Saturday, September 19, 2020

Divining Der Movement

 A magical Type I moment.

More great optics; the Type I traditionalist freaks are going to have a grand old time recruiting STEM folks with O'Meara:

Ian Smith

Posted September 17, 2020 at 7:32 am | Permalink

So why don’t you divine next month’s winning lottery number and cast for a long term buy-and-hold stock with your winnings?

Reply

James O'Meara

Posted September 17, 2020 at 10:25 am | Permalink

Because thousands of other bettors are imagining a different outcome. However, it can be done…

Divining!  Casting!  Evola was struck down by a spell, not by a shell fragment from a bombing raid!  He could have walked, but chose not to!  When the Chinese launch an ICBM strike against the “bring out your dead” White ethnostate, all the magicians in their hobbit holes will cast a spell and send those missiles back to China!  Dat right!  Optics!

And of course, the purely anecdotal (and unverifiable in any real empirical sense) example given by O’Meara is of “casting,” not “divining.”  How about this - why doesn’t a magician “divine” the numbers of the lottery?  That’s not a case of others interfering by “imagining a different outcome” – merely predicting an outcome that will eventually be actualized (by random chance or by magic, take your pick).  The magician can then announce the winning numbers online before the actual drawing – in order to prevent folks from all running out to buy tickets with those numbers, the online announcement can be made minutes – or seconds – before the actual lottery drawing. Indeed, a skilled diviner should be able to predict every drawing, no?

I suppose that the freakshow crowd will think up some imaginative reasons why such a “divining” or psychic prediction is not possible in this particular case.  

And here we go…

Now, I certainly do not want to be close-minded.  Thus, if individuals with such novel abilities can reproducibly demonstrate such abilities under properly controlled, rigorous experimental conditions, then those abilities must be accepted, and should be further studied.  However, rambling nonsense from Type I droolcups does not constitute the necessary evidence.

A Counter-Comments commentator with sense (same fellow who started the conversation, see above):

Ian Smith

Posted September 18, 2020 at 8:08 pm | Permalink

I had a friend from the Middle East who was big into the skepticism thing. He told me this amusing story of how he and a friend went to some mystic in the desert who claimed he could summon Jinn. The went to his place a few times asking to see him perform this feat. And each time he had some excuse as to why the Jinn weren’t feeling social that day.

The point is, whenever you ask people who believe in sorcery or mind woo-woo for tangible, replicable results, you get excuses about the stars being out of alignment or some such thing. And I’m sure others will blame the materialism of the Kali Yuga or Jews using astral golems or some such.

Regarding the race track winner, it is inevitable that, occasionally, somebody is going to get what they wish for. It isn’t any proof that the mind can manipulate reality. I know I’m going to be accused of being fedora, but the whole thing seems, at best, unfalsifiable.

On a final note, which is the more successful civilization: the one that manufactures bullets, or the one that believes that one can be made immune to bullets by belief in magic?

More evidence that the fact that group may be close, or overlap, in PCA does not necessarily mean they are of the same racial derivation.

Thus, South Asians and Latin Americans are in the same general cluster but are obviously not (immediately) derived from identical racial stocks; instead, they both share the trend of gene frequencies intermediate between Europeans and East Asians (East Asians being a proxy for Amerindians for the Latin Americans) – with some Latin Americans also shifted toward Africans.

Thus, PCA overlap between, say, South Asians and Mestizos is obviously not due to a shared ancestral history (in any meaningful, historical sense).

A HuWhite Aryan beauty dies.  HBDers and race realists the world over weep.

Yes, let us remember Francis Parker Yockey, a great man who would utterly oppose the petty nationalism espoused by Counter-Currents, and who would no doubt label Greg Johnson a “Culture Retarder” and a treasonous enemy of the West.

An onanistic video for “movement” Anglophiles.  Try to avoid a priapism, fellows!

Behold the female.  Remember, men, they are your equals, nay, your superiors!

Is Greg holding out for a Cosima?  Or a Richard (Wagner, not Spencer?)?

Yeah, real daring and all.  What has Trump actually done for those “good gene” people?  That’s why the Right always loses; they are impressed by empty posturing, mere words, instead of actual deeds.


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