Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Another Example Of How "Here" Is Not Always The Same Place...

THE CITY HAS always been an engine of intellectual life, from the 18th-century coffeehouses of London, where citizens gathered to discuss chemistry and radical politics, to the Left Bank bars of modern Paris, where Pablo Picasso held forth on modern art. Without the metropolis, we might not have had the great art of Shakespeare or James Joyce; even Einstein was inspired by commuter trains.

Now scientists have begun to examine how the city affects the brain, and the results are chastening. Just being in an urban environment, they have found, impairs our basic mental processes. After spending a few minutes on a crowded city street, the brain is less able to hold things in memory, and suffers from reduced self-control. While it's long been recognized that city life is exhausting -- that's why Picasso left Paris -- this new research suggests that cities actually dull our thinking, sometimes dramatically so.
-source

So at one time Western cities gave us Shakespeare, Picasso and Joyce and today they make us dumb?

Uhhhh....Yeah. Right.


Maybe this has something to do with it.


Almost every single Western City in America and Western Europe have seen an influx of non-Whites and the subsequent fleeing of indigenous Whites.
In fact, in a great many major U.S. cities Whites are less than 35% of the population.

And those Whites that stay are forcibly dumbed down in the name of "tolerance" and "equality".




It's not that cities have suddenly and mysteriously begun to make people dumber.
(That's just an attempt to explain away the politically incorrect reality of racial differences. )

No, put bluntly, it's that today's cities are now populated with a higher percentage of (genetically predisposed) dumber people.



Just moving people to The West will not make them like indigenous Western (White) Peoples. That's just a ridiculous presupposition to begin with.

As the old say goes, "you can't make a silk purse from a sow's ear."



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