First published at 18:02 UTC on September 28th, 2018.
From the Maafa website (www.maafa21.com): "They were stolen from their homes, locked in chains and taken across an ocean. And for more than 200 years, their blood and sweat would help to build the richest and most powerful nation the world has …
MORE
From the Maafa website (www.maafa21.com): "They were stolen from their homes, locked in chains and taken across an ocean. And for more than 200 years, their blood and sweat would help to build the richest and most powerful nation the world has ever known. But when slavery ended, their welcome was over. America’s wealthy elite had decided it was time for them to disappear and they were not particular about how it might be done. What you are about to see is that the plan these people set in motion 150 years ago is still being carried out today. So don’t think that this is history. It is not. It is happening right here, and it’s happening right now."
This documentary discusses the eugenics and birth control movements in America and how they've devastated minority populations. Although this is a magnificently well done documentary that everyone ought to see, I feel that it gives an inaccurate impression as to the ultimate target of as well as the motivation behind these movements.
The eugenics and birth control movements are both part of a long-term Malthusian agenda that has targeted the *lower class* segment of all races. Although black communities have undoubtedly been most heavily impacted by these movements, it would be a mistake for us to conclude that depopulating just these communities is the ultimate end goal. It isn't.
In order to carry out an across-the-board population control agenda, you have to start somewhere and the eugenics movement (for example) provided the necessary justification to begin with what was considered (then as now) to be the highest priority segment of the population--the poor. Traditionally, this segment has been comprised mostly of members of the black community. Was racism a component of the eugenics movement? Absolutely! But that doesn't mean that the eugenics movement was necessarily driven by racism; and in fact, as I explain in some detail in my article, "Two Coastal Marine Disasters and the Fingerprint of Malthus" (see: https://www.bitchute.com/video/sHMsfehZW3BI/), the motivation of racism is actually employed here as a means of hiding the real Malthusian motivation.
LESS