-
Diogenes of Babylon posted an update 4 years, 8 months ago
“The stupid will believe it and ask to be treated” Pandemic to DePopulate 1981
“In the future it will be about finding a way to reduce the population. We will start with the old, because as soon as he is over 60-65 years of age, man lives longer than he produces and costs society dearly. Then the weak and then the useless who do nothing for society because there will be more and more of them, and especially finally the stupid ones.
Euthanasia targeting these groups; euthanasia will have to be an essential instrument of our future societies, in all cases. Of course, we cannot execute people or set up camps. We will get rid of it by making them believe it is for their own good. Too large a population, and for the most part unnecessary, is something economically too expensive.
Socially, it is also much better for the human machine to come to a screeching halt rather than gradually deteriorating. We won’t be able to give intelligence tests to millions and millions of people, you can imagine!
We will find something or cause it, a pandemic that targets certain people, a real economic crisis or not, a virus that will affect the old or the big, it doesn’t matter, the weak will succumb to it, the fearful and the stupid will believe it and ask to be treated.
We will have taken care to have planned the treatment, a treatment that will be the solution. The selection of idiots will thus be done by themselves: they will go to the slaughterhouse on their own. “
“The future of life” – Jacques Attali, 1981, interview with Michel Salomon.
The Giza Forum (Legacy)
Closed Archive of The Old Forum
It’s not really surprising that so few ever notice. As Ole Dammegård tells us, the “announcements” are seldom, if ever, in plain human language. Unfortunately, Mr Globaloney appears to believe that manufactured consent based on symbols, codes, metaphors and other devices which produce less than properly informed consent is sufficient for his purposes. Since he has been doing it for such a long time, it is concerning that he appears to believe that it is sufficient. However, call me an eternal optimist, but that seems to me to be no way to run a cosmos and I’d prefer to think that his legal advice is, to say the least, erroneous!