#1 Pain | 2008-01-27 20:45
Tim-
Imagination does best with discipline.
What I mean is that your instincts are right, but you still have to hold up the egg in the sunlight and turn it around.
Sometimes it's a bad egg; sometimes it's Styrofoam and spray-paint.
But when you are lucky, part of it is good.
Before 1482, when Bristolmen sailed the ocean blue, the "world" was only Eurasia and Africa.
Thereafter, the New World the Bristolmen uncovered for the Old World stretched our horizons. Now physicists tell us that the world is far greater than even our whole planet.
I think many of us have noticed that about the circadian rhythm when we took summers off: if you turn off the alarm clock, you will wake up a little later each day. And supposing if we are from a planet that takes a little longer to spin, it may have been bigger, and so we would be naturally more muscular to match the stronger gravity. (Or supposing if we were from Mars, we would be scrawnier.)
Or not.
Supposing if we came from somewhere else, how did we get here? Well, it is not well-known, but the Norse had words for interdimensional portals and hole-paths. In the old stories, these were not just some vision in the mind, but they could move solid, physical objects and people.
That may be just legend, but it is odd that the words match physicists' predictions of wormholes.
But as for identifying the world which we suppose we may have come from, how could anyone know, yet?
The websites and science fiction that talk about this are fun to read, but when you told them up to daylight and turn them around, most of it, maybe all of it, is Styrofoam and spray-paint.
This is how the topic fits with the race-problem. There would be two outcomes right now:
(1) Someone makes a discovery about a worm-hole or a warp-drive and stumbles upon a new world. He announces that to our whole world, and a billion people leave, including a sea of niggas and chinks. So the new world becomes worse than our own.
(2) Someone makes a discovery about a worm-hole or a warp-drive and stumbles upon a new world. He keeps it secret, and takes only a few worthies. Thus you and I would never know about it till the next genius repeats the discovery and we by accident are invited.
It should be clear that the real issue remains for us to solve the race problem now.
If speculative physics gives us an escape, speculative biology would have the solution.
Here's an example for the simplest solution.
Willis Carto's magazine every once in a while runs an article on an evil North Korean scientist who wants to kill all white people. He steals white genetic technology and releases a deadly virus that attacks and kills all and only white people.
Now at the same time, the simple racial solution for us would be for a genius geneticist to do something like that imaginary North Korean: to release a virus that targets everyone but whites and sterilizes them painlessly.
Now here's where holding up the egg to the light comes in. I doubt there is any such evil scientist in North Korea. There obviously is no white counterpart, either.
So talking about it may be fun, but it doesn't solve any problems.
The only good that could come of it would be the very unlikely chance that a white-loving genius geneticist read this blog and got some ideas.
For now, there's the Mantra and Mantra-thinking.
Remember: New Age and science fiction sites may be fun to read sometimes, but 99.99% of that is worthless. Be suspicious of anyone who is supposing, but who takes himself seriously -- like the Heaven's Gate people.