Tuesday, 21 June 2011

The Tower of Babel


A popular mythological argument against multiethnic society proposes that Yahweh (the Jewish god, not the Christian-Mohammedan god) intended us to be separate races and accordingly divided us. Almost always omitted is what prompted Yahweh to make such a decision. The Tower of Babel is actually a myth about a united prehistoric humanity building a tower to transcend earth and reach heaven. Yahweh, fearing that we would succeed and consequently overthrow his rule, panicked and gave every race a different language, with the result that communication between builders broke down and construction failed. Thus the Tower of Babel, far from a ridiculous experiment doomed from the beginning, was a folk project so likely to succeed and so likely to thus threaten Jewish hegemony that it had to be sabotaged by deliberated division of its folk through giving them separate racial identities.

The myth warns against cultural relativism (the idea that different cultures need not converse with the aim of reaching agreement), which we have never denied is promoted by Jews. But what many anti-multiculturalists misunderstand is why Jews promote multiculturalism. It is hardly because Zionism fears ethnically homogenous societies (which, after all, took turns expelling Jews more than 100 times only to soon let them back in), but because it fears all non-Jews resisting it in synchronicity. This is why Jews promote ethnic separatism at the same time as they promote multiculturalism. Multiculturalism (many directions in one society) and separatism (many directions in many societies) are both derived from cultural relativism and hence, while dressed up as a mutually hostile dichotomy, work in a pincer movement to fragment what could otherwise become a multiethnic folk (one direction) easily able to defeat Zionism, and furthermore, if we believe the myth, complete our construction project and leave this material existence behind once and for all.

Be not misled by reverse-bluffing Zionist agents who erroneously use the term ‘Tower of Babel’ as an analogy for a failed multiethnic society. The true social architecture of united humanity is neither melting pot nor salad bowl, but a distillation tower, at whose summit only the noblest will arrive.

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