Aired May 24-25, 2016. Joe Atwill and Jan Irvin discuss the family and marriage and the attacks on these traditional institutions.
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Very interesting and productive analysis as always, gentlemen.
I agree wholeheartedly on most of the points brought up and elucidated so eloquently here.
Coming from a somewhat more explicitly racialist angle than Mr. Irvin, however, I probably tend to focus my attention more directly on White racial interests since (1) we are so massively outnumbered compared to the other races and (2) since zog’s cultural attacks are directed almost exclusively at us. Multiculturalism is forced only upon White nations whereas non-White countries in general are, not only allowed, but encouraged to remain ethnoculturally intact.
To ignore this fact is not only naïve but, in my opinion, also irresponsible.
I have noted with interest that Mr. Atwill seems to harbor understandings of these matters a bit closer to my own in this regard. But despite such apparent divergence in terms of racial worldview, I still hold Mr. Irvin’s investigative and informative work over the years in very high regard.
Concerning the very relevant dietary/nutritional interpretation of gender mainstreaming proposed in the presentation here, I would like to bring forth an intriguing aspect to the discussion … namely that of the role of soy in east asian, confucian/mongoloidal cultures. Cultures with typically high tendencies towards social authoritarianism, political hypercollectivism, unquestioning loyalty to established hierarchy and general submissiveness of the spirit (let’s call it the Juche syndrome). Now, I’m certain that this angle has already been covered extensively elsewhere in the encyclopedic archives available here, but fascinating it is, no less, to contemplate and remind ourselves how a particular type of staple diet may have been selected and popularized by ruling castes for the express purpose of societal control through hormonal manipulation of the subject masses, possibly for millennia in the far eastern, mongoloidal nations (Korea, Japan, China in particular).
Such a historical precedent, if true, makes the notion, indeed the suspicion, of similar schemes in operation today all the more justified.