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#Post#: 16952--------------------------------------------------
Re: Re: True Left Breakthrough: Hate
By: guest19 Date: December 8, 2022, 1:48 pm
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homo hubris in the jewish/western world, and homo slaves in the
"third world"
#Post#: 17062--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 15, 2022, 6:49 pm
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Duchesne again:
HTML https://www.thepostil.com/the-european-discovery-of-time/
[quote]European geologists were the first to realize that the
Earth had a history, that it came to be in the course of time,
and that humans could discover this history by studying the rock
strata and fossils of the Earth’s crust.
...
John Whitehurst, in a daring book published in 1788, Inquiry
into the Original State and Formation of the Earth (1778),
argued that the geological record suggested a much older history
of the Earth than the Noachian Flood. The Italian Giovanne
Arduino (1714–1795) even denied the Flood and contended that the
rock strata of the earth, which he classified with the names
Primitive, Secondary and Tertiary, also pointed to a much older
Earth.
The beginnings of the idea of an older Earth, however, is
associated with Georges Louis Leclerc (the legendary Comte de
Buffon), who was less a geologist than a historian of nature and
encyclopédiste. Buffon hypothesized that the Earth originated
from a collision of a comet and the sun, much earlier than the
Biblical 6000 year account. He suggested this argument in his
multivolume work, Histoire naturelle, générale et particulière
(1749–1788), and in his Introduction to the History of Minerals
(1774), although it was in his The Epochs of Nature (1778) that
he formulated in explicit terms the idea that “the surface of
the Earth has taken different forms in succession; even the
heavens have changed, and all the objects in the physical world
are, like those of the moral world, caught up in a continual
process of successive variations”. He inferred the age of the
Earth experimentally by heating a small metallic globe and
measuring the rate at which it cooled, which yielded an estimate
of 75,000 years old.
...
The German geologist Abraham Werner (1749-1817) thus proposed
that in the beginning the Earth was covered by a primeval ocean
which gradually receded to its present location, depositing by a
process of crystallization and chemical precipitation almost all
the rocks and minerals in the Earth’s crust over the course of
about one million years. In his estimation, heat was not an
important initial geological force; volcanic heat from the
interior of the earth was a late and a secondary rock-forming
agency after the main strata had been consolidated through slow
sedimentation. In the spirit of science, Werner devised a
comprehensive color scheme for the description and
classification of rock strata according to their mineral content
and age.
...
But soon a new perspective known as “uniformitarianism” came on
the horizon thanks to the Scottish James Hutton (1726-1797),
identified by some as the first student of the earth who may
properly be called a geologist. In his The Theory of the Earth,
or an Investigation of the Laws observable in the Composition,
Dissolution, and Restoration of Land upon the Globe (1788), he
provided a rigorous explanation, grounded in scientifically
acceptable principles and based on the existing geological data,
why the age of the Earth was indefinitely long.
...
The current geological consensus today is that the Earth’s
history is a slow, gradual process punctuated by occasional
natural catastrophic events.
Every participant in these debates was a European. The rest of
the world was oblivious about this revolution in geology, as it
was about Newtonian science, and the amazing revelation that the
Earth’s history was very old and could be explained with the
powers of the human mind.
...
After Hutton, Europeans would go on to develop techniques to
date the rock strata of the Earth as well as a variety of
methods to understand the Earth’s structure and evolution,
including field work, rock description, geophysical techniques,
chemical analysis, physical experiments, and numerical
modelling.
...
I left other names from this account of the discovery of
geological time, such as William Smith, who published three
works from 1815 to 1817, gave geology a descriptive methodology
for assigning relative ages to the various strata of the Earth,
and provided the first geological map of England and Wales.
After the 1830s, geology became a professional vocation with
many names making important contributions and reaching ever more
accurate estimations of the Earth’s age with the assistance of
European physicists and chemists.
In 1896 radioactive isotopes were discovered by the French
physicist Henri Becquerel showing that heat from their decay
pointed to an Earth hundreds of millions of years old. Between
1903 and 1906, the renowned New Zealand physicist Ernest
Rutherford (1871–1937) determined that isotopes could be used to
date rocks. By the 1930s, through the efforts of Arthur Holmes,
the age of the earth had expanded to about 2 billion years. In
1946, Willard Libby proposed an innovative method, radiocarbon
dating, which allowed for the dating of organic materials by
measuring their content of carbon-14. This method provided
objective age estimates for carbon-based objects that originated
from living organisms. The “radiocarbon revolution” finally
allowed Europeans to reach the conclusion that the Earth was
4.54 billion years old.[/quote]
The main effect of all this is make the material world feel less
like a prison that we should be trying to escape from, and more
like a place to stay and endlessly discover more about.
#Post#: 17117--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 19, 2022, 7:24 pm
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HTML https://twitter.com/dr_duchesne/status/1604881634503057408
[quote]White men were the only explorers in history producing
100% of the greatest ------ which means that human nature has NO
urge to explore. Only European man has.
Columbus
Da Gama
Magellan
Cortez
Cartier
Champlain
Cook
Livingston
Burton
Stanley
Scott
Shackleton
Amundsen[/quote]
I agree. So which bloodlines should be eliminated first if our
aim is to prevent settlement of outer space?
#Post#: 17214--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 24, 2022, 8:06 pm
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HTML https://twitter.com/dr_duchesne/status/1606831138139508736
[quote]If White men need diversity, how come they have been
responsible for about 97% of all scientific ideas, and ALL the
Scientific Instruments?
Ammeter
Barometer
Sextant
Voltmeter
Thermometer
Galvanometer
Hydrometer
Radar
Hygrometer
Electroscope
Microscope...[/quote]
[quote]Electron Microscope
Accelerometer
Magnetograph
Telescope
Periscope
Calorimeter
Nanoscale
Telemeter
Seismograph
Cardiograph[/quote]
Because the world was a better place before any of these
existed?
Bonus Counterculture movie clip:
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUOB-BkSMa8
#Post#: 17277--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 28, 2022, 8:19 pm
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More Duchesne:
HTML https://www.thepostil.com/western-cartography-a-history/
[quote]A supremely high proportion of the greatest cartographers
in history—reaching 100% after 1400—were Western. The history of
cartography may indeed provide a window into what the German
philosopher G.W.F. Hegel (1770–1831) called the “principle of
the European mind…which is confident that for it there can be no
insuperable barrier and which therefore takes an interest in
everything in order to become present to itself therein…to make
this Other confronting him his own, to bring to view the genus,
law, universal, thought, the inner rationality, in the
particular forms of the world. As in the theoretical, so too in
the practical, the European mind…subdues the outer world to its
ends with an energy which has ensured for it the mastery of the
world.”
...
the marvelous European age of discovery would begin in the
fifteenth century, preceded by the world eventful travels of
Marco Polo (1254-1324), which found expression in the Catalan
Atlas of 1375, a synthesis of medieval mappa mundi and the
travel literature of the time, showing compass-lines, and a
rather accurate delineation of the Mediterranean. The fourteenth
century also saw the emergence of the mariner’s compass, which
made it possible to determine from the location of a ship any
coastal feature, harbor or island. We should acknowledge the
Islamic contribution of the cartographer al-Idrisi, who produced
a large planispheric silver relief map that was original in not
portraying the Indian Ocean in a landlocked way and in offering
a more precise knowledge of China’s eastern coast. But Islamic
geography would go no further. The first real turning point
leading directly to the sixteenth century cartographic
revolution was the Portuguese planned discovery and mapping,
under the leadership of Henry the Navigator, in the course of
the fifteenth century, of the African West coast down to the
southern tip of Africa, rounding this massive continent and
finally uncovering the full extent of this “Terra incognita” or
“unknown land”. A mere two years after Diaz had sailed around
the Cape, Henricus Martellus created his World Map of 1490,
which showed both the whole of Africa generally and the specific
locations of numerous places across the African west coast,
detailing the step-by-step advancement of the Portuguese.
...
Once the age of discoveries intersected with the rise of modern
science and the development of geodesy, which began as a
surveying technique to determine with accuracy positions on
Earth, which involved the invention of accurate measuring
instruments and the development of new mathematical techniques,
all of which happened in Europe, it stands to reason that all
subsequent cartographers in history would be European. Some of
the surveying tools and techniques which allowed for detailed
hydrographic surveying of sea shores and islands, the topography
of lands, heights of hills and mountains, included the general
use of the plane table, for establishing and recording angles;
the method of triangulation to determine distance of remote
objects without going there; angle, distance, and
elevation-measuring instruments…and John Harrison’s (1693-1776)
‘longitude’ clock, which finally solved the problem of
determining longitude at sea.
It is said that the Cassini family were the first to start
mapping the interior of France, with César-François Cassini
(1714-84) being the most illustrious in the utilization of new
surveying tools such as triangulation and establishing that the
Earth was flattened at the poles, and in the production of an
accurate map of France.
James Cook (1728-1779) is best known as one of the greatest
explorers ever, for his three voyages between 1768 and 1779 in
the Pacific Ocean, reaching the southeastern coast of Australia
for the first time in history, circumnavigating New Zealand,
crossing the Antarctic Circle three times, and exploring the
Northwest passage all the way to the Bering Strait. He embodied
the Faustian spirit of exploration in its purest form, driven
solely by a will to explore without economic self-interest or
missionary zeal; confessing to an ambition which “leads me not
only farther than any man has been before me, but as far as I
think it possible for man to go.” What many don’t know is that
Cook was also one of the greatest cartographers in history. His
voyages were models of reconnaissance mapping. He produced the
first hydrographic surveys of the coast of Newfoundland based on
precise triangulation. He discovered New Zealand and mapped its
entire coastline using the sextant, which measures the angular
distance between two visible objects. He surveyed and mapped
South Georgia. In his search of the Northwest Passage, he mapped
the coast all the way to the Bering Strait. This is a kernel of
what this man accomplished.
...
There are too many great European cartographers to suppress.
Francis Beaufort produced in 1792 the first map of Ireland, as
the great hydrographer of his generation. He instructed
map-making explorers that “the height of all headlands, isolated
hills, and remarkable peaks should be trigonometrically
determined…The nature of the shore, whether high cliff, low
rock, or flat beach…the material of the beach, mud, sand, gravel
or stones.” I won’t say anything about the men who started
mapping the interior of India, and only a few words about the
ones who began land surveying and mapping the United States. One
has to start with Lewis and Clark, who conducted one of the most
renowned journeys in history crossing the uncharted American
West from August 1803 to September 1806, reporting in detail
about the geography and wildlife, and producing about 140 maps
of the area. They were followed by John Charles Frémont
(1813-90), the first presidential Republican candidate, mapping
explorer of the country between Missouri and the Rocky
Mountains, Oregon and Upper California, and the “still and
solitary grandeur” of the Great Salt Lake. Then there was Almon
Harris Thompson, the mapper of Colorado through the Grand
Canyon, southern Utah, part of Arizona—topographical maps to
illustrate rivers, canyons, mountains, with a geological
perspective.
Mappers of the bottom of the Ocean and the Universe
For all this, it has been estimated that in 1885 less than
one-ninth of the land surface of the earth had been
surveyed—which should not surprise us since the rest of the
world remained asleep without much cartography other than the
knowledge percolating from the West. In 1884, the West
encouraged the world to adopt the Greenwich meridian dividing
the Earth into the Eastern and the Western hemisphere, along an
imaginary line of 0° longitude, establishing an International
Date Line between one day and the next.
With the merger of the Western technologies of aviation and the
camera, including aerial photogrammetry, cartography was
revolutionized yet again, leading the to the rapid mapping of
the globe through the 20th century. From this point on, we are
no longer speaking of trailblazers as much as institutionalized
cartographers assisted by scientists sitting on desks, who would
go on to develop newer technologies, automation techniques,
electronic distance-measuring instruments, inertial navigation
systems, high resolution radars, remote sensing, and
computers—revealing great geographic details at long distances.
These technologies allowed radar imagery to be converted into
maps of impenetrable regions like the Amazon, including geologic
and seismic mapping of the earth beneath.
They also began to map the mountains, chasms, and plains beneath
the oceans, with the use of deep-sea echo sounders,
magnetometers, and underwater sonars. And the universe.
Europeans had begun mapping the moon back in the seventeenth
century, with the lunar cartographer Johannes Hevelius producing
his famous Map of the Moon in 1647. Today, hundreds of teams of
scientists are working with complex technologies, such as the
Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes, mapping everything from the
far reaches of the universe to the most infinitesimally small
particles within it. This Faustian drive for mastery of the
unknown has now produced (as of 2010), based on the ground-based
telescopes of the 2MASS Redshift Survey, 3D images of 43,000
galaxies.[/quote]
We all know what will happen next: they will expand into those
43000 galaxies and more. Unless we stop them here and now by
eliminating their bloodlines.
#Post#: 17288--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: guest98 Date: December 29, 2022, 1:46 pm
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[quote]Unless we stop them here and now by eliminating their
bloodlines.[/quote]
How can we do this?
#Post#: 17290--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 29, 2022, 5:22 pm
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The best way would be state control over reproduction, which we
have always advocated. War can also be useful:
HTML https://trueleft.createaforum.com/news/re-duginism-1134/msg17275/#msg17275
though this unfortunately also affects non-dangerous bloodlines:
HTML https://trueleft.createaforum.com/news/why-war-in-ukraine-is-causing-apocalyptic-famine/
On a smaller scale, we recommend Ahimsa activists prioritize
machinist targets with plenty of reproductive potential
remaining.
#Post#: 17302--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: guest98 Date: December 30, 2022, 11:30 am
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How can you tell if someone is a machinist, like if your in a
crowd of people how can you identify which ones are the
machinist's? Are all jews-"white" machinist's?
#Post#: 17304--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 30, 2022, 4:52 pm
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"How can you tell if someone is a machinist"
If they have participated in machine R&D.
"if your in a crowd of people how can you identify which ones
are the machinist's?"
You would have to talk to them one by one to learn their
background.
"Are all jews-"white" machinist's?"
No. However, their gene pool is expected to turn out a fairly
consistent fraction of machinists per generation. Therefore
uniformly reducing their TFR in a given generation can be
expected to proportionately reduce the total number of
machinists in the following generation.
#Post#: 17324--------------------------------------------------
Re: Homo Hubris
By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 31, 2022, 5:52 pm
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Time for our enemies to entertain us with their subhuman tastes
again:
HTML https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2022/12/30/facial-racial-spatial-how-human-faces-and-brains-have-taken-different-routes-through-race-space/
[quote]The specialness of European female beauty
But the anthropologist Peter Frost argues that male choices were
particularly important in Europe, where women competed more
intensely for fewer men in a much harsher and colder environment
than that of tropical Africa. That’s why the color of women’s
hair and eyes is most varied in Europe: women benefited by
standing out from their rivals in the competition for mates in
an individualist mating system in which personal preferences
rather than family strategizing was paramount. Indeed, Frost
says that “eye colors … have diversified only in Europeans and
more so in women than in men. Specifically, the range of eye
colors is more evenly distributed among women: they have the
less frequent colors more often and the more frequent ones less
often.” The eyes are windows to the soul, so it’s said. They’re
certainly a window into evolution and the gem-like eyes —
sapphires, emeralds and more — of European women are the result
of a distinct and uniquely beautiful evolutionary path.[/quote]
Such as?
[quote]the jaw-dropping beauty of the two Margo’s takes some
beating, Margeaux Hemmingway and the contemporary version Margot
Robie, by anyones metric.[/quote]
Not by our metric!
HTML https://allthatsinteresting.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/margaux-hemingway.jpg
[img width=972
height=1280]
HTML https://cdn.britannica.com/32/201632-050-66971649/actress-Margot-Robbie-Australian-2018.jpg[/img]
HTML https://pbs.twimg.com/media/En9jYfYW8AA_k4T.jpg
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