From Anonymous Conservative:
Excerpt:
I've been reading through the original, on and off for a few days now. It aligns with much that I have observed/stated over the past several years. If it's a cosplay, then it's so well done that it might as well be real.
Yeah, the guy's Lawful Evil, but I'll take him over most of the allies on the "right" that we have right now. He's rH-; I'm not. My blood cries for heroism, not sneakiness. But he's not wrong.
Few people want to live, or win, or invest in the future. I do. I think many of you will get something from this.
Excerpt:
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When he ridicules how a normal person would act if they won the lottery, he is saying they would buy a house, or a car, or even an island for themselves. But if you asked them what they would have spent money on, to see to it that their bloodline was perfected and stronger in 100 years than it was now, they would look at you blankly. Indeed, most people probably do not even think of themselves as part of any sort of bloodline, nor do their familial lines engage in the type of conscious careful selection of mates which could incrementally increase IQ, or strength, or health and vitality. So when winning a lottery, everyone sees the money, and giving it to their kids, or giving their kids the ability to make money in the form of education, or a business. But the path followed by their kid’s underlying genes are completely ignored. They could marry a bimbo, they could fail to reproduce, they could just marry the first “average” girl they happen across, that is not custom-chosen to meld well with their genes, and so on. All of that shortsightedness would lead to failure by the metrics of a bloodline family, since they would not be incrementally accruing beneficial genes in their family’s bloodline.
The key, is that meme, passed from generation to generation. You must create something in the family which will endure, incrementally improve it with each generation, and make every decision based on how to perfect it – in the next generation, and the generations hence. I must confess, it is a powerful idea, and would lend long-term advantage in a world of short-term individualists choosing love based purely upon the heart.
That is why the Rothschild implied they would not see anyone else as a threat – unless they grasped that concept and acted on it with all their might. Even as a lottery winner was handed this great advantage of hundreds of millions of dollars, they would squander it and fail to pass forward anything which would compete with the next generation of the bloodline-oriented families. Indeed, their wealthy kids, raised with ease and resources, would probably be even weaker than they would have been absent the lottery-winnings. And all along the way, nobody was seeking the real power, the information of how to perfect their genes and raise their children to be maximally successful.
And yet the most lowly citizen, grasping that bloodline concept, embracing the long-time-frame outlook, and developing the motivation in their family to pass that idea forward generation to generation, in children who were raised most effectively, would be a potent threat, if the other bloodlines did not get on top of them or subsume them at some point.
I've been reading through the original, on and off for a few days now. It aligns with much that I have observed/stated over the past several years. If it's a cosplay, then it's so well done that it might as well be real.
Yeah, the guy's Lawful Evil, but I'll take him over most of the allies on the "right" that we have right now. He's rH-; I'm not. My blood cries for heroism, not sneakiness. But he's not wrong.
Few people want to live, or win, or invest in the future. I do. I think many of you will get something from this.