2:42:52

INSOMNIA STREAM: POWER OF ILLUSION EDITION - 06/20/2026

Display stream descriptionThis stream features the host reacting to and critiquing the documentary The Power of an Illusion, focusing on its claim that race is not biologically real. The discussion centers on the documentary’s use of genetics, anthropology, and historical narratives to argue that racial categories are socially constructed. The host analyzes specific segments from the documentary, including classroom DNA experiments, historical references to eugenics, and discussions of athletic performance, while offering extensive commentary on how these arguments are framed. The stream also includes chat interactions toward the end, where viewers contribute comments and the host responds to them.
Full Summary
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Devon Stack
00:09:02 welcome to the Insomnia Stream Power of Illusion Edition. I'm your host, of course, Devon Stack. Hope you're having a good weekend. We're getting closer to hope you all celebrated Juneteenth.
00:09:25 Oh my god, I was so pissed off. I had packages I was expecting to go be able to pick up yesterday, but no, apparently, apparently Juneteenth is a, is a fucking holiday, like an actual holiday, where, like, the post office is closed. It's like, what really? I thought, I mean, I knew it was.. I don't know, I guess we just celebrate anything, right? Government workers get a day off. Off over every little stupid thing. God, I was so pissed off.
00:10:09 I was real. I was raging in the parking lot. I was losing my shit visibly. I was visibly angry. Usually I'm usually pretty, yeah, pretty even, pretty even, even Stevens, you know, and not so much in that parking lot. I was mad, I was raging, but yeah. Anyway, I guess I have to wait till Monday.
00:10:32 First world problems, as they say, but no, I was, I was really pissed off. I had some shit I had to get done this weekend that required things that are just sitting in a fucking post office that I can't get to because, because niggers, anyway, the the show tonight is called Power of Illusion.
00:10:57 Power of Illusion, because didn't you know, I guess we shouldn't even have a Juneteenth. We shouldn't even have a Juneteenth to celebrate black people, because black people don't exist. Black people don't exist. Race is a social construct, it's all made up.
00:11:16 Race is an illusion, and it's this illusion that creates our differences, you know. What, when you see different races, you're not actually observing any biological differences between people. It's your, your.. it's almost like the, the, like the quantum physics thing.
00:11:39 By observing something, you make it different, right? And so, by observing black people, you're making them different than white people. It's all actually.. it's all an illusion. That's the premise of a documentary called The Power of an Illusion. It's actually.. there's a couple.. there's a few episodes.. wanted to go over at least one of them, or part of one of them tonight, they're pretty long.
00:12:01 There was, it's like three hours of this stuff, and I kind of tapped out after about 45 minutes, because there was a significant research - not research, really, it's all pretty easy, but to prove it wrong.
00:12:17 But it's amazing, it's amazing the kind of money that goes into this idea that race doesn't exist, it's all part of the the machine that has been grinding away trying to get multi racial societies to work every possible way that they can, and if that means constantly promoting these lies and hoping that in some way that they'll manifest something, you know, like Andy, what was Abbie Hoffman said, the good propagandist doesn't tell you what reality is, he tells you what he wants reality to be, and in that way he hopes to manifest it almost like a Jewish, Jewish magic spell, you know.
00:13:08 If you keep telling people that the world is a certain way, eventually it'll become that way, and that's what the social engineers who have been pulling their hair out, trying to figure out how to make this multiracial society work, and that's what they were thinking when they made this documentary.
00:13:26 You can tell, sort of, go over the arguments made. The first thing that you notice when you start this documentary up is, is this, that it was funded by the Ford Foundation, which is just Henry Ford, has got to be spinning in his grave. The amount of subversive bullshit that gets produced by the Ford Foundation, it's just obscene.
00:13:53 It's totally obscene, but that's that's really what that, that's what happens if, unless you find a way, like if you get super rich and you create these foundations that live on forever, like, like a zombie, you, you know, for eternity, because that's, you know, this big pile of money, these foundations, they can just go on forever.
00:14:13 It's only a matter of time before some Jews go and take over your foundation, and then the very things that you were opposed to, your money is now funding in perpetuity, and that's kind of the story of the Ford Foundation.
00:14:27 Everything that Henry Ford stood against is 100% with the Ford Foundation now funds. So the Ford Foundation bankroll the bulk of this documentary or series, I guess.
00:14:39 Then we have this, the Annie E. Casey Foundation, another foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Lita and Alejandro Zafaroni Akinati Foundation, the Wallace Alexander Gerbodi Foundation. Foundation and the new Lum Lumda Trust, so all these foundations and trusts that just apparently have millions and millions of dollars to put towards the production of these documentaries, and and so that's how this stuff gets produced. We, of course, don't have anything similar that would be nice.
00:15:21 It would be nice. So you take a look at this, and you're like, okay, well, so what exactly? You know, you can tell by the name, right, that they're basically saying that race is an illusion. What exactly is going to be their argument here? Because you're basically telling people not to believe their lying eyes, not to look at, not just obviously the physical differences that are obvious, but the, you know, the crime statistics, all this stuff's all made up, all these correlations that we're all very painfully aware of.
00:15:58 How does, how is this all actually just an illusion. So, let's have a listen. Let's just dive right in here.
Narrator
00:16:06 There is no question that individual human beings are different, one from the other. Our eyes confirm this day in and day out: skin color, body shape, hair form, eye shape. For several 100 years, we have used these visual differences to classify people into four or five groups we call races.
Pilar Ossorio - Microbiologist
00:16:34 We have a notion of race as being divisions among people that are deep, that are essential, that are somehow biological or even genetic, and that are unchanging, that these are clear-cut, distinct categories of people.
Male Science Professor
00:16:51 And the beauty of the race business is that you can identify people by just looking at them. You don't even have to look at their genes, because one manifestation of their genes is there, namely skin color, or eye shape, or hair shape, and then that's the key to everything.
Devon Stack
00:17:10 Okay, so they start by acknowledging that you're going to see physical differences between people, because you can't exactly gloss over that, you know that they're called black people for a reason, you know, it's because they're black. I did find it interesting that the black woman that they had, who's talking about how, you know, that there's.. they're literally going to be making the argument there's no biological difference between blacks and whites. I couldn't help but noticing that her hair.
00:17:41 she probably spent a lot of money on her keratum treatment on Africa, Africanizer hair there, but anyway, be that as it may, but it seems as if they're implying all of these, these differences are external, right? It's just, you know, and even though we might have these obvious differences like eye shape and hair color and skin color and what have you, that really it's genetically there's not a whole lot of variation, right, like it's it's just, you know, just it's it's all esthetic, it's not a really a big difference, and when you look on the inside, you know, race being skin deep, as they say, you don't see a whole lot of difference. The
Narrator
00:18:25 idea of race assumes that simple external differences rooted in biology are linked to other, more complex internal differences, like athletic ability, musical aptitude intelligence.
Devon Stack
00:18:47 Yeah, that's that's true. The idea of race does assume that while your skin color is not your race, it's one of the many indicators, it's one of the the many correlations that you can make, like you can, you can look at a person who has very dark skin and know that, while obviously there's always the the outliers, and there's everyone's an individual, and you know, whatever, you can make some assumptions about some people with, or at least, a, you know, educated guess about some people based on an exterior manifestation of their race, right.
00:19:30 In fact, they kind of have it backwards. They're saying that by looking at, you know, external factors that you can, you can divine what's on the insides, that's not so much. I feel like it's what's on the inside that, that creates these external factors, right? And so, I mean, black people are black, that's in the name. And so, if you, if you look at a black person, yeah, you can, you can pretty much assume they're black.
00:19:58 It's, I don't know why this is so complicated. Kidded, and based on that category, cater is a cat, catec, the category that they're in. You try doing this sometimes, you just can't fucking say a word, especially after, like, not you don't realize I'm in here all day long talking to nobody.
00:20:19 I haven't, this is the first time I've talked today. It's 10 o'clock at night. First time I've talked today. So, anyway, I should do like those things that actors do, where they warm up their voice, you know, before they, you know, they have like those voice exercises.
00:20:37 I don't know, when I was, I used to direct commercials and stuff. There, every once in a while, you'd get these actors that would just be like Peter Piper picked up at the, like, they would just go through all these like tongue twisters before you'd go, you know, before you'd shoot, and you just play, you'd have to just sit there and wait for them to do it, and I used to hate it.
00:20:53 Now, man, maybe there was a little with.. anyway, so they're trying to say, "Oh, well, you know, just.. just because there's differences on the outside, and doesn't mean that there's races, and they bring up some of the earlier studies that were done on race, you know. For example, they like, they're, they brought up this guy here, let's see here, here he is, that fucking Chad, that fucking Chad there. Oh, where'd my notes go? Here we are.
00:21:24 This is Theo Phyllis, painter Theo - we'll call him Theo, like, like from The Cosby Show. Theo, Theo Painter, here now. This is the guy that was the first to discover that human sex was determined by X and Y chromosomes. He was, he did some of the earliest discoveries involving chromosomes, and in fact, I think that they, he made the mistake, they miscounted the number of chromosomes when they first discovered it.
00:22:00 Let me, because a lot of this look, we're talking about bleeding edge technology using the resources available to us, and it's kind of funny that they, they try to shit on him as if, like, he wasn't, you know, I wasn't quite the brilliant man that that you might think, he thought there was only 46 chromosomes, and and the, you know, something that they, they, they updated as they, as they kept researching, but it's like, yeah, meanwhile, in Africa, they haven't discovered chairs yet.
00:22:32 Okay, so maybe you can chill out on this guy with a microscope, not fully understanding chromosomes the first time, you know, but anyway, they also, it becomes obvious.
00:22:42 The reason they actually hate him is he was a segregation segregationist. He was a segregationist. He worked at a university and was trying to convince the government to allow them to build a separate university for black people, because he didn't, after emancipation, everything like that, and you know, blacks trying to integrate into white society and failing, he wanted to separate blacks from whites, so he could prevent, you know, like an Austin Metcalf type situation on a daily basis at his university, it went to the Supreme Court.
00:23:26 In fact, and they unanimously ruled against him in 1950 And before you asked, there was only one Jew on the court, only one Jew, the rest were various types of Christians, right? There was a Unitarian, a couple Catholics, Presbyterians, it was like, literally, it was almost like every kind. So it's a pretty diverse court.
00:23:54 I mean, other than, you know, like the Jew, they were all white guys and unanimously ruled against him, and so that's kind of why they had a chip on their shoulder for Theo, based Theo, the segregationist, when talking about the chromosomes, like, oh, look at this, look at this, he's trying to imply that there's something wrong with with black chromosomes, they're all over the place, it's like,
00:24:19 well, he's that's the other thing, too, that they start to, you look at this when they, when they go after, we'll get more into it in a moment, but when they go after the racial science that was going on, what they don't address is the reason why they were doing this, the reason why they were doing all this research is they were trying to figure out an answer to the problems that were beginning to develop as a result of blacks no longer just being slaves in a field that no one had to fucking deal with, other than a very limited amount of southerners, to now they were, because of the great Negro migration that was underway full steam.
00:24:59 We're now flooding into all these urban areas and creating all these problems, and so white people were trying to figure out a scientific answer to this problem, and again, because they were working with primitive technology, sometimes they didn't get it 100% right, but they had the right idea.
00:25:16 So anyway, now that's the real reason they had a problem with Theo, is because he was a segregationist, and you know, sorry, sorry, he was busy discovering chromosomes when Africans were yet to discover second story buildings. Oops, there we go.
Narrator
00:25:35 This belief is based on the idea that race is biologically real.
Devon Stack
00:25:44 Oh my god, you mean it's not real? You mean that race is not biologically real? That is their premise. That is their premise.
Pilar Ossorio - Microbiologist
00:25:53 All of our genetics now is telling us that that's not the case. We can't find any genetic markers that are in everybody of a particular race, and in nobody of some other race.
Devon Stack
00:26:05 Oh, in that case, race doesn't exist. So they play this game a lot. They play this game a lot, where they say something that to a low IQ person would sound like, "Oh, well, the case closed if they can't find any genetic markers that exist in every one of one race, but not in any other race.
00:26:29 Then I guess, genetically speaking, race doesn't exist, right? But that's that's absurd, because guess what, you can't find any genetic markers that exist in every wolf and doesn't exist in, in any dog. Okay, that, that's, and they're, they're obviously different subspecies. It's about clusters, okay? If you compare two different dog breeds.
00:27:01 No single genetic marker is going to be present in every single Labrador and absent in every poodle. That's that's just the way that it is. And yet there are Labradors and there are poodles.
00:27:18 They have different behaviors. They have different disease susceptibility, and these differences are not just real, they're predictable, and so just because you can't find any genetic markers that are in every single wolf and not in every single and absence in every single dog doesn't mean there's no such thing as dogs and wolves, and that there's no difference between the two of them.
00:27:46 In fact, there's, there's, there's almost no, because there's so many, there's so much genetic variation. Yeah, there is no such thing as like the nigger gene.
00:27:59 Although I was thinking about it, I was like, what about the gene that makes them have the curly hair, because that would be at, you know, that very specific kind of hair. There's probably a gene for that, so maybe that you could say that that would be a gene that would not be present in white people, but I don't know.
00:28:16 So, anyway, so they talk about that, and really what they're going around, or getting around, is the fact that you have clusters of differences, so this is dogs versus wolves. Obviously, you can do the same thing with races.
00:28:29 So here you've got Europeans up here at the top, the blue, you've got Finnish people right next to the blue, they've got a little bit of the Asian admixture, so they're genetically a little bit different in the yellowish, there you got the below them, the it looks like admixed Colombians, then you got the South Asians, you got the Peruvians, you know, so you can, you can cluster these. In fact, you can cluster, you can get pretty granular with it.
00:29:08 This is a cluster of map of the, the different, the genetic differences between different European people, so it's all kind of bullshit, you know. So, there, there is, there is a very real way of measuring differences in races, despite the fact that there's not like an all or nothing gene.
Pilar Ossorio - Microbiologist
00:29:34 We can't find any genetic markers that define race,
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:29:38 and actually,
Devon Stack
00:29:40 okay, again, it's they're they're trying to play a trick by saying it's kind of like this, it's like saying I can't find any ingredient in these baked goods that defines bread stick, right, because all of these pastries they.
00:29:59 You are made up of pretty much the same, the same ingredients, right? They all have flour, they all have yeast, they all have baking soda, they all have sugar, eggs, but that doesn't mean breadsticks don't exist, right? That you can't find, there's not an ingredient that's in every bread stick that's in none of these things, that doesn't mean there's no such thing as a bread stick.
00:30:29 So, it's the same thing they're trying to say that bread sticks don't exist because you can't find an ingredient in bread sticks that doesn't exist in any other pastry, that's that's that's the logic, that's basically the logic they're going with, and so anyway, these students
Narrator
00:30:52 are gathering for a DNA workshop led by Cold Spring Harbor Labs teacher Scott Bronson,
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:30:59 30 microliters,
Narrator
00:31:01 Marcus Go. gorgeous
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:31:03 to these tiny Jackie, Noah,
Narrator
00:31:07 Hannah, Jamil, and their fellow students are about to explore the biology of human variation,
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:31:15 but there's another type of DNA. Does anybody know what that type of DNA is? Yeah, mitochondrial, mitochondrial DNA, very good.
Narrator
00:31:23 They will compare their skin colors.
Student
00:31:25 They're like,
Devon Stack
00:31:27 oh, look at that. They did the meme. They busted out the skin color card. So, the one thing you'll notice is obviously what they're setting up is we're going to do a DNA test between all these students that look like they're in different races, they look like they're in different races, and we're going to, we're going to get their, their DNA test,
00:31:51 and then we're going to compare them, and we're, you know, let me guess, let me guess, there's going to be more, more in common than you would think, right, even though they bust out the skin color card, and, and there's a big difference there. She is trying to see where she ranks on the racial hierarchy.
Narrator
00:32:15 They will type their blood, and they will swab cells from inside their mouths to extract a small portion of their own DNA. Once the sample is ready, they will compare some of their genetic similarities and differences.
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:32:32 We're gonna look at a very tiny section of this ring.
Devon Stack
00:32:36 Ah, yeah. I want you to hear what? Do you hear what he said? We're gonna look at a very.. I'm sorry, I'm gonna have to watch the Jews spit in a
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:32:42 cup again, very tiny section of this ring.
Devon Stack
00:32:47 Okay, okay. So we already know that, you know, the fix is in. We're gonna look at this very tiny section of this range, where predictably there's going to be a lot more similarities than differences. We've already.
00:32:59 we've already rigged the test, so that when you get the results, we already know what to expect, because we're going to be looking at something where you know we're definitely not going to be looking at the part of the genome that defines skin color as an example, because then it would be predictably different, so we instead we're looking at this really this really small section where we know that there's going to be a lot more similarities, so it's it's a bullshit test. The
Narrator
00:33:30 students begin the workshop with the same assumptions most of us have.
Scott Bronson - Cold Springs Harbor Labs teacher
00:33:35 As you begin to look at the data, you might want to keep in your mind who you think you might be most similar to, and who you think you might be most different to.
Jewish Student
00:33:45 I think I probably have the most similarities with mr. Bronson, or with Carol,
Devon Stack
00:33:50 because we were white males, both Carol and I, and both Scott Bronson and I. Yeah, actually, Noah, you're Jewish, you're Jewish, but you know, I mean, compared to Tyrone, yes. If we looked at your DNA, you would be closer, close, more closely related to to this guy than Tyrone, because basically everyone is more closely related to this guy than Tyrone, because blacks are genetically dissimilar from everyone. But anyway, let's go
Alan Goodman - Biological Anthropologist
00:34:24 to
00:34:24 understand why the idea of race is a biological myth.
AI Singer
00:34:31 What's in your DNA? Alan Goodman is the name. Ashkenazi, for sure. What a shame. Biological anthropologists, more like racial apologists. It's not that hard to figure out your game when we notice good man is your last name.
Alan Goodman - Biological Anthropologist
00:34:52 In fact, that race is not based on biology, but race is rather an idea that we ascribe to biology.
AI Singer
00:35:00 That sounds really Jewish,
Devon Stack
00:35:02 so the other Jew come in here, Alan Goodman, Alan Goodman, the biological anthropologist is there.
00:35:13 In fact, I've seen this guy in other specials done by networks in the late 90s, they would bring this guy in to essentially perform this act that he has perfected, where he comes up with these word salad explanations as to why race doesn't exist, and he'll say things, he'll cite things about how, like, oh, actually, well, we'll go over, they probably lifted some of them, his, his talking points to make this, this episode, but he'll talk about how, like, you know, race as a, as a biology, biological reality, that's just nonsense, that's complete nonsense.
00:35:55 So this Jew tells everyone that race is fake, and then they say, well, you know, it's that's weird that he would say that the race is fake, and that all you know, so many people seem so certain of these biological differences, you know. Let's go for the most obvious one.
00:36:12 The most obvious one is that the blacks in athletics, right? Like, why is it that if, if there is no biological difference between the different races, which is what we're arguing here, stunningly, that there's so many blacks that excel in athletics.
00:36:31 If you flip on professional sports, then you will notice that most of the teams are all black. In fact, if you look at, you know, even even it's spread to other parts of the world now, right? Like, if you watch, you know, even like World Cup, you know, you look at the French team, it's like, is there like one white guy on the French team now? I think, like, the goalie, I think, is still white, you know, because that's what, that's again, because that takes the most brain power, just like if you look at the American football teams, you know, the quarterback.
00:37:02 If anyone's going to be white, it's going to be the quarterback, because he's the one that's actually having to use his brain. But every all the linebackers are are gigantic nigs, so everyone kind of knows this. Everyone kind of gets this, so they're like, oh, you know, you probably think this too.
00:37:20 So we went to this high school track meet to interview kids and make them feel uncomfortable, because this is, I believe, 2005 when this came out, and white kids were very uncomfortable, very, you know, squirmy and squeamish when you asked them about race. The
Narrator
00:37:39 idea of race as biology is ferociously persistent on America's playing fields. Gorgeous Harper and her teammates are competing at the Adidas Nationals.
Gorgeous Harper - Track Runner
00:37:53 I love to run track. I've been running track since I was eight years old. The people I train with, they all want to be the best, and you got to put in the hard work. This is the
Narrator
00:38:08 top event for elite high school track and field stars, and while racial differences are not necessarily discussed openly, they are often part of the careful calculation of competitive edge.
Student
00:38:26 Well, I've heard some rumors I've heard are just like blacks have an extra muscle in their leg, but I don't think anything's true.
Devon Stack
00:38:35 Well, that's when you're wrong. I mean, they don't have like an extra muscle in their leg necessarily, but they have what is called speaking of genetics, the Sprinter gene.
00:38:46 That's right, the Sprinter gene. It's AC TN three. The Sprinter gene has been the subject of much research in the field of sports science, which is believed to play a key role in determining athletic power and sports performance potential.
00:39:04 A CTN three codes for a protein called alpha actinin three, which is found in fast twitch muscle fibers. Remember when people were getting fired for just mentioning stuff like this about the difference in muscle mass between blacks and whites, and the fast twitch muscle fibers.
00:39:24 Well, this is this is what's responsible for the fast twitch muscle fibers. These fibers are responsible for generating quick, powerful movements, such as sprinting, jumping, and weight lifting.
00:39:36 On the other hand, slow twitch fibers are used for endurance activities like running and cycling studies have shown that the AC TN three gene comes in two variants, blood oil. Anyway, you get the idea.
00:39:51 Bottom line is, on average, these this the AC TN three is. Found more frequently in black people, specifically from West Africa, which is where the Africans in America come from.
00:40:11 So they actually do have a genetic difference that actually does disproportionately appear in their populations, and that also, or in addition to that, you also have limb proportions, which are different, and those are also obviously genetically coded, and so you have this, this genetic difference that is very real and actually pretty well studied, and not imaginary, and I don't know why they, they acted as if that was like a crazy thing for her to say in the documentary, because we actually know all about this.
00:40:54 The blacks do have the quick twitch fiber, more muscle mass, and they also have higher, higher average activity and enzymes for quick energy production without oxygen, so like, what is the Kenyan runners? Like, you guys know what is it? I think it's Kenyans, right? It's some, some kind of African.
00:41:17 They're always the ones that win the, like, the long distance races and stuff like that, and it's because they're genetically more fit for running away from tigers.
Black Student Lady
00:41:30 I assume that a white girl can't beat me in the 200 In my mind, I don't think she can beat me, but I won't. I won't sleep on her.
Male Student
00:41:42 I don't want to get too controversial here, since I really don't know exactly, but I'd say that there's maybe a little bit that
Devon Stack
00:41:52 it's so sad watching this white kid here, like he's, he knows, see this, by the way, if you want to understand the psychology of white kids in 2005 this guy right here is very representative of every of the of the average white kid in 2005 very representative because they're all by 2005 white kids are all pretty aware of the racial differences, because unless you live in somewhere like Maine, or, or I don't know, maybe like parts of Delaware, I don't know, there's probably white towns in 2005 still.
00:42:32 I mean, there's still sort of white towns, very rare in America, but they do exist for the most part, though, by 2005 1005 every white kid has had the unfortunate reality of being raised alongside non-whites, and they're all very well aware of these differences.
00:42:56 I was, I myself, by 2005 had had grown up alongside non-whites against my will, and was noticing lots of patterns that the most violent kids were always not white, and that the stupidest kids were always not white, and this is just something that every white kid notices, and he knows this, and that look on his face of like, is this going to get me in trouble? Because not only have I been force-fed the exact kind of bullshit that's in this documentary my entire life, I'm now on a camera, and you might think that canceling is a new thing, maybe to the extent that you know, maybe it got worse, but no one wanted to be called a racist.
00:43:48 You might, you know, again, back then, you don't have to worry about the internet and the whole world finding out that you said nigger.
00:43:53 If you said nigger on the playground, you didn't, you know, this other students didn't have, like, you know, camera phones, and and tweeting out like a video of you saying that that would then destroy your your college dreams and any kind of employment opportunities you might have for the rest of your life, but yeah, the social stigma was still there, you would still become a social pariah, and so that's the look of of discomfort right there, that, that's, that's the white, that's the white boy of the, of confusion,
00:44:24 where he's like, because I'm white, I want to say the truth, and I want to say what's what my, my reason and logic has has led me to understand about the world, I want to discuss that in a, in a reasonable and honest way, but I also know the social consequences that come along with that, and so he wants to, he wants to say that, yeah, actually, obviously, obviously, you know, yeah, the quick twitch, and I'd
Male Student
00:44:52 say that there's maybe a little bit that, not to use as an excuse, is why they beat me sometimes, but maybe can. Considering when you, when you look at the Olympics, you know who tends to dominate the 100, the 200 and a quarter for the most part.
Devon Stack
00:45:07 Yeah, she even, he even did like the god hair to do that, do the scratch my ear thing, like, oh, how do I, how do I phrase this in a way that's complimentary to black people, because I can't say anything bad about them, but even then, like, I've now people are getting in trouble for just saying nice things about black people too. So it's like, yeah, oh, fuck, really put me on the spot here, having to mention the race.
00:45:33 So yeah, there is a genetic difference when, and there, look, that's just one that we know, the AC TN three is just the one that we've researched, and we know a lot about. There's obviously other things, other things that go into that. And look, people, not everyone, but other people were discussing this, but this was something again. There are people that lost their jobs because of this.
00:45:56 I mean, we talked about in a previous stream that there was that general manager, I think, of the Dodgers might have been the Dodgers who lost his, his job because he was on with, I think, Ted Koppel, and said something along the lines of the reason why there's, there's more black people on the field than in the, in the office was because it took a different skill set, and implied that that skill set might not be, you know, something that blacks had had because of these genetic differences. He was out of a job, I think.
00:46:34 Rush Limbaugh, weirdly enough, I think he actually briefly worked for ESPN until he said something about it was either the quick twitch thing or the or white quarterbacks or something like that, but it was, you know, just like a reasonable observation, super Zyokuk, not, you know, anti-racist Rush Limbaugh, you know, he stayed the obvious, and so the canceling stuff was happening, it just wasn't happening in a way that was amplified by the internet, so they show an example of this.
00:47:07 They show a guy who's interesting, why he might care about it, but here's a clip of him on CNN discussing this,
Jon Entine - Author, "Taboo"
00:47:17 but I'm really saying that different populations, whether it's West African descended blacks, and that's what African Americans trace their ancestry to West Africa, or East Africans, or whites, or Asians, they all have different body types and different physiological structures that allow them to have advantages in one sport or another. There are as a genetic basis for these kinds of differences through culture, environment training athletes can't dramatically change the limits of what they can be.
Devon Stack
00:47:48 Yeah, it's all pretty, you know, pretty reasonable stuff. You would expect that to, you know, not be very shocking, that all that's doing is confirming what everyone's observing, but of course, black people don't want to hear that, and so their argument, I'm sure, it will be very.. their rebuttal will be very scientific. Let's, let's have a look to the black at the black rebuttal. Here,
Jim Brown - Former Cleveland Brown
00:48:15 I would like to say to John, there is no scientific definition that holds up about race. Race has changed its definition in this country to the benefit of those who wanted to define it differently, and there is no scientific place to start from, so you have no basis for your work.
Devon Stack
00:48:32 See, and that's the thing, you can't, you can't. This is why they have to make you feel as if you can't even define it, because once you can define it, then you can start looking at data, but if you can't define it, if you can't decide who is black and who is white, then you can't say 13 does 50, let me put it that way, if you can't say who that 13 is, you know, if we're all just individuals, it's impossible for you then to take the next step and say, okay.
00:49:02 Well, now that I've classified this group as black and this group is white, I can start to look at other data, and what, and what that data might tell us about these groups is what they want to avoid.
00:49:15 And so, this, it's kind of funny, because this guy here is actually a Jew, the guy on the right, and this is one of his books, Abraham's children, race identity and the DNA of the chosen people, so he's a low-key Jewish supremacist who does mention in his book, he goes into Jewish IQ, and because he believes in the superiority of Jews, he's willing to admit that IQ is heritable, and so that's why they had him on was because he's a Jew, so even you know if you're going to have a Jew that's going to, or if you're going to have someone who's actually going to.
00:50:00 To be on the side of race realism, then then he, then he had better have a Jew who's there to promote his book about Jewish, Jewish supremacy. So, anyway, I thought that was kind of funny. Then they start talking about, like, why a word, how can you define, yeah, like, where would you draw these lines, right? Because it's not like, not like, I mean, it's just like your, your jet black or your, your pure white, right? There's like a gradient that makes it impossible to categorize these people.
Narrator
00:50:34 How many races would there be? 555, Who decides, and how different would they really be from one another?
Devon Stack
00:50:50 Oh, I guess in that case, in that case, we can't have races because that they'd be, it'd be too hard of a thing to define, you know. It's kind of like, let's go back to the bread stick thing. Is that a bread stick on the right there? I mean, it's, it's stick-shaped, right, just like the bread sticks on the left.
00:51:09 You know, it has something on the top of it. They both have flour in them. I mean, so how could anyone determine whether that this was a bread stick or something, something else. I mean, it's so fucking stupid. It's so fucking stupid, just because something is, is exhaustingly complicated to explain, and so we sometimes take the shortcut of just saying that's a bread stick, because I look at it, I know it's a bread stick.
00:51:37 I don't like, I don't need the fucking recipe to the bread stick to look at that and know that that's a bread stick on the left, and that's, I don't know, whatever those donut things are called, that's that's a donut thing, like I don't need, I don't need the recipe, I don't need to have watched it, these things get cooked in the oven, I don't even need to know how they were produced or where you bought them or or any of these things,
00:52:04 I can just look at the bread stick and I know that's a bread stick, but they're saying that you can't do that, you can't possibly know that that's a bread stick, and that that the thing on the right is not a bread stick, there's no way you can't make these categorizations because there's there's a similarity, there's similarities and there's differences, and Who decides? So it's that argument. So they're basically saying that race can't exist because there's - it's too complicated for it to exist.
Joseph Graves Jr. - Evolutionary Biologist
00:52:34 The measured amount of genetic variation in the human population is extremely small, and that's something that people need to wrap themselves around, that genetically we really aren't very different.
Devon Stack
00:52:46 Ah, that argument. So then they say, well, actually, races can't exist, because the difference that does exist, that I guess they're admitting does exist, it's so small that it really doesn't really matter. It really doesn't matter, you know, like if the difference between blacks and whites is on the order of, you know, like 1% different.
00:53:14 I mean, it's less than that, but like, why does it really matter? Well, I mean, this little bit of difference goes a long way when you're talking about genetics, okay, so the difference between - I'm sure you guys are aware of this - people, you know, cite this all the time, the difference between humans and chimpanzees is it's a 2% different difference, and I think I think it's slightly less than that, actually.
00:53:35 But here's the, here's, here's the problem. If I, if I had these two glasses of water right here. If I got these two glasses of water, and I told you these are both 99.999% water, they're both 99.999% water. The difference, the only difference is one of them. I'm not going to tell you which one that that that fraction of a percent that's not water is chlorine, and then the other one that fraction of a percent that's not water is botulism, and then I said, have a drink.
00:54:30 I mean, it's, it's a small difference, right? One of them has a drop of bleach, and one of them has a drop of botulism. It's, I mean, they're still almost 100% water, so there really is no difference between the two of them, right? So making this argument that because the difference is a small percentage, that the difference doesn't exist is fucking stupid. It's fucking stupid because that percentage, yeah.
00:55:00 The percentages of differences can be can be very small, but little things can do big things. Little, little differences can make big differences, and as is the case with when it comes to to genetics,
Narrator
00:55:17 only one out of every 1000 nucleotides that make up our genetic code is different one individual from another. These look-alike penguins have twice the amount of genetic difference, one from the other, than humans.
Devon Stack
00:55:37 Oh my god, and look, all these penguins, they look the same. Isn't that crazy. The genetic difference between individual humans is, is half that of the genetic difference between penguins.
00:55:53 So, therefore, because penguins look, look all very similar to each other, you should just, race can't possibly exist, right? I mean, race can't possibly exist.
00:56:06 Well, the problem with that is that, well, the reason for that is penguins are haven't had the same genetic bottlenecks that humans have had, but what they don't want to mention to you is cheetahs. you know, there's four subspecies of cheetahs, four subspecies of cheetahs.
00:56:32 They are capable of reproducing with each other, but they are different subspecies. They do look different. They have different habitats, and in conservation environments, they are treated differently because they have different needs. They have different behaviors. Well, the genetic similarity between these cheetahs, they're actually twice as similar as humans, so they're considered different subspecies.
00:57:11 The Saharan cheetah and the Asiatic cheetah and the northeast African cheetah and the southern African cheetah, all they're all considered different subspecies and but they are genetically closer to each other by, like, a fact by a factor of two. I think they're twice as close to each other using the same mathematics that they're using with their penguin example as humans, and that's because cheetahs went through a severe genetic bottleneck that was even tighter than what humans went through.
00:57:52 Yeah, so humans, she said the difference was like one in 101 no, one out of every 1000 nucleotides is different in humans, but in penguins it's one out of every five 500 right. Well, in cheetahs it's, oh wait, did I go other way around? So it's one out of 1000 is different in humans and in penguins, it would be one out of no.
00:58:27 I did that right, right. It's late, guys. Anyway, it doesn't matter. Penguins have twice as much variation. Cheetahs have half the variation.
00:58:39 Cheetahs are considered different subspecies humans for some reason or not, and then it's funny because they almost, it's almost as if they, they don't understand that they're proving exactly what I just said about the cheetahs, that you know we have different subspecies, even though that there's there's twice or half the difference in cheetahs that there is in humans, so they're half as genetically diverse between subspecies as we are between human individuals,
Narrator
00:59:13 and these fruit flies 10 times more difference,
Devon Stack
00:59:18 so the fruit flies, there's 10 times, oh my god,
Narrator
00:59:21 any two fruit flies may be as different genetically from each other as a human is from a chimpanzee.
Devon Stack
00:59:29 Well, and I guess chimpanzees are people too.
00:59:31 See, this is why it's ridiculous every time they bring up these examples that they want to use to use science to disprove the idea of race, they just, they just illustrated why that's stupid to point out, they're just showing you how irrelevant that figure is, because they're saying that fruit flies are 10 times as different from humans, in fact, they're more different from each, you know, individual fruit flies are more genetically different than.
00:59:59 Human is from a chimpanzee, so by using their logic, then I guess that would mean chimpanzees are fucking people, so they're just they're trying to find, they're trying to find math that will sound good to people who don't know anything about genetics, I
Narrator
01:00:22 We have a long history of searching for racial differences and attributing performance and behavior to them. For 200 years, scientists poked and prodded, measured and mapped the human body, searching for a biological basis to race. Some measured facial angle to illustrate the proximity of races. I love
Devon Stack
01:00:58 that. I love that. Ah, you know, because again, that they didn't quite get it yet, you know, the science was was crude, you know.
01:01:12 What are you supposed to do at this point, right? This is before genetic research existed, or at least, you know, we're in a meaningful way, right? So all you really could do is go off observation, and you know the whole, sorry guys, the whole skull measuring stuff with the frontal lobe and whatnot, like that's that actually turns out it matters, turns out it matters by still have that profile of a Negro European and orangutan
Narrator
01:01:46 to the primitive others calibrated skull size to identify those with superior or inferior intelligence.
Devon Stack
01:02:01 Yeah, actually hate to break this to you. That also is, is real, as you know, as your common sense would probably conclude. Big-brained people are smarter. Who would have thought? Who would have thought that a, a larger, though larger brains would correlate with, with more intelligence, who would have thought so. This is actually, again, this is a well-studied thing, too.
01:02:27 This isn't, this isn't the 1920s you know. Pull up the calipers and measure a skull, although, honestly, I don't see why that's any, the why that would be junk science, right? Like, if you're, if you're accurately recording skull sizes, and you have accurate data that, that you know, the IQ of the people whose skulls you're measuring, and you can, you look at the data and find that the skull, you know, the bigger the skulls, or at least the cavity where the brain goes, the more intelligent the person, if you can find that correlation, maybe it doesn't prove causation, but it kind of confirms some common sense conclusions that, like, yeah, people with bigger brains are probably smarter.
01:03:14 I mean, that makes sense to me, right. And again, this has been studied. This study, in fact, was done before this video was even put out. This was done in 2004 and the correlation, as it says here, is, is there's a, there's a what was it, a point three, yeah, as estimated point three three.
01:03:37 The correlation is higher for females than than males. It is also higher for adults than children. Will that make sense? Because children's skulls are growing, probably at different rates, and so it's like kind of useless to measure their skulls, because you don't know what it's what size it's going to end up at for all age and sex groups. It is clear the brain volume is positively correlated with intelligence.
01:04:01 Well, who would have thought? Gee, who would have thought that? I get, I guess I've got an extra big skull, because I, you know, this didn't come as any kind of surprise for me, but they try to act as if that's junk science, that when people, when white people in the early 20th century were measuring skulls to try to find a correlation between skull size and intelligence, and if that could maybe explain the problems that they were having with black people and immigrants, which is exactly why they were doing this.
01:04:30 All this science, people, you know, it's not like white people one day woke up and they said, 'Yeah, I fucking hate niggers. Let's find scientific reasons to hate niggers and immigrants, can we do that? Hey Bob, can we find some sciency reasons to hate niggers and immigrants? No, that's not the way it worked.
01:04:51 Okay, though, what happened was you had black people released into the general population and they were running amok and causing problems, and you had all these.
01:04:59 Immigrants flooding into the country, a lot of them from Eastern Europe, and you know, also Jewish, causing problems, and you had the white people who are problem solvers looking at this problem and saying to themselves, well, how do we account for this? How do we figure this out? Hey, let's, let's, let's fire up our, the scientific part of our brains, and let's, let's try to, let's try, you know, our big, big skull cavity brains, and let's try to figure this out, which is exactly what they were doing, so they hear this kind of fun, they show these screenshots, racial differences and mental fatigue, presented by Foss, our Garth, I guess, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Texas.
01:05:44 Work curves of whites, Indians, and Negroes being results of a continuous mental performance with a comparison of what was done in the first to last six minutes, and again, this was important too, if you're going to be trying to incorporate all these new people into your society, and you start to find out that black people are lazy, and that Indians are lazy, and you're trying to figure out why is it that, that when you know we were told that these people would just, they'd be able to do everything that white people could do, and they're not.
01:06:19 Let's find out why. That's what's going on here. That's what that, why else have the study? Why else have the study? So that's precisely what white people were doing.
01:06:30 They were trying to figure out, is there, you know, can we put our feet, is there like a physical reason, maybe that black people are lazy, like, is there, is there like a something that accounts for this, I mean, because we need to be able to fix it, because, and that's the other problem, that's the other side of this.
01:06:48 If white people were allowed to come to the conclusion that, yes, actually, there is a biological reason for this, there is a physical reason for this.
01:06:56 Well, then there's, there's not a lot of solutions left on the table, are there, there's not a lot of solutions if you find out that the reason why blacks behave differently and blacks have different aptitude and they have different work ethic and you find out that that's not something that you can fix with with Jewish social engineering, well, then there's a problem, there's a problem, because as it turns out, the whole idea of having blacks live among white people really has nothing to do with any kind of, you know, let's,
01:07:32 let's do them a solid and build them up, has a lot more to do with let's get rid of the white people, and if the white people start to figure this out, that by inviting all these people into their society, that they aren't going to be bringing them up to their level, but instead the white people are being brought down to their level, that their quality of life is going to suffer, and their destiny is going to be taken away from them, they'll, they'll, they'll be upset, and so if they figure out that this is a biological problem, and the only way to solve, solve biological physical problems is physically, is by physically removing these people, and a lot of white people were starting to figure this out.
01:08:13 This is why the eugenics movement was starting up, because you had a lot of white intellectuals that lived in the northern states that may have, in fact, been abolitionists at some point, because they lived in a world of theoretical nonsense, where they didn't actually ever have to come into contact with black people, and so all they ever heard about was like the suffering negro in the South, and so they supported abolition.
01:08:38 Well, all of a sudden, these black people that they freed these slaves that they freed, and they, you know, threw a little party and pat themselves in the back, you know, go white people.
01:08:46 Now those black people, black people live down the street, and they were causing problems, and so they had to fix this. They had to figure this out, and they had to also, once they started to figure this out, albeit in a crude, primitive way, and they started to determine that this was a biological issue.
01:09:06 Well, one of the, one of the solutions, or at least one of the things that you need to address is not diluting your race, like genetically, right? Like already it's a problem because of the, the, the proximity. Already our society is suffering now that we have these blacks and these immigrants coming into our neighborhoods.
01:09:32 Like, the whole quality of life has gone down. The quality of everything really is has kind of gone down, and so the quality of our genes is next. The quality of our blood is next. So, if we can't get rid of these people, which I'm sure a lot of them wanted to do, if that sounds insurmountable.
01:10:00 Then at the very least we need to be able to preserve what we have, right. We have to prevent this lower quality of person from doing more than diluting the social purity of our community, we have to prevent them.
01:10:25 If we can't do that, we need to at least prevent them from diluting the genetic quality of our community, and that's what the eugenics movement wants, which is exactly why Jews fucking hated it,
01:10:38 because that defeats the whole purpose, because the whole reason the Jews wanted the immigrants and the black people here in the first place was precisely so that they would dilute the genetic quality of white people, that was the whole point, that was the whole reason that you know, bring us your trash, that's the whole reason the Jews wrote that poem on the fucking Statue of Liberty that says bring us your trash, specifically asking for the track, you know, the Statue of Liberty doesn't have a poem saying, 'Hey, all the awesome people of the highest performing high IQ people of the world come here and help us have a super society.
01:11:16 This, this, this great shining light on the hill, civilization, kind of a thing.
01:11:22 No, it was bring us your trash, because we already had an excellent population here, and then we something has to be done about it. So, of course they, they wave the, the boogeyman, the boogeyman of eugenics in the faces of the, the audience. Oh, this is bad, you know.
01:11:54 You've already been pre-programmed to hate, just, you know, if you hear, hear eugenics, it's that's like, it's like hearing Hitler. So, let's, you know, who believes in race? Eugenesis, yeah, and Hitler. We'll get to him in a second, I'm sure. But eugenicists, oh yeah, they believed in race, those fucking psychos
Narrator
01:12:25 measures of eye shape, hair form, even brain color were scrutinized in the hunt for the fundamental sources of racial difference.
Devon Stack
01:12:39 Right, they were, they were looking, they were trying to figure out what's causing this. Why are black people like this? Maybe if we can find the thing that causes them to be like this, we can find the cure. We'll finally find the cure for niggerness. I got the Negro vaccine.
Evelynn Hammonds - Historian of Science
01:13:01 We just take African Americans as an example, there's not a single body part that hasn't been subjected to this kind of analysis. You'll find articles in the medical literature about the Negro ear and the Negro nose and the Negro leg and the Negro heart and the Negro eye and the Negro foot, and it's every single body part,
Devon Stack
01:13:22 yeah. Because we, again, it wasn't. This is what's absurd to me, because we had autistic white people on the case. They were trying to figure it out. We got to figure out this Negro problem. Who knows, maybe it has something to do with the ankles. Well, I don't know.
01:13:42 We won't know till we check, you know. We're gonna have to look at the every little difference. We got to figure this out, because this Negro problem is getting out of hand.
Narrator
01:13:58 At the turn of the 20th century, American society was riding a wave of confidence as an emerging industrial power, and the face of its power and prosperity was white.
Devon Stack
01:14:14 Yes, again, because white people are fucking awesome. White people built this, this, but, but you know, talking about 1920 America wasn't even 200 years old yet, and it was like a superpower.
01:14:29 You've got these civilizations in Africa that have just been languishing in, in primitive nonsense for eons. I mean, if we're to believe the out of Africa theory that I'm sure the people who made this believe, then like the most ancient civilizations in Africa have produced nothing, and so when you get apparently, if white people are some kind of genetic anomaly.
01:15:01 You get this genetic anomaly, these people that can just show up somewhere, they can just show up somewhere where there's zero meaningful civilization, and to the degree that there is civilization, it's hostile and primitive and actively trying to kill them, and they're still able when their home base is across the Atlantic Ocean, you know.
01:15:33 Speaking of Africans, right? So this week we, you had the, the Caribbean, African countries, or like Haiti, and I don't know, some other countries demanding an apology for the transatlantic slave trade, and it's like, nigger, you wouldn't, Haiti wouldn't exist if it wasn't for the transatlantic slave trade, because the only way you could get there was on white people boats, white people are the only ones that were creating boats and sailing across the fucking ocean, we had this god-like technology compared to the primitive brown people that lived in the Americas, and certainly the primitive black people, who unfortunately we brought along for the ride, but here you have this genetic anomaly, these white people that came from Europe, and within 200 years they have one of the most powerful civilizations that has ever existed ever, and you don't think that has anything to do with genetics.
01:16:53 You don't think that has anything to do with the people that the civilization was a product of, and you don't think that the white people might also kind of get this, the people that themselves had created that civilization, you don't think that crossed their mind, they're like, holy shit, we're bad ass, we have created this unprecedented level of success and prosperity in record time, and now we're getting immigrants and fucking niggers moving into the neighborhood, and things are not exactly working out.
01:17:44 Things are kind of going in a different trajectory now. You don't think that intelligent white people might think to themselves, maybe this is a problem, because I like the way I like where things are going now. I like how things have unfolded so far. Not perfect, right? It's been a little bloody and weird, and whatever, it always is, but things have, I mean, compared, compared to everywhere else, this is not so bad.
01:18:25 We've done a good job here, and now we got all these fucking Eastern European Jews moving in, and all these fucking spaghetti niggs, and, and just nig niggs, and taco niggs. It's like, come on, we got to think about this. We got to think about this. I don't see them creating these civilizations, maybe adding different.
01:18:58 Yeah, we've been baking this cake for 200 years, we've been baking this cake, and it's turned out great every time. It's Mom's mom's famous recipe for birthday cake, and every birthday we bake the mom's famous, you know, it's a recipe we've been handing down for generations, and it's kind of nice.
01:19:16 Maybe we shouldn't just pour like a cup of fettuccine into the birthday cake mix, maybe that's a bad idea, maybe not. I don't know, maybe it'll, maybe it's better, but do we really want to find out? Do we really want to put like Kool-Aid soaked watermelon into the birthday cake? I mean, that might fuck it up, might ruin the, might ruin the cake, do so white people start thinking, all right, we got to maybe regulate the, the racial contacts, what's the right makeup, I guess, of.
01:19:59 The of the country, this is something we should be regulating, because things.. this is.. this is not going to be good. This is not going to.. they knew it, they knew it then, they knew it then, not everyone, but a lot of them knew it then. They knew that this was not going to end well. We let in all these..
01:20:16 we let black people just into our societies, we let these Eastern European Jews into our societies, we let all these people, you know, coming through Ellis Island, that kind of suck. It's not going to be great like this. This fun ride we've been on is is not gonna be great. This fun movie we've been watching is not going to be as fun to watch with Shaniqua in the back row, fucking talking her head off, so maybe we just keep it the way things were. That seems to be working out good.
Narrator
01:20:53 African Americans lived under the yoke of Jim Crow segregation. Most surviving Native Americans had been banished to reservations, and new immigrants crowded into urban ghettos. Disease was rampant, death rates soared, infant mortality was high. To many, this reflected a preordained natural order.
Devon Stack
01:21:21 No, you mean like, so they looked at the results, they looked at how these people lived, and they thought, yeah, this is not, that's not a, that's not how we want to live, we don't like this, we don't like this, you see, like, we came here, and it was like, literally just like a forest, and we created the city,
01:21:40 these fuckers show up, the city is already here, and they, they're turning it into like ghettos and shit holes, like they've somehow made it worse, like they were on easy mode, and they're fucking losing, you know, our ancestors were playing on hard mode, they were, they were, you know, dodging arrows and spears and shit, and wrestling buffalo to the ground with their bare hands, and they managed to make things nice.
01:22:11 You guys show up, you can't even keep your fucking ghetto clean, and not full of like rape and murder and whatnot, so yeah, maybe that's a problem. I'll look at that bathroom, never in the, in the history of the imagine the smell meme has, has the the imagination been so tickled. Imagine the smell of that. The
Alan Goodman - Biological Anthropologist
01:22:43 biology becomes an excuse for social differences. The social differences become naturalized in biology. It's not that our institutions cause differences in infant mortality, it's that there really are biological differences between the races
AI Singer
01:23:03 that sounds really Jewish, that sounds really Jewish, that sounds really Jewish.
Devon Stack
01:23:11 So, this fucking Jew, of course, it's not because of the actual people were different. In fact, what he's implying, because what does he mean when he says institutions, what do you mean when you say that the instant at that time, what does he mean when he says the institutions were causing all the problems, the white people, that's what he's saying, so not only is it not the fault that the black people who are coming into the cities that you know they're not having to build anything on their own.
01:23:44 The city's already built, they come in there and just destroy them, create ghettos, much like many of these immigrants coming across the Atlantic, but not only is it none of their behavior, and the results of their behavior. Not only is none of that their fault, and none of that is tied to their biology, it's actually the white people doing it. The white people are the people who created the civilization, the civil or civilization that drew all these people like flies to shit.
01:24:27 Those are the people that are to blame. So, nothing's changed, obviously. Then they shit on this guy. This is Frederick L. Hoffman. And before you ask, no, he's not Jewish, he's just German. He's one of the German Hoffmans. I looked, and he wrote a book called Race, Traits, and Tendencies of the American Negro, released this in 1896 and look. He would, he, it wasn't like he was, he was the OG 13 does 50, he was the OG 13 does 50,
01:25:12 he was one of the first ones to go and gather data on criminality and health, and just he worked for an insurance company, I think they'll say, which I forget which one, but they'll say here in a second, but he worked for an insurance company, and the insurance company, you know, insurance companies gather statistics on all kinds of things, because they, that's how they determine what people will have to pay as a premium, you know, just like, just like a casino, they know exactly how rigged every game is, so that they can determine how to keep people coming to play the game, and even if people win, you know, every once in a while, at the end of the day, the house wins, you know, that's how they program slot machines, right? Like, even if this slot machine pays out five or 10 or even $20,000 every so often, we can rig it so that in the long run the casino is still making tons of money, right.
01:26:20 Well, that's how insurance companies operate, too. Insurance companies say, like, yeah, you know, it will sure we'll have to pay out this guy when his car wrecks, or when he dies, or, you know, whatever the insurance is, his house burns down. But we have to do the math and find out what at what rate our house is burning down.
01:26:40 Are there any correlations, are there is there anything that makes it more likely that your house will burn down, which, by the way, might include race, right? Do black people's houses burn down more often? If so, we got to do the math and include that in the premium. We have to roll that into the premise, and when we insure a black person's home, we know that the likelihood of it burning down and goes up by a factor of whatever, right.
01:27:04 So that's all he was doing, is he was writing this book in that role for the insurance company to determine how they would do the math to sell policies to black people, really, and so it was very important that his data was accurate, you know.
01:27:28 This wasn't like just some like evil racist that wanted to say, you know, you know, like, oh, black people commit more crime, no, like he, he needed accurate numbers.
01:27:38 If you're, he's in the money making business, if he's going to make more money on black people because they, they, their houses burn down less frequently, then he's going to want to know that, right? So he can, it's just data, really. And now he does editorial, editorialize a little bit, but the book is mostly just data, and they have a problem with it.
Narrator
01:28:03 For Prudential Life Insurance statistician Frederick Hoffman, those differences could lead to only one fate for African Americans. In vital capacity, he wrote, the tendency of the Negro race has been downward. This tendency must lead to a still greater mortality, and in the end cause the extinction of the race.
Devon Stack
01:28:32 You know, what's funny is that's exactly what would have happened if we didn't give them welfare, like they try to make it. Oh, look at this guy, he's so dumb, because he predicted that blacks would go extinct, and we know they didn't go extinct. Thank God, right? That would have been, that would have been a tragedy, that would have been.. oh, that's not a future I'd want to live in.
01:28:57 Oh God, thank God, he was wrong about that.
01:29:00 It's because all he's saying is that current trends, if, if the blacks, now that they've been freed from slavery, this is basically what he was observing, because again, this, it was statistics, he was plotting trends, he was gathering data and plotting trends, and the trends that he saw said that if this, if it continues in this direction, that basically ever since blacks were released from captivity they have been underperforming on basically every level, and they're, they're, they're, this is, this is causing them to live shorter lives, and they're less healthy for a number of reasons, because they build shittier houses, they build shittier houses, and so they, they don't have the same insulation that a white person would have in the winter, as an example, so he might get.
01:30:00 More often he's he's going to have more, more likelihood that there's going to be a drug or alcohol problem. You're going to have fathers that leave the homes, so you're gonna have less people there to to be parents for the children. You're going to have more instances of rape and murder, like it's just like black behavior isn't worse now.
01:30:25 There's, there's, for some reason, and I think it's because in the 80s and 90s the Jews did such a good job of making it seem like every every black person you were going to meet was going to be like Axel Foley, right, where he's just he's just like a white guy, but cooler and funny, and it's, it's Beverly Hills Cop reference,
01:30:44 for those you guys don't know, Eddie Murphy, but that's, that's what they, that they convinced people that, that's what it was going to be like, they convinced that that's, that's your, you know, your base black friend is going to be like this cool funny guy, and you know, sure, he's from the ghetto, and maybe he's a little rough around the edges, but he's gonna, you know, but you're kind of a square if you think about it, and maybe you know he can learn something from you a little bit, but not as much as you can learn from him, and you know,
01:31:14 like the endless movies about some white lady that goes to the ghetto to teach ghetto children to teach them how to be white, but at the end of the movie, you find out that she's the one that was learning the whole time, and that was what people thought, that's what people thought, and basically what we're experiencing now is just a hangover from that, just the hangover from that, that, by the way, is ironically amplified by the same internet that the whole cancel culture thing was amplified by right, just like cancel culture, that stuff was still happening.
01:31:46 It's just that it didn't get amplified the internet, and people didn't hear about it as much. Same thing goes for black behavior. Blacks were just as much of a menace in the 1980s and 90s and 1880s and 90s as they are today, that we just didn't have body cam footage of everything that they did being shared instantly out to the internet.
01:32:09 In fact, in some ways they were worse.
01:32:11 I mean, you look up some of these black serial killers and what they got away with, and why they got away with it for so long, is that there weren't there wasn't as much surveillance to catch them doing this shit, so the same exact behavior that you see on these body cams was going on in in the 1890s when this guy's collecting his data, and this is before the welfare state, and if left to their own devices, which they should have been blacks trying to coexist in a white society very well could have gone extinct, because they are as a group incapable of producing more than they take in.
01:33:05 We know this.
01:33:06 We know at the end of the life of any African in the United States, on average, they are a.. they create a tax deficit of something like $200,000 I forget the number, I don't have the meme handy, but you guys have all probably seen it, and so they are using more resources than they provide for, and in a sane world that would necessarily mean a spiral into extinction, and that's what he's predicting, and that's why he's predicting it.
Narrator
01:33:48 Hoffman's Race Traits and Tendencies of the American Negro was published in 1896 the same year the Supreme Court legalized segregation. It was one of the most influential publications of its day,
Devon Stack
01:34:04 back when the Supreme Court was based enough to legalize segregation, maybe again, maybe again someday. Although I think it's going to require some force, it's going to require some force, but again, he was the original 13 does 50. You look at his book, and it's just statistics again, a little ease editorializing and coming to some conclusions, because that's his job. His job is to not just collate and and put together these statistics, but to try to come to some conclusions based on those statistics.
01:34:35 But that's all he was doing. But what an what an evil fuck, right? What an evil fuck, for like accurately discovering that the, the black mortality rate was, was much higher, and that there was a lot of reasons for that, which, that Jews, of course, when faced with. In the face of this data, this unimpeachable data, they had to figure out another reason, and of course that reason was white people.
01:35:13 You know, it wasn't the biology, ironically, it's not the biology of the black people that is responsible for their plight. Now it's the responsibility, it's the biology of the white people, quite frankly.
Narrator
01:35:25 But his data analysis was flawed. He ignored the insidious effects of poverty and social neglect on health.
Devon Stack
01:35:34 Ah, there's all socioeconomic reasons, but the thing is, his data, it wasn't flawed, even if what she was saying was true. The conclusions might have been flawed, if that, you know, what if it's not true.
01:35:49 What she's saying, obviously, we all know the socioeconomic reason or argument is fucking retarded Marxist bullshit, but even if that was true, the data wasn't flawed, I Lod, so anyway, they go back to the kids, you know, because they now they've, they've explained to you that race doesn't really exist, and white people are able.
01:36:13 Here we're gonna talk to the Jewish kid. What does the Jewish kid think about white people?
Narrator
01:36:20 20-eight states passed laws forbidding intermarriage.
Devon Stack
01:36:23 Oh, I guess we're not there yet. The Jewish kid does. Sorry, spoiler alert, they're talking the Jewish kid. Let's, let's hear what she has to say about the, but the 28 states, by the way, 28 states had laws against race mixing.
01:36:39 That's so fucking awesome, that should give you a well, I was going to say that should give you hope, but that was only possible in an environment where these 28 states were probably like, in terms of their ruling class, essentially, if not 100% white, really fucking close to that.
Narrator
01:37:00 28 states passed laws forbidding intermarriage to safeguard white racial purity. Racial purification was one aim of the eugenics movement. The science of eugenics rested on simple Mendelian genetics, one gene each from father and mother, it was believed, gave rise to any trait, physical, behavioral, even moral.
Devon Stack
01:37:29 Okay, so again, they didn't have the cape, the scientific or technological capabilities that we have today. It doesn't, it doesn't change the fact that yes, all those traits you mentioned are heritable. Maybe it's a little more complicated than what they thought it was, but the basic idea was there, obviously, obviously. you should care about this kind of a thing when it comes to a civilization that's exceptional.
01:38:11 When you look around the world and realize that what you created is is somewhat unique in its prosperity, and its safety, and its strength and its ingenuity and its productivity and America was, you should want to preserve that, you'd be crazy not to, you Yeah, so that's exactly what they tried to do.
01:38:47 That's what these eugenicists were trying to do. They were trying to preserve the racial makeup of this country, so they could continue on the path that that was at the time seemed that seemed like our destiny, and it wasn't just by the way, it wasn't just focused on on blacks, you know, they weren't just like, like let's sterilize all the black people, although they certainly wanted to sterilize, if not all, most of the black people, because most of them would fall under the threshold that you'd want to, I mean, there's just some people you don't want reproducing.
01:39:32 Sorry, but it should not be a genetic free for all, that's called the law of the jungle. So don't be surprised if you find yourself living in a fucking jungle, if that's the law that you subscribe to when it comes to reproduction. Do you want to live in a strong, healthy society? You have to do things that are going to preserve it. Preventative maintenance, you might say. My dad was an engineer for a long time.
01:40:12 He worked in the field of preventative maintenance. Sounds really boring, because it kind of is. To kind of, to quickly summarize it. He worked for a, a large goy slop manufacturer, and they would have these.. we'll just.. I'll just make up something. So, let's say he works at a Cheerio factory.
01:40:38 He works at a Cheerio factory that that cranks out Cheerios all day, and in the Cheerio factory they've got these massive machines that cost hundreds of 1000s of dollars that are very specialized and very complicated, and they have to be fairly exact in their tolerances, and they have to obviously pass inspections for all the regulations when you're making food and stuff like that.
01:41:05 Also, if you're making Cheerios, you've got a brand that you need to protect, you can't be just.. you gotta.. there's a.. there's a level of quality your customers have come to expect, so that you have to keep that machine working perfectly, so that you can have a an identical product being constantly produced.
01:41:25 The other side of that is, if you are a company like this, you, the way you're figuring out your profits is you have to have a predictable rate of production, and so a smaller company might buy a piece of machinery and just run it, just like a poor person might drive their car until it, until it breaks, and then they fix it, but if you have the money, because you know the inconvenience, and if you're a company like this, the cost involved in that inconvenience, you, you tend to want to address these predictable situations before they happen.
01:42:07 So, my dad, what his job was as an engineer, was to go around looking at these machines and trying to find out what was going to fail before it failed, so they could replace that part, and so that they wouldn't, there would never be any downtime, they could just be seem they could be cranking out fucking Cheerios 24/7 no problem, because if they did have a machine go down, you could be losing millions of dollars, the longer it goes down, like you're paying all these people to stand around, you're you're losing product creates this whole big problem.
01:42:46 Well, societies like this, especially complex civilizations like the one that we live in, are no different.
01:42:53 There's a lot of moving parts, and if you want to have that society work efficiently and humming smoothly. Then you have to proactively look and inspect this machine. You have to look for the weak spots.
01:43:17 You have to predict what's going to fail before it fails, because if you wait for it to fail and then try to fix it, you, you create all these other problems, like the poor person that has to wait to fix their car when it breaks, they don't, you know, they maybe they, there's things that maybe they should be doing, like change the oil and stuff like that, that they're not doing, and so they ignore it because they don't think they can afford it.
01:43:49 Usually, it's a, it's more of a question of priorities, right? They can afford to go out drinking and spend 200 bucks at the bar, they couldn't, but for some reason they couldn't afford the $70 oil change, or whatever, right.
01:44:00 Well, then what happens, right? Like, when their car finally breaks down because they didn't perform the preventative maintenance well, what happens is, well, now they can't get to work because their car is broken, and then they have to hitch a ride. If they can't hitch a ride, then maybe they lose their job.
01:44:18 Now they're never going to fix the fucking car, and that's the problem with these civilizations too, is if you start treating your civilization like you don't have the ability to to do the preventative maintenance, like you start just running it like a, like a fucking nigger driving his car into the fucking ground, it's it's gonna break, it's gonna break, and in a way that's going to set back your civilization, possibly permanently. So, these are the high-functioning white people that knew this, that understood this about our society, and said, "Okay, we need to identify where this is going to go bad, do. And we need to, we need to prevent it from, from happening, and one of the ways that you do that is you prevent 60 IQ niggers from having babies, because while it might seem cruel today, you're saving a lot of white lives when you do that,
Narrator
01:45:22 you gen eugenicists use the science of the day to advance a social agenda widely accepted in white America to breed the best and the brightest, always white, and breed out society's worst and weakest.
AI Singer
01:45:42 What the hell happened? Oh yeah, I forgot.
Devon Stack
01:45:57 That's right, fucking Jews, fucking Jews. So we had people that thought about these things, and that were actively doing things. In fact, we were sterilizing people, black people specifically, low IQ black people specifically, up until like the the 80s. I want to say, like the early 80s.
01:46:20 I don't know exactly when it was 100% the practice was 100% stop, but they at least until the early 80s we were still obviously they didn't do it, they didn't do a good enough job, but they were trying, there were people actively trying, and these are unfortunately these are the kinds of people that conservative Christians will demonize it. Is it wasn't? Look, it wasn't the leftists that were there.
01:46:48 I mean, now I would say every leftist would be against eugenics for sure, right? But I learned to hate eugenic eugenicists when I was a kid, listening to right-wing commentators using religious arguments and calling them evil doers, because those people that they were sterilizing, they were all God's children.
Evelynn Hammonds - Historian of Science
01:47:14 You don't want a superior race, a race with great qualities of intellect and achievement, a musical genius, and these kinds of things to mix with a race on a lower stage of civilization that has fewer of these characteristics, because that again would bring down the level of those characteristics and what you want to have for your civilization.
Clip
01:47:37 Couldn't have said it better myself.
Devon Stack
01:47:40 I mean, exactly. Do you fucking hear yourself? I mean, for fuck's sake, that yes, there is like your tone is suggesting this is a crazy thing to think, your tone is suggesting that I should be outraged that my ancestors would have, would think such a thing.
Evelynn Hammonds - Historian of Science
01:48:17 You don't want a superior race, a race with great qualities of intellect and achievement, a musical genius, and these kinds of things to mix with a race on a lower stage of civilization that has fewer of these characteristics, because that again would bring down the level of those characteristics and what you want to have for your civilization.
Clip
01:48:40 Couldn't have said it better myself.
Devon Stack
01:48:43 I mean, it's, it's shocking. It's shocking that, that, how can you even have those words come out of your mouth and feel like you're on some kind of weird moral high ground. The answer, of course, is is her racial narcissism, as blacks all suffer from like this delusion of grandeur that they have. Is it that that's that has to, that's insane. Don't they know black people built this country? That's insane. Oh.
01:49:23 Oh, those stupid whites, thinking they were superior, but in a weird way, she's kind of admitting that there's nothing wrong with the logic. She's, she's disagreeing on the grounds of the facts, right? She's, she's disagree, she's, she disagrees with, for example, that this is like a superior race that's higher up on the civilizational ladder. I don't know how you would disagree with that, but that's that's what she's disagreeing with, right? Not, not that there's anything wrong with the logical conclusion, in fact.
01:50:00 She's almost saying that if you believe this, then this is the logical conclusion you have to come to, and she's right, that is the logical conclusion you have to come to, because that is the logical conclusion that anyone would come to. It's the logical conclusion that anyone in animal husbandry comes to every time that they make decisions on on on when where they're going to buy their fucking bull sperm? Like, this is not, this isn't like high-tech shit.
01:50:35 This is something that we've understood as a people since we started domesticating dogs 50,000 fucking years ago, so they talk about how you know, the, you know, obviously, again, these were proposals that they were making. First, you know, segregation - I'm for that, you know, their screenshot cuts off most of this, but we can see three, you know, three big ones: segregation, sterilization, restrictive marriage.
01:51:16 Love it, love it. Where do we sign up? I want segregation. I want sterilization, which is that's the, by the way, that's the humane option. I'd rather have total removal. Maybe we can strike some kind of compromise, right? Maybe we can work out some sort of deal, where okay, if you don't want to move to Liberia, or whatever project that we've, we figure out how to, you know, where to settle you somewhere.
01:51:54 Well, maybe we buy some land from some African country, or just fucking take them over, drop a bomb on them, whatever, who cares, something we're America, we can make arrangements for you to be somewhere that's not, that is not a big ask. Okay, we bought Alaska for like, you know, like $100,000 or something like that, right? We, we're good at this.
01:52:19 We got, we got Manhattan for a box of beads, we'll figure something out, all right. We'll figure something out, but if all right, you want to make the argument that, like, ah, but my family has been here since the slave days, all right. Fine. Well, if you don't want to go to the Wakanda Ville, or whatever, the fuck will we decide to create for you sterilization, restrictive marriage.
01:52:50 Again, it's not just about preventing the other races or like the lower quality people among your race, it's not just about preventing them from spreading their seed, it's also about restricting your, your valuable white woman wombs, preventing them from damaging their, their genetic capabilities, so look, they look, they had problems, and they figured out some solutions.
01:53:25 They wrote up a proposal, and this was, this was not an unpopular trend. This was not, it was a trend that was picking up a lot of steam, in fact, not just in America, you might say to
Narrator
01:53:42 keep America's mongrels at bay. Eugenicists proposed a series of restrictive measures unthinkable today, yet they were adopted within and outside of America. Taken to their extreme, they fueled one of the century's greatest horrors,
Joseph Graves Jr. - Evolutionary Biologist
01:54:01 the Nazi propaganda machine pointed out that their eugenic policies were entirely consistent and in fact derived from ideas of American race scientists.
AI Singer
01:54:14 Fuck yeah, all those good ideas that Hitler had came from here. America should have been awesome, but then we fought at you.
Devon Stack
01:54:29 That's right. Hitler stole all our good ideas, which is kind of true. That's what inspired a lot of Hitler's policies, because Hitler was a smart guy, and was like, wait a second, these are good ideas, which is why, by the way, none of these ideas were allowed to be implemented.
01:54:48 This is why all this stuff got tossed in the fucking toilet, because part of the war propaganda against Hitler that was pumped into the minds of Americans was. Is that his idea of wanting to have racial purity was an evil one, and that's that residue is still there, so every time you hear someone say something about eugenicists, or saying that's eugenics in response to a, a reasonable solution to one of our many problems.
01:55:30 It just, just ignored it, just like you would if they called you Hitler, because it's this, it's literally the exact same mind fucking retard poison that is afflicting them, so then, of course, they do that, like it's like it's like it's so cliche, they're like, and Hitler wasn't even right, Hitler's eugenicist plan was stupid, and you know what proves that, Jesse Owens, because he could run fast, which, by the way, isn't that funny, earlier in the show, black people don't run faster, then we get to Hitler. Black people run faster.
Narrator
01:56:06 At the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, Hitler's Aryan race was to have confirmed its place at the top of nature's hierarchy, but the star of the games would shatter those expectations.
Devon Stack
01:56:26 But wait a second, I thought black people didn't run faster, right? I thought this was this whole, this whole thing about that being a genetic thing. The AC TN three gene doesn't exist.
01:56:38 I thought that was all bullshit, but now all of a sudden it's not, now the sudden, oh no, it's real, because Hitler, and all we have to do to make you shut off the rational part of your brain is just, we'll just say Hitler, Hitler bad, Hitler bad,
Narrator
01:56:56 in the words of American team coach Dean Cromwell, the Negro athlete excelled because he was closer to the primitive. It was not so long ago that his ability to sprint and jump was a life and death matter to him in the jungle.
Devon Stack
01:57:11 Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Yes, maybe not exactly that, but yeah, you have the right idea. Exactly, yeah, you because that that AC TN three gene is heritable and natural selection made sure that it, that gene was was propagated because the people that could run away faster from the rhinoceros, they were gonna have more kids because they weren't impaled by a fucking rhinoceros horn.
01:57:48 Be a little reductive here, but that's the basic idea. So they try to make a big deal out of it. They try to, oh, this whole thing, how could they all these eugenicists were wrong because Jesse Owens runs fast, that's their argument. Jesse Owens could run fast, then they go to Noah the Jew. This is Noah the Jew, then Noah the Jew, throws in some sound bite about his privilege.
Jewish Student
01:58:27 Would I trade my skin color? I probably wouldn't trade my skin color. It's something that I've taken for granted. It's also a privilege, I guess. I think 13 is closer. Wow, there's no profit in denying it, that um, that there is a certain advantage to being white.
Devon Stack
01:58:56 I like that Jewish term. There's no profit in denying that. If there was, I would deny it, because you know how we like prophets, Jews, by the way. Also, not definitely not a genetic behavior there. That's that's definitely not heritable. Our obsession with profit, prophets of both kinds, actually.
01:59:19 So they throw in this line about white privilege that just seems like a left field, but they, you know, no other Jew was happy to oblige.
01:59:28 And then they talk about, oh yeah, we're only like the people that they have darker skin, because look, it's a, it's look, it's hot suns out more often, you know, vitamin D, melanin, bladder, you know, like the stuff that's like, yeah, no one's fucking disputing that, right? We're not saying that, like, being stupid makes you black, kind of the other way around, but you know, like, you know what I mean, like that, no one's saying that, that we don't, we don't recognize the the environmental factors that per.
02:00:00 It was black skin, okay. That's that's no one's. We get it, yeah. They were in sunnier parts of the world, that's why they were black. But you know what, I'm more interested in another map. This map, which happens to look a lot like your map in some ways, in terms of hot spots, you see the same areas where, like, everyone's darker, they're also dumber, you know, they're just.. they're just that, almost..
02:00:33 it's almost an exact correlation, in fact, you know, it's almost as if the darker you get, the dumber you get, I mean, kind of, I mean, look at that, you got, you have sub 65 IQ averages in Africa, sub 65 Coco, with a gorilla, I think, had an IQ of 60 or 65 or something like that. We got Coco Gorilla levels of retard in Africa. We got the subcontinent of India clocking in somewhere above 80, barely, and that's who's that's who we're bringing in in mass quantities, that's great, we got, we got Mexico barely, barely hanging on to like the high 80s with Central America, just being a fucking 80 IQ shit show. So, yeah, actually, there is a correlation.
02:01:53 There is a correlation between dark skin and IQ. Now, the dark skin is not causing the low IQ, but there's enough of a correlation where you can predict with a reasonable amount of accuracy at least an IQ range based on skin color, as it turns out, generally speaking, then they do this is kind of hilarious. I don't even know what that, where they were there, where they were going with this, because again, this just disproves more of what their argument they make, the the argument that because basketball teams used to have a lot of Jews hard, I found this hard to believe. Turns out I guess it was true. Basketball used to be Jews.
02:02:55 This is literally called the this team was the Cleveland Rosen Blums in the 1930s I mean, can you imagine? Can you imagine? I don't even like watching these roided up negroes play fucking basketball. I can't imagine, well, maybe actually watching Jews try to play basketball might be even more entertaining, I but then they say, "Oh, well, guess what? Basketball used to be all Jews. Look at this one, that was their team logo. Basketball used to be all Jews, and now it's not Jews anymore. No, no, it's Niggs.
Narrator
02:03:46 By 1992 America's Olympic dream team was almost completely African American.
Devon Stack
02:03:55 Yeah, because they started letting blacks plates. That should tell you that the Jews, of all people, for them to get pushed out of an industry that's, that's quite the accomplishment, niggs, but that's because Niggs are way more physically able to play basketball than fucking Jews, of all people. So, the Jewish game of basketball, I guess, was taken over by Nick's because of genetics, because race is real.
02:04:28 You, they just said, and then I guess they had some, like a moment in a moment of self-reflection or awareness, rather, in order to address this like obvious thing that would pop in everyone's head, like, well, hold on, you just, you're just admitting that blacks dominate the sport now, which again flies in the face of everything you were saying earlier. They're like, but whoa, look, look, Yao Ming, he's big, look, there's a big ass Chinaman, let's focus on the freakishly tall.
02:05:01 Like crazy outlier, that Yao Ming is the guy who's got, like, I think a genetic disease, them, that's why he's so fucking big. Let's focus on this guy. Look, a fucking Chinaman, that's not small. See, races don't exist because Yao Ming is tall, he
Alan Goodman - Biological Anthropologist
02:05:23 For race to be more than skin deep, one has to have concordance. In other words, skin color needs to reflect things that are deeper in the body under the skin, but most of human variation is non-concordant skin color or eye color or hair color is not correlated with height or weight, and they're definitely not correlated with more complex traits like intelligence or athletic performance.
Devon Stack
02:05:58 Actually, skin color is correlated with intelligence, and that's because skin color is correlated with race, and then race. See, this is why we have race. Race is correlated with intelligence.
02:06:15 This is very well studied. This is why we have this information here, that the vast majority of blacks in the United States have an IQ of around 8080 maybe, maybe slightly above 80. This is why we had to lower what the definition of retarded meant in this country, because if we didn't, the majority of blacks would be considered retarded, and that would unduly tax these special education systems in America.
02:06:48 So, rather than do that, they just lowered the standard and made your white kids go to school with literal retards, because while skin color isn't correlate with intelligence necessarily in a roundabout way, it is skin color correlates with race, which also correlates with intelligence. That's why we have these categories, and also, by the way, while you have to make it sound like we don't, because once you have these categories like race, you're able to do exactly that rational thought process I just did.
02:07:35 If you're unable to determine who is a who is considered a black person, and everyone's just an individual, you can't have graphs like this, which is exactly what the purpose of this video is. And then, of course, they do like the.. oh my god. Well, we just got.. remember getting there.. oh, we're gonna do this DNA test, and you're going to find out we're not so different, you and I, right?
02:08:04 We're going to find out that, uh, that we're going to do this very limited in scope genetic test that looks like this, this very tiny, tiny part of the, the genome that we expect will have the most similarities between unrelated people, so that we can make the political point to our students with their soft little minds that, oh yeah, you know what, who you're most related to genetically, which isn't true, but like if you just focus in, you zoom in on this one tiny part of the genome, this black girl, that's right, white, you know, white kid, you're actually most related out of everyone that class, you're most related to
AI Singer
02:08:50 Shaniqua. The
Narrator
02:08:51 student's mtDNA appears as the letters A, C, T, and G, representing the four nucleotides that define our DNA. The students are sampling a small sequence about 350 letters long.
02:09:07 They find that most of it is identical one to the other. What is not is highlighted in yellow differences with everybody,
Black Student Lady
02:09:20 because I'm different. I'm really different.
Devon Stack
02:09:24 I agree, this is bullshit. Even the dumb negress figured it out. Even, even the dumb negress smells, smells a rat. She's like, oh my god, this is impossible, and it's true, they focused in on this, this tiny part of the, the, the genes that would have predictable levels of similarities, so they could brainwash their students into believing. That that actually we're all the same, so like I said, it goes on from there.
02:10:06 I might revisit it later, but this was, I mean, there's like three fucking hours of this, and and after this was about 45 minutes into it, and I just was like, all right, you know, good enough, good enough, like we get, we get the idea. You're, you're wildly dishonest, but you know, I'll, this some of this stuff took..
02:10:27 I've gotten into arguments with leftists that will will say these things, they will say I've gotten arguments of black people that have regurgitated these exact talking points, and even today, even today, I saw on my Twitter timeline a clip from Lucas Gage in his, like, weird apology tour that he's doing right now.
02:10:59 He was in an interview with Jeremy Boring, Lucas Gage, former anti-Semite, said that white people don't exist, or at least didn't challenge Jeremy Boring when he asserted that he agreed, he said yes, he nodded his head and said yes, or said right, or whatever that is, that, and by the way, in fact, and I retweeted a pastor who said exactly that today on Twitter. What was his exact words? He said it was like one of the first things I saw when I woke up this morning. Well, this afternoon, my sleep schedule is all fucking retarded right now.
02:11:52 Some guy named Owen Strachan, who's got twice the followers I got, or almost twice, he's a theologian and director of One Gospel Ministries, they tweeted out, friendly reminder that the concept of race is as imaginary as the tooth fairy. This whole "we're all God's children" shit has to go.
02:12:27 We have to go back and revisit the wisdom of our ancestors that attempted to put a stop to the madness to the Jew nigger mutt world that we're living in today, and again, if we can't fix the demographics, at the least, at the very least, it's incumbent on us to at least, at the bare minimum, preserve the genetics, and that's the, I think, the takeaway tonight. All right, let's take a look at Hyper Chats over on Odyssey, which was acting like a bitch. I had to start the stream multiple times for it to start working.
02:13:16 Hopefully, it's still working. We got as, as always, we got love and division,
Clip
02:13:25 white power,
Devon Stack
02:13:40 all right. We got Love and Division. Says good show, Devon. I was looking through some old Sandia Corporation lab newspapers from 1965 and came across an editorial from the National, or from, yeah, from the National Conference of Christians and Jews. It equates racism to having a disease.
02:14:01 It also mentions 6 million Jews killed in World War Two. Now that I'll maybe look that up. Why would Sandy Labs be talking, have like a conference of Christians and Jews? That seems very unscientific, actually. But I'm gonna, I'm gonna copy that notes, that might be interesting.
02:14:23 Sandy Labs, growing up, I had a lot of friends whose parents worked at Sandia Labs. All right. Well, thank you very much. There, love and division, all right. Let's go over to Rumble. Over on Rumble, we got Lewis Beam Me Up. Uh, message was removed, so I don't know what you said.
02:14:54 Then we got Professor Chaos says, check out the stream later, keep up the. Good work. Appreciate that. Gorilla Hand says, what do you think about the fat cunt laughing at the British girls being groomed and raped in the report? The pit would be too good for her.
02:15:15 Yeah, I mean, I saw the clip, and I know there are some that are saying, well, you know, she's, she's not laughing at the girls being raped, she's laughing at the report, and it's just like it's still inappropriated. She's, and she's definitely laughing as a way, as a means to minimize the seriousness of the report.
02:15:34 She's obviously not, she's far from bothered by the contents of the report, in terms of of the rape contents, and more, more concerned about not being included.
02:15:47 It sounded like she was complaining because she wanted to be part of, like, the group doing the report, and was trying to laugh at, like, some way they decided to have the data, and it's like, yeah, it's just a Jewish behavior, Jewish behavior, trying to minimize the effects of the, the Pandora's box that they have opened, and just generally because they don't care, and yeah, she should be deported to Israel, and that, that, that's the, that's the compassionate solution to that problem.
02:16:26 Rupert V 21 says, "Replay, gang, here. Total chimpanzee death. See you next week, Professor Stack. Have a good night, Heil Hitler. Well, I appreciate that, Rupert. I mean, I got almost said Godzilla hands, we got gorilla hands. I'm sorry, but multiracial societies don't work. You need a dominant or alpha ethnicity to run the society, and then you can have a smaller percentage of the other cultures living with you.
02:16:59 I don't think you need that. I don't think you even want the, the smaller, I mean, you're always gonna look, it's never gonna be like 100% I guess, I mean, it could be in theory, but in, you know, in practice, not really, you're always gonna have a little bit, but yeah, the only, I mean, no, no multiracial society has ever survived, it requires top down enforcement and brainwashing constantly just to keep it sort of together, and eventually it falls apart.
02:17:29 Eventually it falls apart, and that is what will happen to America.
02:17:33 I don't know if it'll happen inevitably, or even in my lifetime. I think we're going to have some kind of civil conflict in my lifetime. It seems as though that's the direction we're going. In what form that comes in, I don't know, but white people in America are probably more racially aware than they've ever been since World War Two. They're not nearly there. If I thought they were there, I wouldn't have to do this stream, but they're on.. I.. they're.. it's.. it's a.. we're.. they're more there than they've been in like 80 years.
02:18:21 All right, we got draft work says experiencing mass diversity firsthand should be the best lesson, but some self-hating white still don't acknowledge that some cultures and races are incompatible with ours. You know what I think it is. I think that there..
02:18:38 if so, one of the reasons why I was able to spot the contrast as dramatically as I was is I had two communities growing up, I had the community that was a result of going to school, so like my friends at school and the secular people in my life, and then I went to Mormon Church, which was 100 100% white, and so I could compare what are all these white people that I'm always around.
02:19:12 How do they behave now? That might have biased the sample a little bit, right? Because they're not just whites, they're they're Mormon whites, but you know, versus kids at school, right, that that made it, that made the contrast clearer to me, and I think that if you're like a Zoomer or a Generation Alpha kid, and there's no environment that you can exist in and experience that is at least mostly white, you don't know what to compare it to, you have nothing to compare it to, and so you don't realize what you're missing out on, and I think that's why it is important.
02:19:59 Want for you to be supportive, if nothing else, of people that are creating white communities, but also finding a way in which you can participate in that, and I also think that it's another reason to home school your kids and find ways of social law. socializing your kids with the other white kids that are homeschooled now. I don't know how that all that infrastructure is set up or how that all works.
02:20:32 I would imagine I will find out at some point, but I think that's very important that you need to have your kids need to have access to an all-white community, and you can't keep them from ever, you know, experiencing the, the, the multiracial reality that exists in our countries, or they'll be ill-equipped to deal with it as adults, but you need to have, you need to give them that contrast, you need to give them the experience of this is what it could be like, so they know how bad it is.
02:21:18 Let's see here, we got Yo, Jimbo Rockford says Dead Nigger Day, Nigger Ego Month, and now Free Nigger Day. When will it end? Oh, it'll never end until we, you know, until we're an all-white society. It will never end until, I mean, because that, that, and that's one of the reasons why it's these multi racial societies don't work, is you can't make everybody happy. All right, then we got Great Wahita. Great Wahita says, Hi, Devon, say have you ever seen The Shape of Water? It's Jew commie slop, but just subversive enough for normies might be worth the look.
02:22:05 Thanks for the stream. I feel like I might have streamed about that. The shape of water that sounds funny. Let me look it up. That sounds.. that sounds like something I either was.. either I did stream. Oh no, I didn't stream. About this is that weird thing with the chick mix out with a monster.
02:22:27 I remember this being like a meme on Twitter, but now it's old. It's funny, time flies. It's from 20, it's almost 10 years old of a movie already. Yeah, maybe, maybe we could use.. we haven't done a movie stream in a long time, so I was thinking about, I'll put that in the, in the maybe category when I'm looking at movies, because I was kind of thinking we haven't done one a long time, and maybe it's maybe it's time we relax.
02:22:52 I still, I'm still working on getting through those fucking videos. I remember I teased it a long time ago, I was like, oh yeah, I got this thing I'm working on, it's like 24 hours of video, I still made through all that shit. Oh, it just got really boring, is why I was like, God, there's eight more hours of this, I gotta get through.
02:23:11 There's a lot of things I have to get through first, but like, maybe I'll do a movie, maybe I'll do a movie in between here.
02:23:17 All right, then we got a Truffle B says, have you ever thought of doing an episode on Dreyfus family, like Julia Dreyfus? She's an heiress with a family fortune estimated in the billions.
02:23:29 The family controls Louis Dreyfus Company, a massive global firm specializing in agriculture, food processing, and shipping, founded in 1851 her grandfather, Pierre Louise Dreyfus, was a noted banker and French resistance war hero. She is distantly related to Alfred Dreyfus, the French Jewish artillery officer infamous for being accused for the 1890s treason scandal, known as the Dreyfus affair.
02:24:07 No, I am.. I, you know, obviously I am aware of the chick from Seinfeld, right? And what's his face, the guy from Richard Dreyfus, right where, but I never really.. I figured they were related, and you know they were related to the Dreyfus affair, though. So that's.. that's maybe that could be fun.
02:24:35 That could be fun. I'll add that to my notes. Truffle B. Thank you very much, Truffle B. Then we got you, Jimbo Rockford says the Limbaugh thing was funny because what he said was the NFL was very desirous of successful black quarterbacks for politically correct reasons, independent of merit.
02:24:58 Niggs freaked out. That's what it was. Yeah, I was a kid. I vaguely remember it, though. I remember him saying something that sounded reasonable, and and then he lost his job. And my mom, at the time, this is why I knew who Rush Limbaugh was, was an avid listener of Rush Limbaugh, and so she was on Rush Limbaugh's side. And so I, not only that, I hear it on the team.
02:25:22 My mom was like, you know, railing against it, pissed off.
02:25:27 My mom used to be racist when I was like a real little kid. There was, there was some, there were some end bombs dropping in the station wagon, like not often, but between her and her sister, once I remember, because I was shocked as a little boy that was brainwashed to believe that that was out of all the no-no words, that was one of the big ones, and so, like, it stuck, it was so shocking to my system, I remember, I remember the whole scene, and then, in retrospect, I was like, what happened? What happened? She must have felt guilty.
02:26:04 She must have felt guilty. Anyway, then we got no land Finley, no land Finley with a big dono.
Mayer Rothschild
02:26:20 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend itself with.
Devon Stack
02:26:26 Look, how Jewy this bag is, you I couldn't figure out, I couldn't find my mic button for a second. All right, no. Land Finley says we love you, Devon or Deyvon. Thank you for all your hard work. Well, I appreciate that, and appreciate the big dono very much. All right, then we got Maximus Prime seven.
02:27:06 Says, thank you for the cover for covering the Project Nim Duck. These people are a lot crazier than I remembered. Speaking of apes, bonobos are almost identical to chimps, yet way less violent. Yeah, they are way less fine than they, they, they just eat and fuck all day, don't they? Or is that a meme? I don't know.
02:27:29 Little genetic difference can go a long way. All right. Then we got Fanny Schrute says, replay, gang, looking forward to the stream. Also, it's my birthday today, June 20-first, oh slash. All right. Well, I don't. I wish I had a happy birthday thing. Do I have a happy birthday thing?
Clip
02:27:58 Hey, girl, you hungry? Fuck you,
Devon Stack
02:28:03 that's not a birthday thing. I clicked the first thing I saw that wasn't something I recognized. Let me see here, I should use this one a lot tonight. Right here, I am not meant to defect, and I don't see why, how can the doctor say that I am all right, that's what you got.
02:28:28 Fanny Shrute, happy birthday, enjoy your time on Shroot Farms. Let us know how those beats turn out. All right, then we got another big donut, big Christmas dono from Super Daphne. Where's my Christmas donut button? I was looking at the other weird things. I can't find the Christmas donut one. Where's the Christmas one? There we are
Clip
02:29:01 children today. We'll be leaving the best Christmas ever. Our story begins with the
Devon Stack
02:29:07 Magic Negro Christmas tree. Where did the show man go? I Christmas
Clip
02:29:33 ever.
Devon Stack
02:29:39 All right, super Daphne with the big gun says thanks for their excellent stream, Devon. Well, I appreciate that. Thank you very, very much. Really helps. That's actually very helpful, Super Daphne. All right, then we got Astralis. Is 725 I was gonna say Negro monkeys, but it just sounds low effort, you know.
02:30:12 How about Nebraskan man coons? Ah, is that any better? All right. Who would have ever thought that blacks from Africa and Jews from Eastern Europe would have a negative impact on society. Answer, most people thanks for the critique, Devon. Well, I appreciate that.
02:30:50 And yet, like that thing, there were white people that understood it, but they were just quickly outnumbered. Is the problem they were quickly outnumbered, and if we're being honest, kind of outfoxed by the crafty Jews who played by different rules, which created a shift in power.
02:31:09 Unfortunately, all right. Now we got a Shadow Band says most people are okay living in a world of lies, extremely few, increasingly few people are truth-seeking.
02:31:26 I would say that has been my experience as well. Most people are, they would rather believe a comfortable lie than the unvarnished truth, and you know, hasn't always been a benefit to me, but you know, you know, some.. if you listen to this show, you're probably one of the real ones, you know.
02:31:53 So, what are you gonna do? I guess we could always do what the Jews do, and just trick them. We.. that's the problem, we're bad at tricking, tricking people, you know, people, and that is the, I guess, that's that's often the problem. That was my problem, I think, initially, is I just assumed that that's what everyone liked, because I wanted to know the actual truth of things.
02:32:15 I just assumed that's what everyone would want, right? That, that you know, it would be uncomfortable, maybe, to find the truth out that went against your, your, your preconceived worldview, but you'd be happy to have a better grip on reality, but not so much. There's a lot of people who are, who are quite allergic to reality. All right, then we got Ali Sirrid, wind cerid wind, something like that.
02:32:47 All right, part of the sneaky thing that's been done is using US racial categories to disprove racial genetics. These categories lump Middle Easterners in under white, for instance, yes. Well, and they lump a lot of Mexicans in with white. Remember, George Zimmerman was, was a white Hispanic, famously.
02:33:12 Yeah, so it's, it's look there, look, they are right in a way that no, there's not like these like super fine, you know, finely defined lines. Look, there could be, though. Here's the funny thing: it's not that these lines don't exist, it's that that we don't have the capability of drawing them, but we can draw, we can, or at least with precision. Let me rephrase that. It's not that these lines, these racial lines don't exist.
02:33:45 It's that we don't have the capability to draw them with precision. That is the bottom line. But given enough technology, I mean, I, in fact, this is the kind of.. this would be perfect for the, you know, this would be exactly the kind of thing you could use AI for.
02:34:03 You could have AI look at the genetic, the genome of all the different races, and and decide, okay, where, where would the line be drawn, and and certainly we already kind of do that, right? Like, if you do the 23andme they're drawing those lines somewhere, right? When they tell you that you're 25% this and 30% whatever, I mean, they're clearly drawing a line somewhere.
02:34:31 So it's they're already, they're not publicizing it in that way, they're not publicizing that as an AI that is, that is drawing racial lines, but that's kind of what it's doing, like when they look at their genetic data and they draw these lines, that's what they're doing.
02:34:50 So, yeah, it's increasingly will have the ability to draw these lines. Is it a little bit messy? Sure. Or do African Americans, as an example, have more admixture than just straight up blacks from the Congo? Yeah, they do, or most of them, not all of them. But the funny thing is, the more white admixture they have, the more that correlates with IQ and success too.
02:35:18 I mean, think of like some of the most successful blacks, they're always light-skinned blacks, and they're light-skinned blacks for a reason, and the most retarded blacks, like Kanye West, are dark as fucking sin. All right, then we got, let's see here, Gorilla Hands says, speaking of racial awareness, it does seem like the normies are starting to wake from the Carmela Anthony trial and all the stuff happening in Europe.
02:35:51 Yeah, and hopefully the stuff that's happening with Chad that they can compare the bond situation with, you know, Chad versus Captain Carmelo, it's a, that's, you know, the problem is that is true of the people that are paying attention, but there's just a lot of, I think, we often, as people that do pay attention, make the mistake and think that that our what we are witnessing is something that's typical of the same social change that might be taking a taking place in the circles that we run in online extends out into other parts of the, and it does a little bit, like there's some seepage, right, there's seepage, but it's not, and maybe this is where it begins, and it always has kind of worked that way, even before the internet.
02:36:46 In fact, maybe, especially when the internet was more exclusive, you would have memes that would get popular on small forums, and if they got big enough, that's how things used to go viral, right? Like, if they ended up on TV, that's how you knew they were viral, because that's what would happen, is something, something would go viral on the internet, and because not everyone had the internet yet, they would end up on some TV show, like that faggot, Tosh Pointo, or whatever, on Comedy Central, for a while, he, oh, I'm just gonna, we're gonna make money playing just the viral videos on the internet and being a faggot the whole time.
02:37:28 The, so they had, they had, you know, shows like, or even like, I remember the local news as filler, the local news would be like, look at this, this, this video has gone viral on the internet, and you know, old people like internet, and then you know, watch the, oh, look at the monkeys throwing its poop, or you know, whatever the video was, so it does, it does spill over, and it, I look, I'm hopeful, I think just this would look, it was always going to happen, it was always going to happen that at least a percentage of white people were going to start to figure this out.
02:38:04 If I didn't think so, I wouldn't do what I do, because it would just be pointless.
02:38:07 Why would I try to get white people to understand what the fuck was going on if I thought that they weren't capable of figuring it out? So it is, it is happening a little bit, but there's some white people that are just hell-bent on our own destruction, which is exactly.. I mean, that's what the Genesis had going against them back in the 1930s right? Ali Seren says, if you use the, or if you use the dozens to hundreds of racial categories of the old school caliper measurers, the genetic correlation is nearly perfect.
02:38:46 All the best to you. Happy mid summer. I didn't know that, but I mean that's reasonable.
02:38:53 That's, that's completely reasonable. That's that's what I was saying, is they were these were super autismo white people using the tools available to them to try to problem solve, and as the tools have have gotten better, their ability to refine those conclusions have gotten better, but these weren't stupid people doing this, and that's just the way that they are depicted by Jews in in popular media because they don't want you to to reach the conclusions that their research would would have you reach.
02:39:36 No land. Finley says chimps are humans too. No, that's the funny thing, is if, if you look at, if that, the arguments they were making were basically implying that Ripping Mad says thanks for doing the work that you do. Well, I appreciate that, Ripping Mad. All right, well, I think that's it. I still haven't, I still haven't set up Power Chat at Live, or whatever, I will. It's been, if you guys knew, you would get it. It's, it's been, it's been quite the year, really. It hasn't.
02:40:10 Every time I think it's got like things are going to settle down, they don't, and not always in fun ways, but, uh, it's okay, it's okay, it's okay, it's gonna be okay. All right, anyway, hope you guys have a good rest of your weekend. I'll be back here on Wednesday, of course, Wednesday, 5o'clock pm Pacific Time for Outlaws with Rebecca Hargraves. And then again, we'll be back here on Saturday. See you guys later for Black Pilled. I am, of course, Devon Stack.
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