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Old May 13th, 2019 #1
Nikola Bijeliti
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Default A propaganda cartoon from 1946

Here is a propaganda cartoon from 1946, the first year of the Boomer generation. It seems that we were fed propaganda from day one. (Copied from VDARE.)

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Old May 14th, 2019 #2
Ray Allan
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Default The Frankfurt School was well-established by 1946

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nikola Bijeliti View Post
Here is a propaganda cartoon from 1946, the first year of the Boomer generation. It seems that we were fed propaganda from day one. (Copied from VDARE.)

Race Relations The Brotherhood of Man 1946 United Auto Workers Animated 11min 2 2
Yep, that's what WWjew was fought for--so we can all be "equal."
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Old May 14th, 2019 #3
Gladiatrix
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Default United Auto Workers

Commie union scum
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Old May 16th, 2019 #4
Enbyeff
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Ruth Fulton Benedict (June 5, 1887 – September 17, 1948) was an American anthropologist and folklorist.

She was born in New York City, attended Vassar College and graduated in 1909. After studying anthropology at the New School of Social Research under Elsie Clews Parsons, she entered graduate studies at Columbia University in 1921, where she studied under Franz Boas. She received her PhD and joined the faculty in 1923. Margaret Mead, with whom she shared a romantic relationship,[1] and Marvin Opler, were among her students and colleagues.

Benedict was born Ruth Fulton in New York City on June 5, 1887, to Beatrice (Shattuck) and Frederick Fulton.[3][4][5] Her mother worked in the city as a school teacher, while her father pursued a promising career as a homeopathic doctor and surgeon.[3] Although Mr. Fulton loved his work and research, it eventually led to his premature death, as he acquired an unknown disease during one of his surgeries in 1888.[6] Due to his illness the family moved back to Norwich, New York to the farm of Ruth's maternal grandparents, the Shattucks.[4] A year later he died, ten days after returning from a trip to Trinidad to search for a cure.[6]

Mrs. Fulton was deeply affected by her husband's passing. Any mention of him caused her to be overwhelmed by grief; every March she cried at church and in bed.[6] Ruth hated her mother's sorrow and viewed it as a weakness. For her, the greatest taboos in life were crying in front of people and showing expressions of pain.[6] She reminisced, "I did not love my mother; I resented her cult of grief".[6] Because of this, the psychological effects on her childhood were profound, for "in one stroke she [Ruth] experienced the loss of the two most nourishing and protective people around her—the loss of her father at death and her mother to grief".[4]

As a toddler, she contracted measles which left her partially deaf, which was not discovered until she began school.[7] Ruth also had a fascination with death as a young child. When she was four years old her grandmother took her to see an infant that had recently died. Upon seeing the dead child's face, Ruth claimed that it was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Benedict



Gene Weltfish (born Regina Weltfish) (August 7, 1902 – August 2, 1980) was an American anthropologist and historian working at Columbia University from 1928 to 1953. She had studied with Franz Boas and was a specialist in the culture and history of the Pawnee people of the Midwest Plains

Regina Weltfish was one of two daughters; she was born in 1902 into a German Jewish family in New York City's Lower East Side. She grew up speaking German as her first language, taught by a German governess hired by her grandfather. Her father, to whom she was very close, died when she was 13. Encouraged by her grandmother, she went to the synagogue daily to say the kaddish for him during the first year after his death, an honor and responsibility traditionally reserved for a son

On April 1, 1953, Weltfish was questioned by the United States Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security staffed by Roy Cohn and consisting of senators Joseph McCarthy, Karl Mundt, John McClellan and Stuart Symington. Weltfish responded negatively to the committee's demands that she name colleagues with communist sympathies. Asked about her own political position she refused to answer, invoking the Fifth Amendment.[19]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_Weltfish

A heartless dyke 'n' a commie kike.
 
Old May 18th, 2019 #5
joeylowsac
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Woodpecker

It's odd that they show skeletons, since anthropologists have no problem telling the races apart (e.g. the anterior nasal spine would rule out a Negroid).

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