTA simulation and before bed kids are trying to play one more segment Davey: “okay, I’m doolittle.” Lisa: “why you always get to be doolittle!” Davey: “well, i got here first. you can be krugman” Lisa: “i hate krugman!!!” Mom: “kids stop fighting. davey let lisa be doolittle and you can be krugman” Lisa: “i hate krugman, okay” Davey: “how about pinker?” Lisa: “momma, why i always got be a ((()))? All they do is lie.
    Doolittle throws molotovs and stuff.” Then pappa steps into living room. Pappa: “kids? What are you playing?” Davey: “GTA earth. i’m doolittle and lisa is pinker.” Pappa: “bwa hahahaha okay. one more session.” Lisa: “who are you daddy?” Pappa: “I think I’ll be taleb this time, just to fuck with pinker.” And and kids cant play the ely harman character. he is on parental lock, NS-17 rating. M-17 or whatever it is for gaming.

  • September 12th, 2018 8:55 AM [K]evin MacDonald’s position is (I think) that our

    September 12th, 2018 8:55 AM [K]evin MacDonald’s position is (I think) that our vulnerability is genetic, and while I think that’s probably partly true, because it’s back in the record forever, and the reason is we were all kin. But my position is that as in all OUR liberal (commercial) orders, the value of profit supersedes the value of self defense (which does not plague the far eastern civilizations), and christianity made it worse. In other words, universalism is a commercial utility but a genetic disease. As such my opinion is that any civilization can eventually develop trust if they produce the institutions and decrease the underclass population. And that western civilization must adopt the east’s strategy of self defense as a limit on profiting at the expense of genetic advantage.

  • Apprenticeships

    September 12th, 2018 7:28 PM

    —“The idea of apprenticeships was admirable: for a fixed term, usually seven years, a master or mistress of a trade would train a young person so that he could earn his living at that trade. The master kept the apprentice in board, lodging and clothes, but had no duty to pay him, although many did in the final years of the term, when the apprentice had learned enough to be helpful. The system applied throughout society. Prosperous merchants, goldsmiths and bankers made tidy sums from the premiums paid by the parents of hopeful apprentices. The members of the Company of Watermen and Lightermen of the River Thames, who had a monopoly of river traffic, had 2,140 apprentices in 1858. Poor masters could profit from the unpaid labour of children taken from the parish workhouse”—-

  • September 12th, 2018 8:51 AM [A]nd yes, when cooperating, deception as a means o

    September 12th, 2018 8:51 AM [A]nd yes, when cooperating, deception as a means of externalizing risk or obtaining discounts is the OPTIMUM strategy as long as you don’t run out of possible cooperators (cities). This is why constant suppression and homogeneity and reputations matter: so you quickly exhaust your market for deception. The problem for whites is that while we developed the first high trust civilization we are (as Kevin MacDonald has stated) extremely vulnerable to use of our trust signals. The principle reason being that we have eliminated the entire suite of means of suppression deception from our civilization.

  • Compulsory Labor and Compensation in England

    September 12th, 2018 7:24 PM  

    —“The Statute of Artificers (usually called the Statute of Apprentices) was passed in 1563 and remained on the Statute Book until 1819; the Poor Law Act of 1601 – which provided for much else besides poor relief – remained largely operative until the 20th c. Between them, these Acts attempted `to banish idleness, to advance husbandry and to yield to the hired person, both in times of scarcity and in times of plenty, a convenient proportion of wages’. They controlled entry into the class of skilled workmen by providing a compulsory seven years’ apprenticeship; they reserved the superior trades for the sons of the better off; they assumed a universal duty to work on all the able-bodied; and empowered justices to require unemployed artificers to work in husbandry; they required permission for a workman to transfer from one employer to another; they severely restricted the freedom of movement of the poor by enabling a person without means to be removed, by order of the justices, to his original parish or last place of settlement; and they empowered justices to fix wage rates for virtually all classes of workmen.” —-

  • We Walked on the Moon. They Worshipped It.

    September 12th, 2018 2:45 AM Science vs Superstition.

    —“The non-Occidental world worshiped the moon while the Occidents walked on it.“— George Hobbs

    (via james santagata )

  • September 12th, 2018 4:15 PM —“The cost of parasitism has been crashing for de

    September 12th, 2018 4:15 PM

    —“The cost of parasitism has been crashing for decades.”— Richard Nikoley

  • September 12th, 2018 10:50 AM —“The middle class didn’t care when it was the u

    September 12th, 2018 10:50 AM

    —“The middle class didn’t care when it was the underclass being culled. But our elites have conspired with a hostile outgroup to profit in the destruction of the middle also. Individualism in markets, but collectivism in government to impose the ban on free riding, fraud, and moral hazard to restore the relative profitability of the benevolent elite again compared to the industries of genocidal traitors.”—Joseph Smith

  • September 12th, 2018 10:48 AM —“There are too many examples of how the short-s

    September 12th, 2018 10:48 AM

    —“There are too many examples of how the short-sighted, or medium-sighted, values of our commercial elite conflict with the long-term values of the genetic and cultural group. This isn’t a new phenomenon but its effects have been amplified since the industrial revolution and our defenses have not kept pace with or adequately utilized the technological advances of the day. The influence of the commercial sector is vast and restraints on it are ineffective. An additional problem is that since the death of god and the disintegration of our religious institutions, we perceive profit in wholly materialistic terms. I think your emphasis on an expanded appreciation of property may be an antidote to this aspect of the problem.”— Tim Spillane

    Commercialism (Unregulated Capitalism) = Universalism at the expense of the people who make such commerce possible.

  • September 12th, 2018 10:33 AM [C]onstitutional Quote: –“So we pray you take hee

    September 12th, 2018 10:33 AM [C]onstitutional Quote:

    –“So we pray you take heed. Do not dismiss our entreaty. Our demands are right, just, possible and in the interests of our peoples. And if demanding fails we shall compel. And if we compel, we will make the Horrors of the French Revolution turn so feeble, that men will remember our prosecution of you for ten thousand years. For when all our ancestors that have been before, and all our descendants that have yet to be, demand our lives in their honor, we will not shirk our duty to them. And we will have no mercy in our execution.”—