First some music….
At one point in history – or rather pre-history – the men hunted large game with spears or javelins, the women and young hunted small game with bows, and they all collected herbs, sea-shells, snails, nuts, mushrooms, fruits, berries and different eatable roots. They were what we call ‘hunter-gatherers’.
Pre-historic Europe was scarcely populated, and there was an abundance of everything they needed here, so there was little incentive for anyone to risk a voyage across the sea to the West, or a no less risky walk across the taiga or plains to the East, beyond the Ural mountains; and those who did go East were usually killed before they got very far, by packs of giant hyenas (weighing around 500 lbs!), that used to live there back then. Some went South though, through the Middle East and into Africa and perhaps also further into Asia, during the coldest periods of the Ice Ages, where they met Africans and Asians, and when the Ice Age ended they returned, some times mixed, and as we know, that is how the European population became a little bit racially mixed.
When our forebears were mixed the European man became more unbalanced, as is often the case when species and races mix, and the unique abilities of the pure European man were gradually lost. The intellectual capacity dropped – some times dramatically. Hunting and even gathering became more difficult for him, and he turned to other means to survive.
The mixed European, at first living in the Middle East, was still intelligent enough to solve the problem with his own deteriorating abilities; he invented agriculture! The perfect means to enable the ‘new’ and inept European man to thrive again. And thrive he did, so much that he multiplied and became so numerous that the still racially pure European man – still a hunter-gatherer – became unable to continue to hunt and gather. He was pushed Westwards and Northwards, from the Middle East, until there was nowhere to go, nowhere to keep hunting and gathering. So he too was forced to turn to agriculture: there was simply not enough space left for him to keep up the much better hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
With agriculture came also famine (when the crops failed), malnutrition (because of a much less varied diet), slavery (because some strong men forced others to work on their land), war (because when famine struck, the farmers had to take what others had in order to survive themselves), tyranny (because some men owned the land, and thus controlled the food supplies), diseases (because all the close-contact with domesticated animals caused man to be infected by diseases that had before only been a problem to animals) and all sorts of other problems too.
At first the conflcits were solved with duels though: one champion representing each side. The fight lasted until one of the champions was pushed outside a ring drawn up on the ground, until one of them started to bleed or until one of them gave up. Yes: they rarely killed each other. Why would they? What on Earth would they benefit from having their best men killed? Instead they cultivated the honourable warrior, specialized in fighting against an equal.
With time agriculture caused the European man to multiply to such a degree that he started to build cities. Civilisation was born! Again, first in the Middle East, in Sumer, and later in North-Africa, in Egypt. Much later this disaster arrived in geographical Europe, first in Ancient Greece and Ancient Italy. Alas! The mixed European man eventually lost ‘all’ links to Nature, even shunned the forest and the mountains like the plague, and instead drew to the cities like flies to manure.
Whenever things went wrong in the cities, as it inevitably did in agricultural societies, they looked to the North and attacked! They didn’t send their champions though, to challenge the Northerners, but instead went there in force to slay them, to massacre them, to cut them down and to take their land! Aye: the men of the cities were hungry or poor, so they had to – or so they felt! They mass-produced arms and armour, and sans honour and sans mercy, met the often naked champions, the warriors, of the uncivilised Europeans. Gaul fell first: an estimated one million Gauls, most of them women and children, were killed when Cæsar’s Legions attacked. The rest of Europe didn’t fall, but much of Europe did, and the land was soaked in blood, from good, honourable and honest Europeans, many – if not most – of them still of pure European stock.
The uncivilised European warrior was stronger, fitter, more skilled, faster and even taller, than the more mixed civilised European, but he had honour and faced a foe with no honour. The warrior faced a soldier, so he lost. When the war was over the winner recorded the history, as he wanted it to look, and invented all sorts of excuses to justify the massacre, and all sorts of mud was smeared all over the memory of the ‘barbarians’.
The hunter-gatherer killed game. The agricultural warrior rarely killed anybody at all, and if he did kill, he killed another warrior fighting on equal terms. The civilised soldier was a mass-murderer of European men, women and children.
HailaR WôðanaR!
The True European Man: