Posts Tagged ‘culling’

Anti-Humanism for beginners

Sunday, April 12th, 2009
repeat after me...The ideas espoused by this site are at best viewed as “extreme” by the average person on the street. This is because for the good of the human species as a whole, we reject the so-called “rights” of individuals and advocate the average person’s extermination. We simply don’t have time for subpar/generic/vanilla/john smith humans anymore. There’s precious little room left on this planet as it is without glorified cattle wandering around mindlessly consuming and destroying everything in sight, contributing nothing useful and getting in better people’s way. The human race needs a good culling, the sooner the better.

Having understood the above and agreed that there needs to be drastic change (and I don’t mean change of the crowd appeasing Obama-style variety), you must be a halfway intelligent and realistic person, therefore you’ll want to communicate these ideas to others. For “extreme” ideas to become acceptable, they need to fully enter mainstream discourse: this is where you come in.

But where do you start? Easy, if you’re intelligent, your genetic family are most likely of similar IQ levels and aptitude, and intelligent people don’t hang around with idiots. In other words, you’re immediately surrounded by friends and family who are potentially receptive to the healthy ideas of Anti-Humanism. Don’t forget your colleagues and co-workers either – you already know which of them are worth bothering with from conversation and observation.

How do you go about broaching difficult subjects like eugenics and euthanasia then? It’s actually easier than you might think. Below I’ve compiled a brief starting set of pointers to help you become an effective catalyst for real, tangible change. It might not seem like much, but opinion forming and altering mindsets is a necessary starting point for achieving your goals. Once the ideas are out there and being discussed and taken seriously by people who matter, leaders emerge who can galvanise those people, attract others and begin to act on those initial ideas.

- What you should be doing is casually and subtly dropping Anti-Humanistic ideas into everyday conversation. For example, suppose there’s a prominent story in the news about people with dementia being abused in care homes.
You could say: “I’ve a friend who works in a care home, she says it’s like a living death to suffer from dementia. The relatives always tell her they’d be better off if they’d just died of a heart attack than keep on living like that. I mean bloody hell, they’re wearing nappies. Maybe we should think about legalising euthanasia for people with terminal diseases, or poor quality of life. It’s inhumane to let them suffer like that.”

- If you argue and make points like the one above, backed up with apparent evidence, only evangelical christians, liberals, and idiots will contradict you (humanists in other words). You can ignore them; they’ll quickly discredit their own viewpoints and make themselves look stupid in the process. Don’t waste time arguing with them either, their moronic convictions form their “individual identity” and they’ll never admit to being wrong because they think everyone has a right to their own opinion. They’re mass grave fodder.

- For people to really listen to what you have to say, they have to respect you and take you seriously. Therefore it’s highly beneficial to attain a reasonable position of authority in society. Fulfil a useful role, preferably where you can supervise others or hold a position that people traditionally look up to. No one cares what bitter, badly dressed, borderline alcoholic losers with crap jobs have to say about anything*, and why should they? Authority, confidence and respect give weight to your words, however much you might moan about the sheer power of your massive intellect.  

- Don’t attend or organise protest marches, they’re a democratically approved waste of time and lame excuse for rich students, hippies and other fuckwits to smash a few windows and shout at the authorities before settling down and getting a job in the City or dropping out of society altogether.

For comprehensive advice on advancing an agenda through the internet, click here.

* Though electioneering politicians will pretend to.