Steven Tucker reviews Gad Saad's Suicidal Empathy, which aptly compares wokeness in the West to the parasites which hijack the zombified brains of wood crickets and force them to jump into water and drown.
Soil fungi have long been considered passive infrastructure for plants, or worse, parasites of their roots. But they are in fact highly active, controlling not only their own destinies but also the fates of those around them.
THE DEEP STATE JUST GOT CAUGHT RED-HANDED AGAIN!
CIA OFFICIALLY ADMITS CANCER IS BIOLOGICALLY IDENTICAL TO PARASITES…
Johns Hopkins BURIED cheap anti-parasitic drugs that CURE cancer in weeks…
Western Civilization didn't flourish because "white males" stopped other groups from succeeding.
The West thrived because of rational thought, individual rights, and free enterprise.
"White males" that invented the steam engine, electric generation, the combustion engine, flight, and space exploration did not do so because they "stole" the ideas of minorities.
These inventions helped lift mankind out of ignorance and hardship, improving the quality of life for all of humanity.
"White males" didn't oppress the entire world, they helped make it a better place.
"White males" didn't oppress everyone's rights, they invented the idea of rights and paid in blood to liberate tens of millions of people.
"White males" didn't invent slavery, they ended it.
"White males" didn't invent tyranny, they devised a form of government to end it.
Destroying Western Civilization isn't about empowering groups that were "oppressed." It is about tearing down civilization itself so that globalist parasites can rule over all of us.
This red-tailed hawk was found sitting on top of a door at the glass-fronted entrance to an apartment building in Brooklyn. His behavior and poor feather quality indicated something was very wrong.
A kind rescuer brought him to us, and our exams revealed a host of issues for this poor bird: severe dehydration and signs of anemia, which probably indicates some rodenticide poisoning. He also has an old wound on one toe that was obviously causing him pain. We also found a lot of intestinal parasites. And finally, he somehow got coated in a greasy substance. Poor buddy!
After a few days of supportive care, medications and wound care, this hawk, named Quan, is standing and more alert. We hope he’ll soon be stable enough for us to clean those beautiful feathers under anesthesia.
📷: Rachel Frank, Eugene Oda