- 2 days ago
Stefan Molyneux digs into what he calls "Gene Wars," looking at how r and K selection strategies in reproduction shape human societies. He describes r-selected types as those that reproduce quickly with little effort put into raising the young, while K-selected ones focus on having fewer kids but investing more in them. Molyneux ties this to modern problems like abortion and spending habits, suggesting these strategies affect how people view duties to others and keeping systems steady. He wraps up by urging people to pay more attention to these biological factors when dealing with today's issues.
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LearningTranscript
00:00:00Hi everybody, this is Stefan Molyneux from Freedom Main Radio. I hope you're doing well.
00:00:03Welcome to my part three labor of love. This is Gene Warr's part three policies and I'm
00:00:11going to do a very brief summary for those of you who want to cheat and start here. This
00:00:16is a very brief summary, of course, of what has gone on in the past two presentations
00:00:19so that you can sort of understand where we're going with here. So the basic thesis is that
00:00:26there is a left-wing and a right-wing brain that corresponds quite nicely to biological
00:00:33processes and evolutionary capacities that have been well delineated throughout the history
00:00:40of biology and that there are basic physiological differences between these two brains, which
00:00:45we went into in part two. So basically, let's go through this very briefly. So for decades,
00:00:53two main reproductive strategies have been recognized by biologists. They're referred
00:00:56to as RK selection theory. So the R strategy is an adaptation to excessive resources and
00:01:05it generally is an evolutionary strategy pursued by prey species, the rabbits, mice, deer, insects
00:01:10and so on. And it emphasizes quantity over quality of offspring. Rabbits just pump out offspring
00:01:17like crazy. I think oysters have a hundred million eggs every single year. Oyster porn never ends.
00:01:24And because you're not going to run out of grass, you just might as well have kids as often as
00:01:29possible. If you're a rabbit, you're just going to keep eating grass. And, you know, an owl is going
00:01:33to sometimes swoop down, a fox is going to grab you, a wolf is going to grab you, and so on.
00:01:38And so you just want to pump out as many kids because you can't fight against the wolf or the fox
00:01:42or the owl, you're just going to get eaten. And so when you have an excess of resources,
00:01:48in other words, you think of rabbits in a field, you've got 10 rabbits or 20 rabbits in a field,
00:01:54they're going to get eaten before they run out of grass. So you might as well just keep pumping
00:01:58out babies and be basically a great way of turning grass into new bunnies. Now, the K strategy is an
00:02:05adaptation to scarce resources. In other words, if you are a predator species, you know, like a wolf or
00:02:10or an owl or a lion, then grass is a lot more common than antelope. And so you have a scarce
00:02:21resource, which is the animals that you're hunting. And catching a rabbit is a lot more complicated
00:02:26than eating a blade of grass or eating, if you're a deer, eating a leaf on a tree. And so you have to
00:02:32have fewer children because if you have too many children, you're all going to starve to death.
00:02:35And you also need to invest in your children considerably, in your offspring, because you
00:02:41need to work together as a pack to hunt whatever it is that you're hunting in general. So you have to
00:02:45teach your kids how to hunt, you know, teaching animals how to eat grass. It's like, hey, grass,
00:02:50go eat, you know, go do it. And oh, I think I've got this, right? Whereas if you think of hyenas
00:02:54hunting an antelope, well, some of them have got to chase the antelope, some of them have to lie in
00:02:59weight. And it's a very complicated thing to do. And so it's been around for a long, long time.
00:03:08And it's in the major university biology textbooks and so on. So you can look it up. It's not particular
00:03:17to this presentation. And so there is the argument that RNK is not just pursued by particular species,
00:03:25but also within particular species. And so there are animals where rising sea levels have created
00:03:32an island. And in the island, there aren't really any predators. And the RNK begins to shift with
00:03:37those kinds of situations. So let's look at the five main traits of an R strategy life form, also
00:03:42known as a liberal, and aversion to competition. And that's very, very important. So if you're a
00:03:48rabbit, and you're not going to compete with another rabbit for the grass, because, you know,
00:03:53just take three steps to the left, and there's more grass. Like, if you're a giraffe, you're going
00:03:58to nibble at those leaves, and you're not going to go and attack someone else, because, you know,
00:04:03just move over and get more leaves, because there's no shortage of food. And so they don't like to
00:04:07compete. Competition is not particularly healthy. Now, you can have prey species that compete, but they
00:04:13do so for mates, when you think of sort of the deer and the rutting and all that sort of stuff.
00:04:18Our strategy, high sex drive, high promiscuity. And that's because you just want to bang out as
00:04:24many kids before you get eaten. That's your best strategy for reproduction. You have low investment
00:04:29single parenting. These are not pair bonded species in general that mate for life, and they don't really
00:04:34invest in their kids. You know, rabbits squeeze out the pups, and off they go to eat more grass and
00:04:39have some more sex. But enough about college. And our strategy, you've got to mature really quickly.
00:04:45You've got to get your reproductive gonads going as humanly possible. It's, you know,
00:04:51highly accelerated naughty bits, I believe is the technical phrase. Early sexual maturity and
00:04:56activity is really key for our strategy. The earlier you can get to reproduction, the more
00:05:00likely you are to survive. Because any animal which delays its capacity to reproduce gets eaten and gets
00:05:06eaten by a predator while that gene dies out. Our strategies have very low loyalty to their in-group.
00:05:13I see this. Your rabbit gets eaten by something, and the other rabbits are like, yeah, I've still got
00:05:16my grass. Good. I'm glad that they're full, because now I'm not going to. Low loyalty to
00:05:20in-group. These are not pack animals in general. So compare this to the K strategy. Well, there's an
00:05:26embrace of competition, because Ks are more complex. They tend to be more intelligent. They tend to have
00:05:32high in-group loyalties, which we'll talk about in a sec. But they embrace competition, because
00:05:37excellence in K really matters. You can't really be excellent at eating grass, but excellent at hunting
00:05:45a rabbit is really, really important. Now, because they embrace competition, they have to delay their
00:05:52sexual maturity, because you need to find out if someone, if the wolf you're mating with is of high
00:05:58quality. Can they, you know, can they bring a lot of meat to you? So you have to wait until after
00:06:04puberty to engage in monogamous sexuality, because you have to prove your worth in this situation.
00:06:11K strategists have high investment dual parenting, and because they highly invest in their children,
00:06:15in terms of raising them, and teaching them how to hunt, and on keeping them safe, and so on,
00:06:19they don't have that many kids, right? They just have fewer kids. So they have late sexual maturity
00:06:24and activity, and a very high in-group loyalty, because it is a pack, and they can't work very well
00:06:30individually. They have to work together as a pack. A rabbit can eat all the grass at once,
00:06:34and a deer can eat all the leaves at once without having to have other leaf and rabbit, other, sorry,
00:06:38rabbits and deer surround the tree or anything, but that's not the way it works with, with the R versus
00:06:45K strategies. So the R versus K, my argument is that they are gene sets, and in part two of this
00:06:54presentation is part three, of course, there are these gene sets, and the R versus K are gene sets
00:07:00that compete with each other. Human beings are the most K-selected species known to human beings,
00:07:06I guess, but even within humanity, there are different strategies of R versus K, which is what
00:07:12we're going to get into here, and R versus K tend to prey upon each other. So you can think of R versus K
00:07:17as human subspecies that generally tend to displace each other, and there's value in K,
00:07:24and there's value in the R. If you have an entirely R-selected situation in society, you just have
00:07:29massive chaos. If you have an entirely K-selected situation in society, you generally end up with
00:07:35stagnation. There's not enough innovation and creativity, like think of the multi-thousand year,
00:07:40not much changed in Chinese society, Mandarin rule, and so on. Now, Ks don't obviously
00:07:47prey literally upon R's in humanity, but the gene sets both fight for survival using a variety of
00:07:54cultural and religious and political mechanisms, which is what we're going to get into here.
00:07:58And if you really want to understand Ks in humanity, think of sports and the free market. You know,
00:08:04if you win in sports, you don't eat the other team, but you carry home the prize, and this may get you
00:08:11the cheerleader or whatever. And in the free market, if you outbid someone in a contract or in a proposal,
00:08:16well, you don't eat them, they don't starve, but you've sort of won access to more resources.
00:08:23And so we're going to get into that as we go forward. Let's move on. So, our organisms, short lifespan,
00:08:32they tend to be small, and they're weak and vulnerable. They have fast maturation. And one thing that's true
00:08:37about biology as a whole is that fast maturation means less complexity when you mature. So something
00:08:44that is faster to grow is going to be less complex when it matures. Just think of human babies. It
00:08:48just takes forever to grow up. I mean, the male human brain doesn't really finish its maturation
00:08:53point until the late 20s. I mean, that's a crazy, it's almost a third of a century to grow a male
00:08:58brain. So, our organisms are prone to take risks. I mean, they have to. They've got to go and eat,
00:09:05even though there are predators around. They're opportunistic exploiters. In other words, if you give
00:09:10them more food, they'll generally like goldfish. They just eat until they explode. They tend to be
00:09:14less intelligent and experienced, but they make up for that with a very strong sex drive,
00:09:19Kardashians. They tend to reproduce at an early age. They have a very large number of offspring.
00:09:23They have very small relative size at birth. They care little for their offspring, and they have a
00:09:28highly variable population size. You know, if there's lots of grass, they'll grow like crazy. And if
00:09:33their predators go away, they'll grow like crazy. They don't have any general inhibition to growth.
00:09:38And that's because the cap, the limit to their growth, is external predation or a sudden change
00:09:44in the availability of resources. Compare this to K organisms. They generally have a longer
00:09:48lifespan. They tend to be large and complex animals, robust and well-protected. They've got,
00:09:56you know, they've got horns, or they've got teeth, or they've got claws, or something like that.
00:10:02They tend to mature much more slowly, and they're risk-averse. They'd like not to take too many risks.
00:10:07And they are consistent exploiters. In other words, they eat until they're full, and then they
00:10:12don't eat again, right? And they tend to be more intelligent and experienced as animals. They have
00:10:17a weaker sex drive. And that's because having too many children is very bad for the gene pool.
00:10:23They reproduce at a later age. They have a small number of offspring who have a large relative size
00:10:28at birth. They put a huge amount of care into their offspring, and they tend to have
00:10:31a stable population size. All right, so let's get into the details. Let's look at something like
00:10:41abortion. So we have conservatives, and we have liberals, or left. I'm going to use left versus
00:10:46right, because it's a bit more of a common way of looking at things. So if we look at our organisms,
00:10:52those who are on the left, well, our organisms have low investment in offspring. They generally avoid
00:10:58monogamy and pair bonding. So the quality of their offspring is relatively unimportant. It's not like
00:11:03one rabbit is really a lot better than another rabbit, whereas in the case of the K organisms,
00:11:08the quality really matters. So there's little differentiation in quality. And better in the
00:11:14our organism world is actually worse, because a more complex rabbit still is going to get eaten by
00:11:20the wolf. And so you're investing in growing the rabbit brain rather than reproducing, which means
00:11:25that you're more likely to get eaten rather than reproduce. And it's not like your rabbit brain is
00:11:29going to have you outfox the fox, so to speak. So better is actually worse in the R continuum.
00:11:35Offspring, which interfere with more offspring, are a negative. This is one of the reasons why
00:11:39it's kind of a pump and dump situation, or a spray and pray situation for sperm and eggs. Because
00:11:45if you have lots of offspring around, and nobody wants to mate with you, well, then you can't produce
00:11:50offspring as quickly as possible, which is a basic foundational drive and component of the R-organism
00:11:55strategy. And so if you think about something like breastfeeding, right? The longer you breastfeed,
00:12:02the less likely you are to have another kid. And you can look at different breastfeeding lengths
00:12:07as part of this continuum as well. And so babies are not precious. Yeah, you could just make another.
00:12:15There's just undifferentiated blobs. They're just blobs of cells in the R-organism universe.
00:12:18And you have a very high sex drive, and you're going to have as many kids as you possibly can.
00:12:25And the parental preferences vastly outstrip the child preferences, right? Because your parental
00:12:30preference is to go and have more kids. And so the R-organisms, given that this characteristic
00:12:36tends to cluster itself on the left, is pro-choice and pro-abortion. And by that, I simply mean that
00:12:43they accept that abortion. Like, it's the woman's choice. It's the woman's choice. Parental preferences vastly
00:12:48outstrip the child's preferences. Of course, it's the baby's or the fetus's preference to be born,
00:12:52but it's the parent's preference that matters. And so this low value of offspring is one of the
00:12:59reasons why on the left they have less problem with abortion. Now, just to remind you here, I'm not
00:13:05arguing either of these positions. In this presentation, I've talked about these things
00:13:10elsewhere. I'm simply trying to delineate why there is a left-right divide, why it's so common,
00:13:16and why it ends up with particular positions. So I just really want to be clear. I'm not pro or
00:13:21against either any of the positions I'm putting forward here. I'm simply pointing out the biological
00:13:25markers. You know that old parenting joke, you can be replaced. You know, I can just make another one
00:13:33of you. And that is very much an R statement. Now, K organisms, the high investment in offspring,
00:13:39monogamy, and pair bonding, the quality of the offspring is essential, which is why you have to
00:13:45put so much time and effort into finding a capable and quality mate and investing in your kids.
00:13:50There's a high differentiation in quality, right? A wolf who's really good at hunting is a lot more
00:13:57valuable than a wolf that's really bad at hunting. In fact, a wolf that's really bad at hunting will drag
00:14:00you down. But there's no such thing as a rabbit that's really good at getting grass. I mean,
00:14:05it's no differentiation. So better in the K organism is actually better, not just for you,
00:14:10but for the pack as a whole, right? If you think of it in terms of sports, right? There aren't many
00:14:15players who in hockey said in Wayne Gretzky's heyday, I don't want to play with Wayne Gretzky
00:14:21because he'll make me look bad. It's like, well, no, Wayne Gretzky was a fantastic player, also
00:14:24had a remarkably high number of assists in that he was a great team player. And so
00:14:30having somebody of high quality on your team is really, really important. Maybe they'll get
00:14:35the cheerleader, so to speak, but you'll get to win more games. So a really good hunter
00:14:40in the wolf pack gets everyone to feed better. So quality is actually better for the entire
00:14:45gene set of the pack. Offspring which interfere with more offspring, that's fine, no problem at all,
00:14:51which is why K-selected organisms tend to breastfeed a lot longer because too many children is bad
00:14:57for the K because they can't invest in the quality of their offspring as much. And so you've got people
00:15:02who consume resources, but who aren't going to grow up to produce as many resources because they're
00:15:06lower quality. And you can't just make another in the K-selected organism world because it's a
00:15:11longer gestational period. It's a tougher birth usually because there's bigger brains to pass through
00:15:15the birth canal. Longer breastfeeding, it's a huge investment in offspring. So you can't just,
00:15:20hey, I'm going to make another. And babies are worshipped. They're incredibly precious. K-organisms
00:15:27will go to huge lengths to keep their baby safe and secure. And because of that, there generally is
00:15:32a lower sex drive among K-selected organisms because fewer children are better. And as we talked
00:15:39about in the last presentation, which we'll get into in a slide or two, K-selected organisms
00:15:43do not have a thirst, an insatiable thirst for variety, which we'll get into. Child preferences
00:15:52vastly outstrip parent preferences, right? If your K-selected organism like a human being and your
00:15:57kid cries in the night, you get up and you take care of your kid because the parent preferences
00:16:02are insignificant relative to the baby or child preferences. And so because K-organisms place such
00:16:08high value on children and human beings can be somewhat divided into a K versus R-continuum,
00:16:14the K-organisms, which are people on the right who are generally religious, are anti-abortion
00:16:19because children are incredibly precious. And R's generally on the left are atheistic, materialistic,
00:16:25and secular. So there's no magic soul inside the body. But on the right, among conservatives,
00:16:31there is a soul within the body. And the soul is a metaphorical way of saying how important
00:16:36offspring and human beings are. So now, just to clarify something that was confusing to other
00:16:42people, I apologize for that in previous presentations. It's true in general, religious
00:16:45people have more babies, but birth control is still a very important part of what has changed,
00:16:53right? So religious people have a lower sex drive in general, but of course, they end up having more
00:16:58sex in a monogamous relationship. You have more sex overall. And of course, you don't end up having
00:17:02to be regularly doused with Lysol in order to kill whatever bacteria the last person left you with.
00:17:09So, you know, Mormons have 3.4 babies per family. I think for the US as a whole, it's 2.1.
00:17:15So, but they don't have more babies than they can afford. And they still highly invest in each baby.
00:17:21And they don't, they don't abort, right? And so the children are precious. So it doesn't mean that
00:17:27necessarily that K organisms are always going to have fewer children, but they will tend to pair
00:17:33bond and invest highly in their children. That's the K organism. The fact that the R organisms have
00:17:37fewer children is because of birth control and abortion and so on. It's not part of the biological
00:17:41drive. So I hope that that helps. So let's look at economic versus sexual freedom. I talked about
00:17:49this with Bill Gerdner recently on this show. So R organisms have a very high sex drive and insatiable
00:17:56thirst for variety. They're just going to have lots of sex with lots of different rabbits. I know.
00:18:01I like to watch. And now our organisms have little capacity to compete in the economic
00:18:06free market. Because they don't invest that much in their kids, and they generally grow up without
00:18:13fathers, which we'll get to in the single mom slide. And because they tend to, in general, be somewhat
00:18:18less complex and intelligent, and they don't have as much tribal sense in-group preferences, and they
00:18:24don't network as well, they have less capacity to compete in the economic free market. And so they
00:18:30prefer sexual liberty to economic freedom. You know, I'm not going to win in economics, but I'm
00:18:36really horny when I have sex with a lot of different people, so I would love it if sexual restrictions
00:18:41were blown away. The 1960s, you know, purely R selected time in a lot of ways. They prefer sexual
00:18:48subsidies to low taxes, right? So if you're R selected, you're probably not going to end up making a lot
00:18:53of money, so high taxes aren't a problem to you. But you do want sexual access to a variety of
00:18:59women. I'm just speaking to men here in general. And so you want the government to do things which
00:19:05are going to open up the magic gateway of paradise, the snug hum or female availability. And so sexual
00:19:13subsidies, welfare, single mom welfare, and free government schools, and free health care for kids,
00:19:20like all the things that reduce the negative consequences of sexual availability. Abortion,
00:19:25you want abortion because, you know, that increases your access to sexual variety. And so given that
00:19:31you're not likely to make much money, but you really want a lot of sexual access, well, you're going to
00:19:36really like government policies which lower sexual standards and reduce inhibitions. And this is also
00:19:42going to occur in art, right? You're going to prefer art that promotes, oh, you know, we've just met and
00:19:51we've just slept together. And you're just going to see art that promotes this kind of sexual
00:19:58availability, sexual access. Don't have such hang-ups, you know. Everyone who doesn't have sex on the
00:20:03first date is a square, and they're inhibited, and they're uptight, and they're stuck up, and they got
00:20:07something non-exotic up their ass and that, right? So you're going to love artistic and government
00:20:13policies which lower sexual standards and sexual restrictions. So yeah, you're not going to get
00:20:19taxed much, but you sure want to get your big bag full of poontang, so you're very willing to trade
00:20:24economic freedoms for sexual freedoms. And this, of course, is what happened in the 1960s and the 1970s.
00:20:31There were massive restrictions on economic freedom, but massive breakdowns in sexual freedoms,
00:20:38right? And this is when one of the things that Ronald Reagan really regretted in his political
00:20:42career was the giving of no-fault divorce. You could just get divorced, and that is fine. Well, that
00:20:49opens up sexual access for a lot of men, because when women are tied up in monogamous relationships,
00:20:55their sexual access is diminished. And so the fact that, yes, it had to be California, the left coast of
00:21:00the United States, that put this stuff in, which then quickly spread around, you know, people say,
00:21:04oh, gays have undermined marriage. It's like, oh, you know that it was a lot of straight people who
00:21:08voted for and really wanted no-fault divorce. I think that's done a little bit more. So there are
00:21:14organisms, absolutely, you know, give me sex, and I don't care that much about taxes. That perfectly
00:21:21fits with the biological and genetic drives of the organism. So basically, you know,
00:21:30penises and vaginas, you know, they're kind of undifferentiated. You know, you can't tell the
00:21:35quality of someone through a glory hole, and basically they are selected organisms. They're
00:21:39just looking for variety and sexual release. So glory hole, pencil sharpener, cupped hand, sorry,
00:21:46cupped hand. I mean, what do they care? So K-organisms, they have, of course, a lower sex
00:21:51drive and less thirst for variety. And that would be bred out, right? All the K-organisms that had
00:21:56crazy sex drives and wanted to have sex with anyone would have been ostracized or attacked by
00:22:00the other K-organisms, would have achieved either personal or genetic death through being killed or
00:22:06failure to reproduce, because you can't have that many kids when you're K. They have a very high
00:22:10capacity to compete in the free market because their parents invest so much into them. They're not
00:22:15raised watching TV. They're not raised, you know, here's a tablet, here's a computer, you know,
00:22:19whatever it is. You have high investment, which means that you have a lot of skills to bring to
00:22:23the free market. Now, for K-organisms, economic freedom means that you can compete in the free
00:22:29market to win and achieve a lot of resources, and that buys you sexual access to high-quality
00:22:35monogamous partners, right? I know that this is bringing things down to the base element and so on,
00:22:41again, I'm talking from a male perspective largely here, but, you know, your daddy's rich and your
00:22:47mama's good-looking, that old song by Gershwin, I don't know, it's in summertime, and Sam Cooke's
00:22:52version is great, by the way, but Sam Cooke's version of everything is great. But, so if you have
00:22:58economic freedom, you can go out and compete for resources, you can get a lot of resources,
00:23:01and you can end up with a pre-train wreck and a Nicole Smith. Again, this is just biological drives.
00:23:07You can get a lot of resources, which buys you access to high-quality monogamous partners.
00:23:14Now, so K-organisms, they prefer lower taxes. They don't want sexual subsidies. They want lower
00:23:19taxes, because they want to be able to accumulate the resources that gets them access to high-quality
00:23:24partners. So, they reject government policies which lower sexual standards, right? They want
00:23:31Mallory Towers, not every Woody Allen film ever made, right? They want all of these standards to
00:23:37be kept relatively high, and they will punish sexual irresponsibility as being very dangerous
00:23:43to the tribe as a whole. So, K-organisms, they're perfectly fine if there are fewer sexual freedoms
00:23:51or sexual libertinism or whatever. They want economic freedom, because competition enhances high-quality
00:23:57sexual access, which is why you have people on the left constantly saying, let's just, you know,
00:24:03make love, not war. Let's just have sex. Let's have sex. Let's lower the standards. You know,
00:24:06why are you so hung up? And fine, you can raise my taxes. I don't care. Whereas people on the right,
00:24:11the K-selected organisms, they say, ah, I'm not that comfortable with all this sexual activity and
00:24:17sexual freedom. It's really not good. But I don't want high taxes, because that's going to interfere
00:24:22with my ability to get the resources that get me the high-quality partner. So, let's look at radical
00:24:30feminism. So, R-organisms, which we'll talk about in the single mom presentation in a sec,
00:24:36R-organisms flourish. The R-organism gene set, the R-gene set, really flourishes when the dads aren't
00:24:43around. Because when a father isn't around, the signal that gives to the genetics and the epigenetics
00:24:48of the, well, the epigenetics in particular, these are the genes that change based on environment,
00:24:53that turn on and off based upon environmental cues. When you grow up without a father, this signals to
00:24:59you one of two things. Either your father has been killed, in which case you're in a dangerous
00:25:04environment, an unstable environment, and unstable environments with predation, of course, are the
00:25:08breeding ground for the R-selected gene set. Or your father just doesn't stick around, in which case
00:25:14you're in a low parental investment situation, in which case, you know, your R-gene set is what
00:25:21needs to grow to succeed within that. So, radical feminism in general promotes hostility to men.
00:25:31And because it makes, and when men are unstable or somewhat absent or somewhat not around,
00:25:38that promotes higher sexual drives among women. And it has them want to mate with somebody who's
00:25:45more physically perfect, rather than more morally good and stable and reliable, which is why,
00:25:49you know, the young women of today so often go for, you know, bad boys with abs, you know, and
00:25:55hella good hair, as Taylor Swift says, you know, they want physical cues of excellence, rather than
00:26:01stable cues of strong and consistent and responsible and reliable provider.
00:26:08So, if you promote hostility to men among women, you know, constant scare in the West of, you know,
00:26:13rape, rape culture, you're in a rape culture, you're going to get raped, you rape, rape, rape,
00:26:17patriarchy, men are bad, men are evil, men are, ah, right? Okay, so that provokes a higher sex drive.
00:26:23That promotes irresponsible sexuality with regards to case-selected preferences. And also, if you keep
00:26:30telling women that they're in constant danger, well, constant danger is what promotes the R-gene set,
00:26:37right? Because predation, predation, predation is what the R-gene set is selected for, to survive
00:26:42constant predation. Radical feminism promotes masculinity among women, right? And you can see
00:26:50this all over the place, you know, the kick-ass women in movies and the kick-ass women in video
00:26:54games, you know, they're tough and they can take on guys. Like I saw, heaven help me, I saw the Mission
00:27:00Impossible Rogue Nation movie, and there's this woman in there who's all of a, you know, buck ten
00:27:04as far as weight goes, and she's taken on some 250-pound, six-foot-six-tall guy with pure muscle,
00:27:09and she just wins, you know, just wins. Meanwhile, it's, you know, you can only get two army ranger
00:27:14women completing the standards if they lower the standards, right? So you promote masculinity among
00:27:19women. Fathers are bad, you've got to do it all by yourself. And when you look at our selected
00:27:25organisms, there's less differentiation between male and female characteristics. And the men tend
00:27:32to be prettier, and think of ducks, right? The men tend to be prettier, and the women are kind of
00:27:36plain. And they think of peacocks, the male peacocks, right? Those giant feathers coming out of their
00:27:39ass, you know, much like some kinky Stefan Ledfest, hey, from Saturday Night Live, not this show,
00:27:45in some, I assume, Berlin dungeon. And so, promotion of masculinity among women, well, yeah, I mean,
00:27:52female rabbits are very masculine, in a way, because they have to take care of their kids
00:27:56themselves, and they can't rely upon men. The femininity is kind of the shadow cast by
00:28:05protective masculinity. In other words, when men take on the role of providers, and so on,
00:28:09then the women can differentiate more and become more feminine. Again, right or wrong, these are just
00:28:14the realities of biology. So, when you promote masculinity among women, well, men become more
00:28:24promiscuous, more hedonistic, less responsibility, they become more effeminate. And the women become
00:28:30more masculine, and aggressive, and shrill, and competitive, and all that kind of stuff. And
00:28:35so, the, this is the rise of the metrosexual, this is the rise of manscaping, this is the rise of
00:28:43men having their body hair removed, to look more feminine, to look less masculine, and so on. And
00:28:49so, this is what happens in the R-selected environment. Now, radical feminists are, you know,
00:28:55as I've argued before, they're, you know, just Marxists in panties, right? And so, they have to
00:29:01promote government resource transfers, to pretend that men aren't needed, right? So, in a case-selected
00:29:06environment, if a woman has a kid without a male protector, that kid is much less likely to do well,
00:29:11unless the R-selected feminists can convince the government to provide massive subsidies to single
00:29:18moms. In which case, yeah, okay, men kind of aren't needed except to pay for the taxes, which have to go
00:29:23to the single mom. And so, radical feminists have to be leftists, and have to promote government
00:29:28resource transfers. You will almost never see a radical feminist group that's deeply concerned
00:29:33with the national debt, because that goes against the whole. Now, R-selected organisms need to create
00:29:39the illusion of infinite resources, right? There's as much grass as you want. Whenever people believe
00:29:44that resources are infinite, that promotes the R-selected gene set, which is why those on the left
00:29:49are always promising you free stuff. They're trying to provoke your, again, not consciously, they're
00:29:54trying to provoke your R-selected gene set to dominate. And that's the, right, that's the
00:29:59hook. It's the hook in the water. Free stuff. If you respond to the idea of free stuff, that's your
00:30:03R-selected demon. And if you respond, oh yeah, might have played my hand a little bit there. Let's just
00:30:09keep going. Oh, don't look back. We just had a little bump in the car. But if you, whereas if somebody
00:30:15says to you, here's some free stuff, and you say, wait a minute, who's going to pay for that? Well, that's
00:30:19your R-selected, K-selected, sorry, it's your K-selected aspect. Fine, we can say demon. And so
00:30:26when people offer you free stuff, if you respond positively, like, yay, that's R-selected. And if
00:30:30people say, oh, here's, you know, free college education, here's free this, here's free that,
00:30:33and you go like, wait a minute, who's paying for this? This can't be free. Nothing's free. Ah, that's
00:30:38K-selected. In other words, you understand there's no such thing as a free lunch, basic reality,
00:30:43economics, and so on. Radical feminists oppose slut-shaming. In other words, if a woman's sleeping
00:30:48around like crazy, they oppose that. That's slut-shaming. You can't do that, because that
00:30:53kind of promiscuity is our behavior. And radical feminism, in a weird way, they deny responsibility
00:30:58to women. I get into this all the time. When I put a video out criticizing single moms, people say,
00:31:05well, you know, it's not like they chose to get pregnant. It's like, well, unless God chose for
00:31:09them and pinged them with some celestial turkey baster, yes, they did. And in fact, the data is out
00:31:14quite to show that single moms, in general, choose to become single moms. They have unprotected sex,
00:31:22and with guys who are around, they just, then they try to get men to marry them. Anyway, let's not go
00:31:28down that road. That way madness lies. And of course, as we talk about our selected organisms being less
00:31:34complex and generally less intelligent, well, single moms have an average IQ in the low 90s, which is
00:31:40quite a lot lower than the average of 100. And so, they deny responsibility to women. Whereas in
00:31:46case, selected organisms say, well, you chose to have sex. You've got to live with the consequences.
00:31:51And they promote institutional sexism. It's everywhere. It's all around you. It's not any
00:31:55individual. If you meet a man who doesn't seem to be sexist, he is because penis, evil.
00:32:00Now, K-organisms, they promote affection for men. And that's because they know that if women hate
00:32:09men, that's going to promote higher sex, more variety, more unwanted children, which is very bad
00:32:14for the community as a whole. They accept differentiation among the sexes, right? So,
00:32:19there are certain researchers who have done fantastic work on pointing out the differences
00:32:24between male and female brains. And if you're K-selected, you're like, well, of course, right?
00:32:31If you are selected, that is deeply offensive to you. Because if there are differences, if there's
00:32:35a division of labor in terms of intellect and capacity between men and women, this doesn't mean
00:32:40better or worse. It's just, you know, evolution is never better or worse. It's just more adapted or
00:32:44less adapted. And so, the degree to which you accept differentiation among the sexes is the degree
00:32:49to which you are K-selected. Because K-selected means men do one thing and women do another,
00:32:55right? They know that men are needed for the K-gene set. So, they want to reduce government
00:33:00power. They want to reduce the degree to which money is taken from responsible K-selected families
00:33:05and given to irresponsible R-selected single moms. They want to reduce that because that's
00:33:09breeding your enemy, so to speak. That's breeding out the K-gene set and subsidizing the R-gene
00:33:15set, right? And the K-s know it's essential to ostracize our behavior. Ostracism is very,
00:33:24very powerful and K-s are perfectly comfortable with it. Because it's much kinder, right? I
00:33:29mean, you don't want to attack someone because there's risk in that. But you, you know, if
00:33:34you ostracize, like if a wolf is just doing really terrible things, well, you simply ostracize
00:33:39that wolf. You just drive him out of the pack or you don't, right? You just don't respond.
00:33:43You don't share. You just don't deal with that. And that promotes gene death. The individual
00:33:47survives but won't reproduce. And so ostracism is something that K-organisms are incredibly
00:33:52well-adapted to have and to impose and so on. You can watch Downton Abbey to see the degree to
00:33:58which single moms got ostracized in society. Our organisms can't stand ostracism. Ostracism is
00:34:07like the ultimate evil for them. And we'll get into why in a little bit. So they're going to deny
00:34:13institutional sexism. They're going to say there's no magic structure that people's brains are formed
00:34:18by. You judge each individual and you look for better and worse. So our organisms with regards
00:34:26to single motherhood. So the R gene set wants high stress, low investment, father absent families,
00:34:33because that is the petri dish. That is the fertile breeding ground for the R gene set to reproduce.
00:34:39And there's not any particular help in empathy, right? Empathy is not a very R-selected trait
00:34:47for a variety of reasons, right? If you really care about your friend who's getting eaten by a wolf,
00:34:53well, the wolf's probably going to eat you too. So you got to just run and abandon, right?
00:34:57Now, single moms, and again, I know there are single dads. We're just dealing with the vast majority of
00:35:02things, right? Single moms, well, they go to the government and they say, give me all these
00:35:07resources. They must not have empathy for the people whose resources they're taking based upon
00:35:11their irresponsibility. So the R gene set wants to create a large dependent R army, which pillages
00:35:19from the K group. Because if everyone's an R, there's very few resources to strip. So some people
00:35:23have to be K in order for the R to have stuff to steal from. Like if everyone's a thief, there's nothing
00:35:28to steal. Now, the R's will hold up kids, you know, like, oh, we need to, you got to help these kids,
00:35:35you got to save these kids. And K's respond to that, because for K's, kids are incredibly precious.
00:35:42So when a single mom says, I can't feed my children, that's really tough for K's, because K's really,
00:35:48really care about kids. And the R's don't as much. I'm sorry, like it's just biologically the case.
00:35:54Yes. And so, but K, but the R's are very cunning. And you, they dangle the kids like, oh, you don't
00:35:59care about this child? You don't care about this child? So you can see this showing up all over
00:36:07the place. What about the children? You don't care about the children. And so, but if, so if they hold
00:36:15up their kids and say, well, it's not the kid's fault, and so on. Well, the K response to that is to
00:36:19say, so you're too irresponsible to raise your children. So you need to give your children to a K family,
00:36:24you need to give your children up. You need to have your children adopted by a K family. That
00:36:28would be a free market, freedom, liberty, K response. Whereas if you've got the government,
00:36:34then, oh, you hold this up, and then all this, well, we'll get to the media and R versus K in a bit.
00:36:40Now, single motherhood also, not always, but in general, creates an unstable criminal class,
00:36:45right? As single moms have been to some degree characterized as a conveyable criminal factory
00:36:50of infinite production of hellspawn for society as a whole. And of course, they are, I think,
00:36:56perfectly nice and wonderful children of single mom households. But statistically, it's not
00:37:01particularly great. There's data shows that a 1% increase in single motherhood in a neighborhood
00:37:06is associated with a 3% increase in an adolescence level of violence. And of course, also, we talked
00:37:13about how earlier sexual maturation is in our selected trait that shows up in biology and human biology.
00:37:19Because girls who grow up without a biological father in the house hit puberty earlier because
00:37:26they now are selected. The gene sets figure it out. Even younger sisters in biologically disrupted
00:37:33families reach puberty earlier than their older sisters do, right? So the older sisters reach puberty
00:37:38later, there's a divorce, the younger sisters reach puberty sooner. And that doesn't show up in
00:37:42biologically intact families. And the quality of father's involvement with daughters is the most
00:37:48important feature of the early family environment in terms of when the daughter hits puberty. A more
00:37:53involved father delays puberty and reduces sex drive. And that's case selected, right?
00:38:02And of course, when you create a criminal class through single moms, that creates the predators,
00:38:06which the R-selected genes that needs in order to manifest itself epigenetically. Sorry,
00:38:12I know this is a mouthful. You can watch it again slower if you like. So there are organisms
00:38:21when there's a welfare state. Children become an asset in the present, but a cost in the future.
00:38:29Right? Because the more kids you have, the more resources you get through the welfare state. So
00:38:33they become an asset, and they become a cost in the future to society as a whole, in general.
00:38:39Now, K-organisms, they don't leave children in the hands of irresponsible mothers, right? So in a K-selected
00:38:44society, if a woman is a single mom, as she's made a really bad decision, okay, so you have to give
00:38:51your kid up for adoption. And that is actually the best thing for the child, right? I mean, women who
00:38:56hold on, single moms who hold on to their kids are being very selfish, because the kids do very badly
00:39:01in single mother households in general. There's no bigger single predictor statistically for a negative
00:39:06outcome for a child than being raised in a single mother household. Single moms are terrible moms as
00:39:10a whole. So what they should do is they should give their kids up for adoption to a two-parent
00:39:14family so the kids have the best chance of doing well. And they do well. I mean, the kids who are
00:39:18given up to adopted households do as well as all the other kids in two-parent households. And if they
00:39:25stay in the single mom household, they do statistically very badly. And so single moms who hang on to their
00:39:31kids are being selfish and they're hurting their children. And so in K-selected society, you don't
00:39:37get resources to raise your single kid. You've got to give it up to someone else.
00:39:43And consequences accrue to actions without effort. You don't have to throw people in jail. You don't
00:39:49have to punish them. You simply have to not associate or provide resources to people who are being
00:39:53harmful. So they provide sexual ostracism for single mothers. And you can look at my videos on
00:40:01single moms about this and know why. And that reduces breeding opportunities for R. R, single moms
00:40:07are R-selected factories. And K and R are subspecies in combat with one another. And so in a K-selected
00:40:16society, you want to reduce the breeding opportunities for R. And so you try to get people to not have sex
00:40:21with single moms. Anyway, but enough about me. So once children are separated from single mothers
00:40:30through a refusal to subsidize those moms, the children are not punished through the ostracism
00:40:34of the mothers, right? You can't punish the mother if she's still got the kids around. So in a K-selected
00:40:40society, which is what used to happen before the rise of the welfare state, the single mom would give
00:40:44her kids up to a married couple who would raise that children as their own, because 10% of married
00:40:47couples are infertile, and a lot of those want kids. And so you separate the children from the
00:40:53irresponsible mom, and then you can ostracize the mom, and thus prevent more of this situation from
00:40:59coming to be, right? So like that old poster. I remember this from years ago. I've talked about
00:41:03this on the show before, that there's a picture of a ship going down, and underneath it says,
00:41:10it could be that the only purpose of your life is to serve as a warning to others. Well, that's a very
00:41:14K-selected. Yeah, you didn't buy health insurance, and you got sick, and nobody likes you?
00:41:19Guess you should buy health insurance and have people like you. So in the K-organism world,
00:41:27children are a present cost, but a future asset, right? You invest a lot in your kids, that they're
00:41:32a present cost, but they're a future asset, right? In the socialist R-organism world, and Marxism is the
00:41:37ultimate R-selected strategy theory or framework. In the R-selected socialist world, children are a
00:41:46present asset, but future cost, right? You get given money by the government for having them now. Other
00:41:49people pay for the incarceration costs later. But in the K-organism world, yeah, children are a
00:41:55present cost, but a future asset. When you get too old to hunt, they'll bring you some food.
00:41:58Let's look at sexual maturity. So R-organism, because the earlier that sexual activity is
00:42:07stimulated, the more the R-gene set is enhanced, is flourished, right? So you want to promote early
00:42:14sexual activity and thoughts, right? And you can see this fight. It's going on actually here in
00:42:18Ontario. So the government put in, they said, oh, we're going to consult with parents, which means
00:42:22they're never going to consult with parents. And they put some pretty heavy-duty sexual education
00:42:27into government schools. So this is all R-selected. Government schools are R-selected factories,
00:42:31which is why the West has gone so R to the point where, hey, who needs borders? But we'll get to
00:42:39government teachers in a sec, but it's a pure R environment, which is why they want to teach kids
00:42:44about sex a lot. Why government schools would have anything to do with teaching about sex is
00:42:49incomprehensible to me. That is the job of the family. But the R-selected gene set wants to promote
00:42:54early sexual activity and thoughts as much as humanly possible, because it lowers the need
00:42:59for quality, right? Anything which lowers your capacity to bang based on quality, you know, like
00:43:06I put out for virtue is my basic t-shirt. And, you know, two thumbs up for virtue, one penis up.
00:43:15And anything which is going to lower quality, right? So you think of drinking parties, right? You get
00:43:19together and everybody gets drunk and they have sex with each other. Well, the drinking is a way
00:43:22of making sure that the R-selected gene set gets to bang others without that pesky K requirement for
00:43:28quality getting in the way. So anything that reduces your capacity to judge the quality of
00:43:33your sexual partners, drugs, alcohol, raves, whatever it is, right? The hypnosis of an incredibly
00:43:40high sex drive, which is the R-petri dish. Anything where the quality gets lowered. And even physical
00:43:48beauty is part of that. Physical beauty renders men idiots, so low is their demand for quality.
00:43:55Early sexual activity increases the span of fertility, because remember, fertility is the
00:43:59R-organism's way of optimal survival. And it promotes physically healthier offspring rather than higher
00:44:06quality offspring. So a wolf that can run a little bit slower, but is much smarter, is a much better
00:44:13predator. Now, a rabbit that can run a few percentage points faster at the expense of not being quite as
00:44:19smart is going to get—it doesn't have to be faster than everyone, it just has to be faster than whoever
00:44:23else the wolf is chasing. So you want healthy offspring, and the quicker you get eggs converted to
00:44:29offspring, the healthier those eggs tend to be. They tend to get a little dusty for human beings into the
00:44:34mid to late 30s. So they want healthier offspring rather than higher quality offspring. It also
00:44:43allows for the release of high sexual tension, which is a constant problem for R-selected organisms—sex
00:44:49maniacs, right? It also promotes the worshipper-based physical qualities—sexiness—rather
00:44:55than virtue. And so, yeah, the R-selected people are constantly focusing on early childhood
00:45:01sexual education, and the promotion of non-traditional sexual standards, and so on.
00:45:09Because, you know, if you can expose kids to sexual ideas earlier, well, that is going to help the R-gene
00:45:16set. K-organisms, they delay sexual activity and thoughts. And of course, they promote sex after
00:45:24marriage, right? You've got to have a commitment to a high-quality person, and then you can have,
00:45:28you know, the wall-to-wall mango-soaked bang-a-thon. And later sexual activity is needed to determine
00:45:36quality. You've got to find out who's good, who's smart, who's passed with 100% in calculus before
00:45:42you, you know, bang those nerds senseless. And so that promotes higher quality offspring at the expense
00:45:49to some degree of the eggs aren't quite as young. But again, you want a wolf that can run 5% slower,
00:45:55but is 10% smarter. Whereas for rabbits, you just want to run 10% faster, you don't care about,
00:46:01right? There's no point with that trade-off. Lower sexual tension needs less release. And so
00:46:07there's skepticism towards base physical qualities. Books I read that were very influential to me when
00:46:12I was a kid by Enid Blyton called Mallory Towers, M-A-L-O-R-Y, Towers, constantly promoting
00:46:17quality of character and great skepticism towards, you know, the girls who just spend all their time
00:46:22primping and putting makeup on and fluffing their hair. They're all just shallow idiots that nobody
00:46:27wants to have anything to do with. So the skepticism to base physical qualities, and they put out for
00:46:31virtue, not just sexiness. And they do not want early childhood sexual education. And of course,
00:46:36you can see this with religious people in government schools. Don't even let me start it on R versus K
00:46:43relationships to pornography. I'm willing to do the research, but it might take a while.
00:46:48Now, what about equalities of outcome? Inequality, our organisms can't stand inequality. They just
00:46:55can't stand inequality. Low parental investment means lack of quality in offspring. And what's
00:47:02the point? There's no point having a high quality rabbit. High quality wolf? Yes, high quality rabbit,
00:47:07who cares? Now, if you have a low parental investment, and there's a lack of quality in your
00:47:14offspring, I think of all the extreme cases, like the people around Dylann Roof, just a bunch of, you
00:47:18know, white trash idiots, right? And black trash idiots, for that matter. Now, it's less negative
00:47:23for you if you've been raised in a R-selected, low quality, low parental investment environment,
00:47:29often with physical violence, neglect, abuse, and so on. Well, that's less painful if there aren't
00:47:34higher quality people around. Our organisms have a hostility to free will and personal responsibility.
00:47:40Because quality requirements are higher for monogamy than one-night stands. One-night stands,
00:47:46you just have to be turned on and probably not even sober. So anything which rewards quality is the
00:47:53enemy of the R-selected gene set. And so they do not like it when people get rich. They do not like it
00:47:58when people get better, when people have additional resources. So economic equality has to result from
00:48:05injustice. Because remember, to the R gene set, it's like you, you know, you helicopter over a field
00:48:11of 10,000 rabbits in Australia. And can you tell them apart? No, of course not. It's just one big
00:48:19giant blob of this. People are people, right? We are the world. We're all one. There's no, we're all the
00:48:24same. Deep down, we're all the same. No, we're not. And so any economic inequality must result from
00:48:31injustice, must result from predation, must result from stealing, right? If you have more grass than
00:48:36me, you must have stolen my grass. Because we're all supposed to share. It's all equal. And this
00:48:42results with a hatred of the wealthy. Now, I'm not talking about inequality of opportunity. Sorry,
00:48:47equality of opportunity is great. But equality of opportunity, everyone gets to compete equally,
00:48:51does not result in equality of outcomes because people are different. And quality matters. I mean,
00:48:56if you just try starting a band by just picking the third guy at some local karaoke night.
00:49:00What are the odds of your band being very successful? Well, not very successful. And if
00:49:05it's not even karaoke, just some guy off the street. Okay, you can be our lead singer.
00:49:10Right? Probably not going to work out very well. Now, in the K-selected world, so high parental
00:49:16investment means high quality offspring. And they prefer competition with higher quality people,
00:49:21right? I mean, Ronda Rousey is not out there taking on a bunch of girl guides. By the way,
00:49:26you got to watch her video and do nothing bitches. Just great stuff, right? And she's K-selected up
00:49:33the yin-yang. So they prefer competition with high quality people. You want to go up against the best
00:49:39because that's the only way you're really going to enjoy your victory. So they prefer free will and
00:49:44personal responsibility because free will is how you differentiate quality, personal responsibility.
00:49:49If you look at the debate around the IQ bell curve,
00:49:56the R-selected, the people on the left say, well, everyone can be smart. You just have to give them
00:50:00the right environment. There's no fundamental difference between people other than the
00:50:05environment. So if you take someone with an IQ of 80 and you put them into Stanford, they'll do
00:50:10really well. And the data does not support it. The data does not support it. I mean, think of the
00:50:15Head Start program. What, 100 billion plus dollars trying to get inner city kids to do as well as
00:50:20non-inner city kids. Complete failure. Complete failure. It's like saying everyone's seven foot
00:50:26tall if you just give them the right food. No, they're not. It's true that malnutrition will cause
00:50:31you to be stunted, but extra food just makes you grow wider rather than taller. So in the K-organisms,
00:50:37they relish and respect and prefer and understand and accept that there are innate differences,
00:50:45because that's the whole point of the K-organism is to prefer the innate differences and breed to
00:50:48enhance them. And so, yeah, they have to advocate free will, personal responsibility, and so on.
00:50:56Anything which punishes quality is an enemy, right? So for the R-organisms, anything that rewards quality
00:51:02is the enemy, right? If you're really good at business and you make a lot of money, well,
00:51:06you just must be a thief who stole stuff and you're corrupt and you're nasty and you're evil and blah,
00:51:10blah, blah, right? But for the K-organisms, which is why high tax on the wealthy is in our selected
00:51:15trade, whereas the K-organisms, well, anything which punishes quality is the enemy. I don't,
00:51:20there's an old statement about Americans. Americans are never poor. They're just temporarily embarrassed
00:51:25millionaires, you know, that there's, I want it, I want that ring. I want that brass ring. I can get
00:51:29there. You know, like I grew up in a really poor environment, a really poor single mom household.
00:51:35I knew rich people. I didn't resent them. I'm like, I'm glad you're there because I'm just going
00:51:40to do what you do and get the hell out of this hellhole. So economic inequality for K-selected
00:51:48organisms, it doesn't result from intel, it results from intelligence and decisions. Whether that
00:51:53intelligence is something you've worked for, is something innate, doesn't matter. It doesn't
00:51:57matter. I could go to singing lessons from here until the end of time. I'm never going to sing
00:52:001% as well as Freddie Mercury or Pavarotti or whoever, right? It's not going to happen.
00:52:07So there's some things that are built in and there are some things which are based upon your
00:52:11intelligence decisions, your commitment, your hard work, your willingness to sacrifice personal
00:52:16pleasure in the moment for the sake of good rewards later, which is a purely K-selected trait,
00:52:20which we'll get to in a sec. And so K-organisms, they don't hate the wealthy. They respect and envy the
00:52:25wealthy. Envy means I want to be like you. Hatred is I can't be like you, so I'm going to make you
00:52:29like me, miserable, flat, and poor. So inequality of outcome, yeah, there are rich and there are poor
00:52:37people and Ks are like, that's great, you know, and ours are like, well, that's horrible and that's
00:52:42the result of injustice and let's go screw up the rich people. Let's look at immigration. So again,
00:52:49this is not arguments for or against, this is just the biological drives. So our organisms have very low
00:52:55in-group preferences, right? So in America, you have largely Protestant Christian country that was
00:53:00founded that way and made that way for hundreds of years. And on the left, they're like, let's bring
00:53:04everyone in. The low in-group preference. Our group is not better than anyone else's. People are people.
00:53:09Everyone's the same. There's no differences in IQ. There's no differences in culture. There's no
00:53:14differences in ambition. There's no, like, everyone's the same. And if you bring anyone to America,
00:53:19they'll be just like Americans because it's all environment, right? So they're very low in-group
00:53:23preferences. Now, remember, R is genetically in a battle to the death with the K. So anything which
00:53:31destroy K thoughts and persons is a plus, right? So this is what happens on the left, is they put out
00:53:37this meme or this general idea, everyone's the same. And if you prefer your own group, you must be a
00:53:44racist, a xenophobe, a bigot, you are a horrible human being. And so any in-group preference, well, if
00:53:50you're white, if you're black and you prefer your own group, right? I mean, it's like that old
00:53:53statement. It's like, I'm proud of being black, said the black man. I'm proud of being Asian,
00:53:59said the Asian man. I'm proud of being white, said the racist, right? Because any preference that white
00:54:04people have for white people is racist. Everything else is just, well, they like their own culture and
00:54:07more power to them. And so if you have any kind of in-group preference, the R-selected gene set will
00:54:14just scream at you and scream at you and scream at you and try and destroy your life and get you
00:54:17fired and so on, because they want to destroy in-group preferences, thoughts of quality and
00:54:22differentiation. So for our organisms, skepticism towards the value of outsiders is incomprehensible.
00:54:28Like they touch Adios America and Coulter's book, and they explode. It's matter and antimatter.
00:54:35How could you be skeptical towards the value of a quarter of the Mexican population moving to the
00:54:40United States? Same thing that's happening in Europe at the moment. How could you be skeptical about the
00:54:45value of half a million Muslims pouring into Germany every year? Skepticism towards the value of
00:54:50outsiders is incomprehensible because rabbits aren't tribal. They don't have an in-group preference.
00:54:55They don't write, that rabbit over there, yeah, he's the same as me. The Ks know that it's different.
00:55:02The importation of R-selected women in particular is of great value. If you can import more R-selected
00:55:07women, not only will you gain sexual access because they have low standards, but also it will drag down
00:55:12the standards of your local women as well. Now they prefer outside R, the R-organisms, the R-people,
00:55:19they prefer outside R to internal K. If you look at the big shift in American immigration from
00:55:24Ted Kennedy's 1965 immigration bill, they used to get Europeans coming in, now they get third world
00:55:30people coming in. Well, they prefer outside R to internal K because the outside R's they can breed with,
00:55:36they can get their rocks off, and they also gain voting powers to increase the size and power of the
00:55:41state for more resource siphoning from K's to R's. I mean, if the state is what's used to take
00:55:47resources from the K's and give them to the R's. Variety. I mean, the R-selected organisms are crazy
00:55:57for variety. They get easily bored. They need constant stimulation. So for them, diversity is a
00:56:01strength. Yeah, well, diversity is fantastic because it breaks down the R-selected, the K-selected culture.
00:56:06Everyone is the same. So if you don't like a particular group or you're skeptical of their
00:56:11value, the only answer is that you're an irrational bigot because everyone is the same.
00:56:18K-selected organisms do not see it that way. They have very high in-group preferences. I mean,
00:56:24wolves prefer wolves to non-wolves, and they prefer their own wolves to other wolves.
00:56:29And for the K-organisms, anything which destroys our thoughts and persons is a plus. And this is
00:56:37why ostracism is so powerful in the K-selected world. Now, skepticism towards the value of insiders,
00:56:44it's incomprehensible. And you can see this in the immigration debate in the U.S. Some people are
00:56:48saying, well, no, our immigration policy should be to benefit the Americans who are already here,
00:56:54right? Because they're the in-group. They are the American tribe. And again, it doesn't have to be
00:56:58white people. It can be anyone, but the people who are already here. And even the Hispanics who
00:57:02are already in America, they prefer, in a lot of ways, limited immigration for Hispanics because
00:57:10they now have an American in-group preference. So skepticism towards the value of insiders is
00:57:15incomprehensible, right? So in Europe, right, when the politicians say, well, we have to help all of
00:57:21these refugees. And people are saying, well, wait a minute, we don't have enough money. We don't have
00:57:26enough jobs. We already have trouble with the refugees who are already here. We can't take
00:57:30more, right? Malaysia had a bunch of Muslims come over from Burma, where they were being oppressed,
00:57:36as they say, by the Buddhist monks, the extremist Buddhist monks. And they said, we can't, we can't
00:57:40do it. We gave them supplies and we said, move on, got to move on. So skepticism, for the K-organisms,
00:57:46not valuing those who are inside your tribe is incomprehensible. And K-organisms want to import
00:57:53K-selected women, which was, again, to some degree, European women in the past.
00:57:58Now, R-organisms prefer outside R to internal K, but K-organisms, they don't like outside Ks or
00:58:04internal Rs. The internal Rs are their enemies and the outside Ks are their enemies because they may
00:58:08compete for resources with the Ks, right? The warrior, it's like armies, right? They don't like
00:58:13internal betrayers and they don't like the soldiers from the other army, right? So that's the K.
00:58:17So for the R-organisms, the shift in immigration from K-selected Europeans to R-selected foreigners
00:58:25was great for the R. Gene said, fantastic, lowers the standards and creates a big voting block for
00:58:30bigger government and blah-de-blah-de-blah. Again, not all, right? Regis in general. But for the K-organisms,
00:58:35the shift of immigration in the U.S. from K-selected Europeans to R-selected foreigners,
00:58:40complete disaster. Now, while the Rs focus on variety and diversity, the Ks focus on tradition and quality.
00:58:47Because everyone is not the same. Culture matters. Intelligence matters. Religion matters.
00:58:56Everyone is not the same.
00:59:00So, kindness, charity, we've got to help these people. Well, that doesn't mean a government program,
00:59:06right? First of all, charity is very difficult. Very difficult because there are accidents in life
00:59:13where we should genuinely help people. However, people who've really screwed up, they like to
00:59:19pretend that it was an accident or it wasn't their fault. And so they mimic, right? Irresponsible
00:59:23people mimic people who have negative things in their life as a result of an accident. It's really
00:59:29tough to differentiate these people. Even charities have a great deal of trouble doing it. I mean,
00:59:32I give money away to my listeners sometimes. Sometimes it's been very successful and sometimes
00:59:36it's been a complete disaster. And I get a pretty good judge of people. It's really tough. You
00:59:40certainly can't do it from a welfare state office hundreds or thousands of miles away.
00:59:45So, state welfare versus private charity, state welfare is coercively put into place, right? You
00:59:51take money from people through taxes by force or counterfeiting or debt or whatever it is. You
00:59:55take money by force and you give it to people. That is theft, technically, in the transfer of wealth
00:59:59against people's will. Private charity is a different matter. Now, so when I talk about criticizing
01:00:04state welfare, I'm not talking about not helping people. I can help people a lot better with private
01:00:10charity. So, welfare promotes sexual irresponsibility because you don't have to be that careful who you
01:00:16sleep with because the government will give you resources, right? You can marry the head honcho
01:00:22of government cheese provision. You can get all your resources from the government so you don't need to
01:00:26be that careful about the man you sleep with. Welfare reduces the requirements for quality.
01:00:31That's what the government provides. You can just bang some thuggy hottie and, you know,
01:00:36get money from the government. Economic determinism also destroys the concept of quality. You are
01:00:42a result of economic determinism. It's a very Marxist idea, right? That the poor classes is just
01:00:48economic determinism and so on. It destroys the concept of quality or personal choice and responsibility.
01:00:54Welfare reduces the need to invest in offspring, which produces the next generation of our selected human
01:00:59beings. Because if you're going to compete in the free market, you really need to invest in your
01:01:05your kids because you've got to teach them all this cool stuff that they're going to use to
01:01:09succeed in the free market. You know, if, you know, as is in America now, you've got generations and
01:01:14generations on welfare. Well, what do you need to invest in them for? Just pop them in front of the TV,
01:01:20let them run wild, going off and have sex with your new boyfriend. That's going to produce your next R's, right?
01:01:26The fantasy of infinite resources is fundamentally what feeds the R gene set, right? So things like
01:01:32the gold standard and things like Bitcoin, where the production of resources, particularly currency,
01:01:38is limited, is very case-elected, which is why you see the case-elected people on the free market side,
01:01:44the libertarians and the republicans who are genuinely free market, they're promoting the end
01:01:49of central banking, which is creation of money out of nothing, bypassing the natural restrictions of
01:01:55reality, at least for the moment, because when you get central banking, when you get the government's
01:01:59capacity to create money out of nothing, you create this fantasy of infinite resources. That feeds the
01:02:04R gene set. Why bother with quality when everything is free? Now, welfare also enables and encourages
01:02:12hostility towards men, because what's going to happen is when there's a welfare state, a lot of women
01:02:18are going to breed with jerks, and those jerks are going to then abandon them, which makes them very angry
01:02:22towards men, which they then take out on their sons, which then further produces jerks in the future,
01:02:26which further breeds the R gene set. It's perfect. I mean, it is really just like feeding the R gene set.
01:02:34Now, for K organisms, there's voluntary charity, and that promotes sexual responsibility,
01:02:40which is very good for the K organism. And so, if you are a widow rather than a single mom,
01:02:47your kids are going to do fine, statistically. You know, your father, the father dies somewhere,
01:02:51or whatever, by accident, then you're, you know, it's not the single mom is you choose to get married,
01:02:57sorry, you chose to get divorced, or you chose to have children out of wedlock, and that's just
01:03:02single mom by choice. If you are a widow, well, you're fine, right? So, you want to differentiate
01:03:07between those who are accidentally raising children alone and those who've made the choice, and you can
01:03:12only do that through the investment of voluntary charity. Charity increases the requirements for
01:03:17quality, and charity works very hard to differentiate people in genuine need and those who are pretending
01:03:22to be in genuine need, or who are pretending that it was accidental, right? So, they'll fake that,
01:03:28oh, it wasn't my fault this happened, and blah blah blah, right? The rejection of economic determinism
01:03:34strengthens the concept of quality. If we're all just victims of economic circumstances, there's no such
01:03:38thing as quality, and there's no such thing as better or worse, right? And if you reject economic
01:03:46determinism, and you say, well, people are making choices, and so on, it doesn't mean you eliminate
01:03:49it completely, that you don't say the environment has no effect, but if you say only the environment
01:03:54has an effect, then you are selected. Charity increases the need to invest in offspring, which
01:03:59produces the next generation of K. Mothers who cannot provide have their children moved to K families in
01:04:05a K-selected environment. The reality of finite resources feeds the K gene set, and charity punishes
01:04:13hostility towards men, right? So, if you just get divorced for no reason, you used to get ostracized
01:04:18from society, right? You can't talk to this with you, you know, she just divorced some guy, and that's
01:04:22very selfish, because it's hurt her kids, so we're not going to associate with her, because father
01:04:26presence feeds the K gene set, and so you can't reward hostility towards men, because that promotes the
01:04:33R gene set. Let's look at teachers' unions. So, for our organism, since everyone is the same, incentives
01:04:41and disincentives are both unjust punishments. It's like giving more money to tall people. It's just an
01:04:47unearned accident of birth, so why would you give more money? It's not fair. Success or failure is not a
01:04:52matter of personal responsibility. Quality, free will, and virtue are the mortal enemies of the R gene set. The R gene set is an
01:04:58excuse machine. It wasn't my fault. I didn't do anything. It just happened. I never meant to hurt
01:05:03you. I never, I never meant for this to happen. I had an affair. I never meant for this to happen. It
01:05:09just happened. It's just an excuse machine. And whenever you hear someone just pumping out, there's
01:05:14just an R, that's the R fog to pretend that it's, that they deserve K selected charity.
01:05:19Now, only high-quality K people get no excuses. Excuses are for the R people, by the perception,
01:05:27right? K organisms. Okay, so everyone is not the same. So, incentives and disincentives are essential
01:05:33for promoting quality, right? Not everyone gets to pass the math test, right? You pass if you pass.
01:05:38You fail if you fail. Harder workers create their additional income. It's an earned benefit,
01:05:44right? So, it's not like just being tall, right? You earn that benefit. Success or failure is largely
01:05:49personal responsibility. Accidents must be strictly delineated from bad decisions. Very, very
01:05:54important. You cannot reward bad decisions, but you must help people who have accidentally fallen
01:06:02on hard times, right? It's the difference between the guy who, you know, takes his money and blows it
01:06:07on the racetrack where you can't give him more money, right? But a guy who's on his way to put the
01:06:12money in the bank and he gets robbed by some people, yeah, let's help him out. Egalitarianism,
01:06:17determinism, and relativism are the mortal enemies of the K gene set, which is a responsibility
01:06:22promoter. No excuses, right? Never explain, never complain. No excuses. Yeah, bad parents, sorry,
01:06:29bad students lose grades, bad parents lose custody, bad teachers lose jobs. And so, anytime you see
01:06:35there's a government union, a government monopoly where you can't differentiate by quality, well,
01:06:40you're in an arsenal. Remember I was saying government schools are our selected machines, right?
01:06:46Failure. Okay, so for our organisms, everyone is the same, so failures must be either accidental
01:06:51or institutional. Never the result of personal choice. Failure is outside the role of choice. All
01:06:56pregnancies are accidental. Infidelities just happened. Pity for sadness is unbearable. And so, selfishly,
01:07:03they got to get rid of it. It's very uncomfortable. Since everyone is the same, well, the tragedy that
01:07:09happened to someone else, well, it could just happen to me. Suffering, you got to alleviate
01:07:13suffering in the moment, no matter what. Parents of addicts who are selected, just give them more
01:07:18money because they can't stand to see the suffering. Parents, parents who are bad parents, they all the
01:07:25excuses, well, if I did the best I could, but the knowledge that I had are selected parents. So,
01:07:31for K organisms, everyone's not the same. Failures are either accidental or intentional. Yeah,
01:07:36accidents happen. Failure is within the role of choice. Few pregnancies are accidental. Infidelities
01:07:42never just happened. You made a specific series of choices, which is what ended up with you
01:07:46in the infidelity. Pity for sadness is bearable. It's teachable. Okay, you're really sad that you
01:07:52failed that test. I'm not going to run to the teacher and demand that you passed. You're going to
01:07:55learn from that and study harder for the next one. Since everyone is not the same, the Ks don't just say,
01:08:00well, I could have ended up homeless. No, because, well, we'll get into that in a sec.
01:08:07Sometimes you've got to alleviate suffering in the moment, but parents of addicts don't enable.
01:08:12Don't enable. It's okay for them to suffer because that's how they get better.
01:08:17Debt. So, for our organisms, remember, our gene set wants to create the illusion of infinite resources.
01:08:25When resources are infinite and collective, any shortage must result from selfishness. Why would
01:08:29you hoard the infinite? Give people free health care. It's free. Why would you not? I mean,
01:08:34there's grass. Why would you not want me to eat grass? You've just got to be a jerk.
01:08:38Now, lack of investment in children means national debt provokes little anxiety. What do they care
01:08:42about how their kids are going to grow up in? Ks, like, they're weighed upon the fact that the kids are
01:08:46born hundreds of thousands of dollars in government debt. They've got to fix it. That's why the
01:08:50Republicans at least talk about the national debt and wanting to, right? In the tropics,
01:08:56do tribes worry about running out of bananas? Do the Inuit hoard snow? No, there's no point. It's
01:09:01everywhere. It's a resource. It's infinite. Conservation for the sake of the future is
01:09:04irrational for our selected environments. For K-selected environments, any debt creates
01:09:10the obligation of repayment. You're just making it worse for yourself down. You might do it in an
01:09:14emergency, but because you actually genuinely want to repay it, it's a liability that plagues you.
01:09:19Since resources are infinite and personal, any shortages must result from bad luck or foolishness.
01:09:26Giving scarce resources to foolish people destroys those resources. Resources must flow in a K-selected
01:09:33society, must flow from the incompetent to the competent. Conservation for the sake of the future
01:09:38is essential. You think of farming societies. Farming societies, they have to defer gratification.
01:09:44They have to hoard their food. They have to survive the winter. They can't eat their seed crop.
01:09:48They have to work really hard. They have to plant crops that they're not going to harvest for months
01:09:51or maybe even years. A lot of deferral of gratification. A lot of managing of resources.
01:09:56Or, you know, other places just food falls down off trees and all that kind of stuff, right?
01:10:02And think of Europe. Like Europe at the moment is not holding on to its heritage and protecting its
01:10:06culture because there are very few native European whites who are having kids. So why do they care,
01:10:12right? It's like John Maynard Keynes, the famous fiat currency-addicted economist. People would say,
01:10:19well, what about the long run? That's a K-selected question. What about in the long run? What happens
01:10:23when we have to pay this money back? K-selected people care about that. Our selected people, he said,
01:10:29in the long run, we're all dead. Well, no, not because he was gay. He didn't have any kids,
01:10:33right? So, no. If you have kids, it matters. Gun control. Our organisms. Well, physical aggression
01:10:39is suicide for the R-gene set. Rabbits don't fight the wolves. So, in humans, they prefer verbal
01:10:44abuse. The Saul Alinsky just terror people. Now, constant danger feeds the R-gene set, and guns
01:10:51have been well proven to reduce criminality, right? The more guns, the less criminality. Less criminality
01:10:57is not good for the R-gene set. The R-gene set has to feel vulnerable in the face of predators or criminals.
01:11:03So, constant danger feeds the R-gene set, so they want to eliminate guns so that more criminals will
01:11:08provoke more R-selected reproduction. So, citizen disarmament is a double plus for the R's.
01:11:16So, since everyone is equal, criminals elicit sympathy. Oh, that could have been me if I'd grown
01:11:21up in that environment. That could have been me because everyone's equal, and it's all environment,
01:11:24right? Rabbits have no control over their environment. They just, is there grass? I'll eat it. Is there a
01:11:29vagina? I'll screw it. Okay, I guess I'm done until tea time. But the K-selected control their
01:11:35environment, right? So, the fact that there's passivity and determinism in the R-selected
01:11:39mindset is perfectly predictable. And our organisms, they don't want to compete in an equal contest.
01:11:45They don't want to knock on Ted Nugent's house and say, hey, Ted, I want your guns. No,
01:11:50they want to use politics. They don't want to risk anything personally. If they want free stuff for
01:11:55themselves, they're not going to go with guns to their neighbors because their neighbors can shoot
01:11:59back. They want the police to do it. And rabbits can't be wolves. If rabbits say, well, all teeth
01:12:04and claws are going to be banned, well, rabbits will still survive, but the wolves won't. So,
01:12:09if you're a weenie who's never going to defend himself, yeah, get rid of guns. K-organisms,
01:12:14assertiveness is natural. Verbal abuse is an admission of defeat and impotence. For a K-selected
01:12:19organism, when you see someone screaming verbal abuse, that person has lost and you've lost all
01:12:23respect for them. You know, like if you beat me in tennis and I run off and throw my racket and say,
01:12:29well, you're just a jerk, right? I mean, K-selected people, I guess our selected people are like,
01:12:34oh, he's hurt, let him win. K-selected people are like, dude, not only did you lose at tennis,
01:12:39you lost at breathing. So, the criminal is not me. K-selected organisms, there's me and there's
01:12:45people really, really different from me. The criminal is not you. It's not everyone's equal.
01:12:48That could have been me. The criminal is not me. They're willing to shoot in self-defense. So,
01:12:51there's value for the guns. Stability and diminished danger feeds the K gene set. So,
01:12:57eliminating criminals serves this purpose of feeding the K gene set. They want to compete
01:13:02in an equal contest, even with a criminal. Now, they can't oppose the R's plus government power,
01:13:08right? Which is why K's are dying in the West. K's ally naturally with limited security powers,
01:13:13and they want to compete with R's on an even playing field, which means no central bank.
01:13:17No central bank. A central bank means you don't have to weigh differences and weigh options and
01:13:21be intelligent enough to know the long-term effects of your predations.
01:13:27Security in life. Security in life. The social safety net. So, for our organisms, everyone's the
01:13:32same. Love is an illusion. You're not driven by love to have sex. You're driven by lust to have sex.
01:13:38So, because youth and sex appeal are so important to our selected organisms,
01:13:41security diminishes in life as sexual attractiveness decreases. Low investment in your kids, rampant
01:13:48materialism, a lack of bonding, and a lack of saving means an insecure old age. You're going to be in
01:13:56trouble when you get older. Low investment in community, no communal cushion for accidents or
01:14:01misfortunes. You can't go and rely on your friends, your neighbors, your extended family.
01:14:04And this is why the R's are like, oh, I got to have unemployment insurance. I got to have old
01:14:09age pensions. I got to have free health care, because they haven't built the relationships
01:14:13that cushion them. It's the subsidized subsidization of selfishness. And this is why they're so opposed
01:14:19to ostracism. K-organisms. Okay, not everyone is the same. There's good people, bad people,
01:14:25noble people, base people. Love is an earned treasure. Security for K-selected people increases in
01:14:31life because your virtue, your saved resources, and your reputation all increase.
01:14:36A high investment in your kids combined with sensible saving and monogamy means a secure old
01:14:40age. You're not going to find some secretary attractive and go through the horrible asset
01:14:45mitosis and lawyer funding of a useless and needless divorce and so on. You're going to
01:14:50keep all your resources. High investment case or a tribal, they invest in their communities,
01:14:55strong communal cushions for accidents and misfortunes. So they want the freedom to spend and save.
01:15:00They want charity. They don't want government welfare. There are negative consequences of
01:15:05selfishness. They embrace ostracism, which is unbearable for our selected organisms because
01:15:09they don't have the social cushion. You can handle ostracism if you've got people who love you.
01:15:13You can't handle ostracism if all you've done is sit-ups rather than learn how to be a good person.
01:15:21Government. We'll end here, and I appreciate your patience, a lengthy presentation.
01:15:24Our organisms, they want unlimited majority democracy, where verbal abuse and praise shape
01:15:31social policy. Do you have doubts about immigrants from opposing cultures? Racist! Nobody looks at the
01:15:38data. Nobody looks at the numbers. Nobody asks, hey, I wonder how many Swedish women are being raped
01:15:43by foreigners. No, nothing. No facts, no data, no information. You're racist, right? Just scream.
01:15:48That's what they want. Now, they constantly react to anxiety with aggression. This is where you get
01:15:53political correctness. It's never-ending witch hunts. There's always some new enemy to be rooted
01:15:58out and hunted down, because they're not training their fight-or-flight mechanisms to learn how to
01:16:02deal with negative stimuli. They just react and blow up. They reject stable laws. They want resource
01:16:07transfers. They want screaming and need and pity and manipulation to get them resources. Now, property
01:16:15rights inhibit sexual access. We've talked about before. If you have property rights, you can't
01:16:19have a massive welfare state. You can't really have a welfare state. You've got to deal with private
01:16:22charity. Property rights inhibit sexual access, so our organisms are very hostile to property rights.
01:16:28They're fundamentally into selfish emotional gratification, and they're infantile. They have
01:16:32tantrums and greed and name-calling and so on. It doesn't mean they're not smart, but just
01:16:37immature. Now, K-organisms, they prefer limited democratic republic, a rule of of laws, a government of
01:16:44laws and not of men, or voluntarism, the idea of a stateless society, because then the state is
01:16:52what's used by the R to beat the Ks. R's and Ks will achieve a stable equilibrium in society,
01:16:58but whenever you have a state, the R's generally breed. There's the dysgenics of single motherhood.
01:17:03The R's take over the political process, enslave the Ks, and then they all hit the wall. You ran out
01:17:08of money, and then everybody floats back to the Ks, and the women are all like,
01:17:11okay, let's pretend the R thing never happened. You're so sexy with your accounting belly.
01:17:17So, verbal abuse and praise is an admission of failure. Like, if you try and manipulate people
01:17:22by just, oh, I love you so much. You're so great. Now, K-organisms enjoy mild anxiety as a
01:17:29performance stimulant. They don't freak out and verbally lash out at people. They're unafraid of
01:17:34language. Sticks and stones may hurt my bones, right? But words will never harm me.
01:17:39K-organisms prefer stable and predictable laws, right? Because they want to be in control,
01:17:44and they want to have predictability. Unpredictability and predation is what breeds the R gene set.
01:17:48And so, the Ks want stable and predictable laws. You can't have that in a majority mob rule,
01:17:53late democracy, like we're living in now. And, you know, you don't need a giant drug war
01:17:59to keep drugs away from kids because parental investment does that.
01:18:05You reject debt as destructive to children. No, it is irresponsible to go into national debt,
01:18:13to feed people's needs in the here and now, because the kids are going to have to pay,
01:18:16and it sure as hell isn't their fault that some woman hooked her stilettos into her hoop earrings
01:18:21with the wrong guy. It's not some kids in the future's fault, right? So, this is, again,
01:18:26this is not exactly the, you know, the end-be-all and end-all. These are just some of the top ones
01:18:30that I thought were interesting and useful to talk about. I'm going to do another one,
01:18:35which is more specific examples of this. We've got Chamberlain and we've got Churchill. We've got
01:18:39other people that we're going to compare the R versus K with, and we're going to talk about the
01:18:43general cycle of what happens when R's take over or when K's take over and the general cycle that
01:18:49happens, because you can really understand a lot about the cycle of civilizations by looking at this
01:18:54R versus K stuff. So, please give me your comments below. I will check them out and respond to them,
01:19:00and I appreciate the feedback that people provide me. And I, of course, you know, need your support
01:19:07to continue doing this work. You can go to freedomainradio.com slash donate to help out
01:19:12this show. Come on! It's my birthday month. So, I hope that you will help us out as we continue to
01:19:17spread, I think, this very essential and useful information to people around the world. So, thank you
01:19:22so much for watching. As always, have yourself a wonderful day. I'll see you next time.
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