Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Racial Socialism and Amnesia

By Nicholas Stix

[During a discussion of Steve Sailer’s brilliant essay, “The Measure of Man.”]

August 12, 2021 at 1:17 a.m. GMT
@Arclight

By Arclight
August 11, 2021 at 4:25 p.m. GMT

The impact of the woke fascism that is descending on us will be felt most acutely by the bottom 80% of society – the people who work for mature (or sclerotic) organizations/industries where it’s less important to be nimble and innovative and more important just to keep the wheels turning, however slowly or imperfectly. This is where we will see explicit racial discrimination in hiring and promotions.

But for those where stagnation means death or irrelevance as a going concern, we’ll just have performative DIE policies like appointing a director of diversity, diverse classes for entry level jobs, and donations to the right non-profits. When it comes to core functions where the real money is made, all of these businesses know they have to be clear-sighted about acquiring and nurturing the best talent they can acquire, and it most assuredly will not reflect the broader demographics of the country.

The former group is far more numerous though – and an intelligent political movement would be laying the groundwork to take advantage of the resentment that is going to increase along with it.

N.S.: “The impact of the woke fascism that is descending on us… This is where we will see explicit racial discrimination in hiring and promotions.”

In 1990, during a group interview for an entry-level drug counselor job, the Hispanic interviewer declared to me that he would never consider me for the job, because I’m White.

You can argue about when this began, but the argument is over whether it was the 1950s or the 1960s. It isn’t “descending on us”; it descended on us generations ago, though not all at once everywhere. For the past generation or so, racial socialism has been consolidating its power, which will; never end, even after it has slaughtered the last White.

Millions of people in this country (and at this blog—Steve Sailer’s) suffer a form of amnesia, whereby they keep on revising history, regarding how long this has been going on. Some have even claimed that it only began four or five years ago. Many of the same people insist on depicting Martin Luther King Jr. as one of the good guys, who must be “spinning in his grave,” as opposed to the black supremacist and Communist collaborator (not to mention, rapist, etc.) that he always was.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Amnesia--or frogs boiling in water?

--GRA