PDA

View Full Version : Reading a very interesting book



MonkeyShines
06-28-2009, 12:11 AM
Imperium by Francis Parker Yockey

This is some of what he says about the negro,this was written in 1948 and nothing has changed.


"The soul of the negro remains primitive and childlike"

"Marriage is almost unkown among negros, and the woman raise large families. In the large cities,the negro population supplies approximately ten times as many criminals as its numbers would indicate to be its proportion. Social diseases are genral among this race, hospitals and penitentiaries deal with highly disproportionate numbers of negroes. Primative violence is natural to the negro"

Negro sections of northern cities are dangerous to the life of white persons.

Remember this was written in 1948 .
I would like to discussed Imperium with anyone who has read it.

skillet
06-29-2009, 12:03 AM
Very interesting. Niggers have long been known for being immoral, instant-gratification beasts of burden.

Sort of off topic, but I was watching a really cool show this morning on the planets and, naturally, all the scientists contributing to the program were all human. A very nice alternative to the non-stop pedophreak-a-thon going on right now.

KaffirSmasher
06-30-2009, 04:09 AM
There's a great deal of truth in those dusty pre-war books (written before the PC virus took over society) that are just as true today as when they were freshly written. Much of the world will never realize it, because they are so indoctrinated by diversity.

DuhWanda
06-30-2009, 10:07 PM
There's an INCREDIBLE Victorian-era South Africa novelist named Olive Schreiner whose works almost no one knows about because they're full of the truth about niggers. Actually, the one with the least of this in it (_The Story of an African Farm_) has been published by Penguin, Bantam Classics, etc. and is fairly easy to get (at Barnes and Noble or wherever - even easier online, of course). But another of her books, _From Man to Man_, is my absolute favorite. Big portions of it are the main character's (a female British colonist) lectures to her children about how negroes are inferior, but how the whites should still treat them kindly, like they would treat animals (unless of course they were to "bite" or such). Good stuff!