Archive for October 27th, 2015

Elementary, my dear Watson

It’s no mystery that Mommy Professor’s favorite Early Victorian author is Karl Marx. After all, Marx wrote that Intellectuals should rule the world.

So, for Mommy Professor, what’s not to like!

But, unfortunately for Mommy Professor, communism has been discredited… not least because some people have an annoying habit of questioning things:

“If communism is so great, then why do all the communist Workers’ Paradises need machine guns and guard towers to stop people from fleeing?”

Samizdat persistently pointed out something else:

“Communists may have READ Karl Marx; but Anti-Communists have UNDERSTOOD Karl Marx.”

Yet another sore point for Mommy Professor is that the universities didn’t anticipate the fall of the Soviet Union. Ouch. And to add insulating tape to injury, the most popular and enduring Victorian period author is not their Karl Heinrich Marx, but rather the author who created Sherlock Holmes. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes didn’t make it onto Mommy Professor’s reading list, but most people don’t care.  photo hot dog.jpg

So what does this tell us?
1. That the “high” literature fawned over by Mommy Professor has nothing to do with reality (least of all the future).
2. That the greatest segment of the reading public enjoys seeing a clever investigator find out what is really going on.

Here at BUGS, we have a number of reference points to investigate anti-Whites. You can do a search for these, such as SUB-basics and The SILENCE. It is a commonly experienced phenomenon when SWARMING, that bystanders enjoy seeing incisive points being made by a BUGSER while interrogating an anti-White.

Now even though Sherlock Holmes is fictional and not on Mommy Professor’s reading list, there is more wisdom in a few lines of his adventures than in the entire corpus of Karl Marx.

Here’s a few memorable lines illustrating the concept of The SILENCE:

“Is there any other point to which you would draw my attention?”
“To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time.”
“The dog did nothing in the night-time.”
“That was the curious incident,”
remarked Sherlock Holmes.

-The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (1894) ‘Silver Blaze’.

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