Diseased & Dying
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Description | The bubonic plague killed almost half of Europe, but where did it come from, and how did it come to be in the first place? Let's find out... If you're a regular viewer please DON'T try to become a Patreon supporter for as little as $1 per video because they are of course free for me to make. I have NO EXPENSES when I make these vidoes. I only invest my time in them, and my love for my heritage of course. And I do so with pleasure. Trying to save our heritage is my objective, not to make money by pretending to do so. If you want to support me some way, you can (and get something in return when you do) by buying my pro-European books from here: https://www.amazon.com/Varg-Vikernes/e/B00IVZ2KPO/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1 |
Collections | CivilisationVisual |
Uploaded | 2017-08-03 |
Okay, I found some time for a video, I think.[1] So now the question is will I be able to finish recording this video before I have a billion screaming children in the house and a wife shouting for help. Let's find out! Yeah, we're going to put them to bed in a few minutes, but first of all, I'm going to talk a little bit about diseases. But first of all, I wish to say that diseases are not all bad because they replace the natural selection or a part of the natural selection we had before and[2] get rid of the weak to some extent. So diseases per se are not bad. However the reason why we have diseases today and I'm talking about viruses like, you know, the common flu and the different flus that tend to be named after Chinese towns the reason why we have them today is because of domestication of animals... Yeah, you guessed it, civilization. You see when we first domesticated the horse that's when we got the common flu because we had so close contact with horses that we were infected with something they had before that[3] Before that we never had common the common flu and the same is the case for a lot of diseases a lot of kind of negative diseases as well. Not just the positive ones that I talked about. This is because we came into contact with different types of animals as we advanced our society progressed. And today we have these mutations that are kind of dangerous and they occur because when large groups of individuals come together the viruses are able to mutate more often. Let's put it very simply and of course if you have an industrial complex where you put up a big you know farm building and you shove in all the chickens you can you know physically fit inside then these different viruses are able to, you know, mutate a lot more and the chance that some of these mutations are really really bad is of course high. And the reason why we have these vicious viruses that are by chance, of course (not of course) named after Chinese cities is because the Chinese they're kind of many and they're kind of cramped together into big towns and what happens then is the exact same as what happens in these[4] industrial farm buildings with all the animals shoved in, you know, for profit and therefore the viruses are able to mutate a lot in Chinese cities more so than in any other place[5] because there are so many. And the viruses are able to change for the worse. And therefore when we have this new vicious virus, it's the Shanghai virus or the Pekin virus and so forth. They're named after Chinese cities most often because that's where they occur, that's where these viruses that we have become fairly new to mutate and become dangerous to us. And those with some intelligence already know where I'm going, right? Okay, I'll just end the video here. Thanks for watching. Bye bye. Well, actually the point is that if you have overpopulation, and we already have, then you have an increased chance for a virus to mutate into something really really vicious. So the chance is that[6] because of civilization because we become so many because our progressed society is able to feed so many mouths we will surely, absolutely certainly, become so many that the viruses will take us down. And[7] it's just a matter of time before this happens, of course, so this is one of the things you can add to my long list of cons in relation to civilization.[8] And that's all for today really thanks for watching and I did manage to finish this video so... Great. Multa paucis. If you say a lot a few words you get a lot done. Now I'm going to put the kids to bed. Bye bye. Mother Nature will sort things out, and put mankind back in place. We are of Nature, whether we like it or not, and until we realise that we are a threat to our own survival
- Diseased & Dying
- Some of them that is.
- Some other examples of what we got BECAUSE we domesticated animals: smallpox, flu, tuberculosis, bubonic plague, measles, cholera. All originally animal diseases that were once largely harmless to humans.
- Animal domestication and rising populations, large sedentary human population provide fertile ground for the evolution of diseases.
- Yeah, they are able to do that in other cities too. Duh. Not just in China.
- Like SARS or ARS...
- Well, unless something else beats them to it...
- "Buh muh Western civilithation!?" (Alt-Right/Lite)