* I’ve commented before about the seeming uptick in heinous incest cases among blacks in Georgia. Incest is big among those weird Nuwabian cultists. I remember reading in the AJC — buried in the Metro section — last year a story about a Nuwabian guy and his wife who imprisoned, starved and sexually abused their daughter. His wife was his other daughter. Not the first time I’ve come across such a story. You can always count an exorcism-gone-wrong case now and then as well. Very urban Deliverance and occupying no mental space among SJWs who are always ready to vilify Southern whites with insults of incest and superstition.
* Europeans, especially northern and northwestern Europeans, have been avoiding cousin marriages for many CENTURIES, over a thousand years in core NW Europe. Meanwhile, cousin marriage at the level seen among Muslims causes a noticeably lower IQ, in proportion to the degree of inbreeding.
* Family unification and chain migration must go. We are always being told today’s immigrants are no different than yesterday’s European ones. Well if that is the case then let’s get rid of family unification. My immigrant predecessor was only allowed to bring his white body into the USA. If any of his family members wanted to come, they had to apply on their on merit and were not green-lighted a visa. It’s only fair that immigrants of today get no advantages over immigrants of the past.
Speaking of which, we should also end all welfare type payments for today’s immigrants. My immigrant predecessor had to prove he would not become a ward of the state before he was allowed entry. The same should happen today. Immigrants are supposed to be hardy, self-reliant individuals. Getting welfare is cheating.
I would also add any immigrant granted citizenship must vote in English. My immigrant predecessor was never offered a ballot or driver’s license exam in his native tongue.
For people who talk so much about equal treatment, today’s immigrants and their supporters sure seem to want special privileges that previous immigrants didn’t receive.
* My daughter (white) and her (mostly white) friends at a college in England were great friends with a muslim lad by the name of Iqbal. Iqbal was a pleasant young man but his family insisted that he should regard his cousins — of which there were many — as more important than any ‘casual’ friendships he might make. When Iqbal’s cousin Ahmed ever entered the college refectory Iqbal was required to leave whatever he was doing and go and shake hands with Ahmed.
Iqbal disliked this, partly because he wanted his own life but mostly because cousin Ahmed was a nasty and unpleasant creature. Family ties mattered so much however that Iqbal had to obey the rule. Privately he would say he hated his cousin, but such was family ‘law’ in his people that Ahmed had to matter more than anyone else. What he knew was that if Ahmed wanted to make trouble anytime, Iqbal would have to back him up.
So there we have one of the unspoken aspects of the Pakistani/muslim obsession with cousins: they all have to follow whatever happens, which may explain why any potential (dare I say) threat to security is magnified by any family ties.
* Back in the early 90′s, I dated a divorced Lebanese-American woman who had been born in the Detroit area. She was not only a Muslim, but a Shiite! I learned from her that she had been sent to Lebanon when she was 15 to marry a man who was her first cousin. The idea was that they were not to consummate the marriage, return to the U.S. so he could get admitted, and then, after a certain period of time, they were to divorce. The best laid plans, as the expression goes. She got pregnant before returning to the States, so they had to remain married and ultimately had three children together.
* Back when I was attending public high school in Washington, D.C., we had something called the “Track System.” Students were assigned to one of four tracks: Track I (Honors track for the gifted student), Track II (Academic track for students planning to go to college), Track III (General track for students not planning to go to college) and Track IV (Basic track for the less academically gifted). Sometime in the early 60′s, a local black civil rights activist named Julius Hobson started filing various lawsuits, one of which challenged the Track System as discriminatory against black students. He was ultimately successful in winning his court case sometime in the mid to late 60′s and the Track System bit the dust. The Honors Track generally had the best students taking courses limited just to like students who were taught by better teachers, and classes tended to be much smaller than normal. In my experience, the Track System seemed to work pretty well, since students who were less than serious were segregated away from more serious students.
* NPR story “In Houston’s Gifted Program, Critics Say Blacks And Latinos Are Overlooked”
Yes — but look through the over 500 comments provoked by that Blank Slate/White Privilege fable. Of the subset of listeners who wrote in, probably 90% aren’t buying what the reporter is selling.
NPR seems to have suspended their policy of aggressive moderation. I expect that the clampdown on ungoodthink will return with a vengeance.
* Americans are extremely weirded out by first cousins marrying, whereas respectable Europeans like Darwin and Einstein married their cousins. I think eugenicists made cousin marriage disreputable among Americans, but maybe it goes back earlier.