r-strategists Call For Normalizing “Twincest”

There is no bottom to r:

… what’s incest? And why is it so taboo?

… others argue that ‘consensual incest’ is a victimless crime – providing the sex/relationship takes place between consenting adults.

Way back in 2013, Jeremy Irons, when reminded about laws preventing incest, said: “It’s not incest between men”, because “incest is there to protect us from inbreeding, but men don’t breed”…

“People link incest to other sorts of things, such as abuse and pedophilia,” Katherine – who dated her brother Scott – told Broadly, “but we already have laws for that. A child can’t consent to sex, so there’s already a law for pedophilia.

“It shouldn’t matter whether [the people in the relationship are] related or not. The fact is, if they’re not of age, it’s wrong to begin with. Children cannot consent, but adults can.

“If I can consent to have sex with an entire football team, why can’t I consent to have sex with my brother who is over the age of 30?” she adds, her voice rising.

“It just doesn’t make sense to me that I can consent to one but not to the other. I don’t think that is correct at all.

A quick search on Google shows that same-sex ‘twincest’ is, erm, popular online – check out the screengrabs above and below.

Well known Czech identical twins Elijah and Milo Peters famously starred in several porn films together – and claimed to be in love.

One of the twins said previously: “My brother is my boyfriend, and I am his boyfriend. He is my lifeblood, and he is my only love.”…

So, between twins of the same-sex, where there are no grey areas regarding consent or abuse, and there’s absolutely no chance that either will conceive, why not?

… it’s an interesting theory.

Wow. So there is actually gay porn featuring twin siblings who are paid to have sex with each other, and it gets huge search traffic. Life would have been better without knowing that. And even weirder, Google sends people on to those sites, unlike this site which is blacklisted under searches for “politics,” “ideology,” “conservatism,” and other high volume keywords. Can you believe it?

In a way it is good. We heard there was degeneracy as the Roman Empire collapsed, but my impression is we probably never got a feel for how bad it really was, because I doubt historians who pieced it together centuries later could really understand how bad it could get.

Now, we have the internet, video, and the very words of the degenerates to document for future generations just what lies at the end of the path to r. The next time r-selection is getting a foothold, and some say letting gays marry will not lead to pedophilia, or incest, or public masturbation, or bestiality, or anything like that, our kind can point at this period and show how those things are exactly what ceding even an inch to r leads to. I wonder if we had video of this back in the eighties, if the horror of it would have held off the decline.

As we head r, all sorts of defectives are going to dodge the sharp blade of Darwin, and with time they will reproduce their haphazard kind faster than K-strategists can carefully construct their quality offspring. The result is an increasing descent into rank degeneracy, and given enough time it will eventually deconstruct every moral foundation, no matter how seemingly impervious to damage it should be, or how bizarre and contemptible some specific peccadillo would seem. If it went long enough, pedophilic snuff films would eventually become a thing, probably initially only with children under one year old, since they would be deemed of limited consciousness.

It is interesting to ponder this phenomenon of r-selected degeneracy throughout the universe though. Somewhere is probably a civilization millions of years beyond us. How did it cross this gulf of evolution created by post-scarcity, and not end up spontaneously being devolved by the imbeciles and degenerates within its population? What does its history look like? How many other advanced civilizations evolved to where we are, only to attain post scarcity and then be lost to spontaneous r-selected devolution, because they never managed to raise the gumption to do what needed to be done to surpass that gulf?

I hate to say it but the answer may very well be an agreement among the masses to artificially inflict the selective pressures of Darwin, and to do so around the virtues of the K-strategy. The key to a lasting civilization may be a controlled brutality and violence that would seem anything but civilized.

There is almost no other way, unless we are to cast our individualists out into the cosmos, and leave the planet to the horrors of r-selection.

I am not sure that wouldn’t be the crueler option.

Spread r/k Theory, because it is one slippery slope from here

This entry was posted in Decline, Homosexuality, Liberals, Politics, r-stimuli, rabbitry, Sexual Deviance. Bookmark the permalink.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

11 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
LembradorDos6Triliões
LembradorDos6Triliões
6 years ago

>The key to a lasting civilization may be a controlled brutality and violence that would seem anything but civilized.

>There is almost no other way, unless we are to cast our individualists out into the cosmos, and leave the planet to the horrors of r-selection.

>I am not sure that wouldn’t be the crueler option.

Agreed. Not having that leaves an wedge for subversiveness to get a foot hold on a society, no matter how K it is. It happens naturally, because when the subverted/weak societies finally weaken themselves enough, they get conquered by another stronger (more violent) culture, OR the native culture cleans it’s own bedroom and start stomping out the subversive take hold, and put in place cultural mechanisms of keeping society K (what those might be is a great topic of discussion), like thot patrolling, etc, etc.

It’s all going to be alright, we’re heading for a tidal wave of positive change (chaotic and not totally safe, but certainly positive).

Michael Kumpmann
Michael Kumpmann
6 years ago

I think, traditional civilisations already had measures to limit r selected behavior. I think many initiation rites of ancient cultures and groups like the assassins in the middle east were to destroy all traits of r selected behavior.

For example, the famous assassin sect had a rite where all initiates needed to undergo harsh, exhausting training, while being purposely “underfed”.

Many ancient barbarians and greek city states sent the people who were to be initiated into the jungle to fend for themselves for several days. (Look at the scene in 300 were Leonidas fought the wolve,)

And for example, the freemasons still today have a metaphor that uninitiated people are like unwilling pawns on a checker board because they never learned to control their desires. And by learning to control your desires/urges, you step higher on “jacobs ladder to enlightenment”.

Hermeticism even taught that the first steps of initiation is Nigredo (darkening) which is like forcibly/painfully burning down all even in ones soul like greed and so on.

And in most myths (and modern computer games), there is a scene where the hero has to fight a huge monster and by fighting the monster, he gains a mighty superweapon or special power. These scenes are all a metaphor for initiatory rites. And some psychologists say that the “beast” in such myths is really a symbol for all impure traits of the initiated individual.

Because of this, I think ancient initiatory rites were really about destroying/overcoming all r selected traits.

(Interestingly, cultural philosopher and anthropologist Rene Guenon suggested that there are also counter initiations. While initiations tries to convert a lesser being into a higher being, a counter initiation turns a human into a lesser being or a beast. For example, a classical example of a mythological counter initiation would be the creation of a Zombie. Zombification follows almost the same steps as an initiation, but turns a human into a monster. And from a certain point of fiew, a Zombie is the perfect metaphor for a life form which is extremely r selected. )

Pitcrew
Pitcrew
6 years ago

Imagine what the fall of Rome would have been like if nukes existed. That’s what we are heading into.

Kharmii
Kharmii
6 years ago

Wrote a story about twincest once. Two psychic borderline cuddlefish twins banged each other in private but carefully kept it to themselves around people who regarded them with a nervous, violent tension. One person tried to beat them to death because they weren’t good enough at hiding their weirdness. It was projection, as there are things about myself that might come across too novel for a k-minded person.

The problem now is that things are so far left/rabbity that people who should live in fear of others finding out about their idiosyncrasies can now be open about every perversion, yet I go to work and get the lowest form of worthless dirtbags viewing me with nervous violent tension because I dare speak out against their values. IE: How they buy LINK cards at the corner gas station, commit disability fraud to get out of working winters, have an ‘honor among thieves’ attitude about snitching, etc. Some have tried to put me in harmful situations.

I dream of the day when we could have controlled k-brutality against evil people. I’d rather live my life in constant fear of not passing as normal enough, just so long as the degenerates and stomach worms could be purged from our society, and good people could live their lives free to speak out against evil acts.

Bob
Bob
6 years ago

There’s actually a movie about r/K!…

Have you ever watched Idiocracy? If you didn’t, you must. It is hilarious. Depressing, too… but mostly hilarious. Here is a fabulous excerpt:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-N9nVLXMhPc

Duke Norfolk
Reply to  Bob
6 years ago

Yes, it’s very funny and apt. But watching beyond the first 10-20 minutes is a complete waste of time. IOW the set up is the funny part, the rest of the movie is stupid and worthless. I wish I had that time back.

MB
MB
6 years ago

No, historians told us exactly how bad it got, it’s just that later generations, especially in the 20th century, refused to believe them.
We still have all these scandalous stories about Tiberius, Nero, Caligula, and several later emperors, of their depravity, tortures, and murders, but “critical” 18th-20th century historians started dismissing them as absurd rumors and gossip, unsupported by evidence and propagated by envious members of the aristocratic class and by Christians besmirching the glories of Classical Pagan civilization.
That was also the time when skeptical historians and archaeologists dismissed pretty much every other classical source, from Herodotus to Thucydides to the Bible, as half-myth and half-fabulation and in any case as unsupported by evidence.
This polemical reevaluation was probably started a couple of centuries earlier by Gibbons and his famously independent-minded contemporaries, who were skeptical of the received wisdom concerning Classical Antiquity and the origins of the Church, since it was filtered through Christian Church-related sources.
Before the 1500s, Christian and Christian-transmitted sources describing in lurid detail the depravity of Antiquity, especially that of the Roman Empire, were accepted as literally true. Everyone was aware of the lesson this history provided.
One reason for the reevaluation that occurred in the 1500s was, likely, that admitting the veracity of these stories immediately implies that
1. Christianity is based on a large kernel of truth and provides a surprisingly accurate view of the world.
2. The Bible and other ancient sources depict, correctly insofar as we can tell, true historical events that actually happened.
3. People are fallen and not naturally good; Christianity and the Church are not the source of their corruption, but rather, if anything, the cure to it.
Etc., etc..
You cannot make one understand when his livelihood depends on not understanding.
However, recent archeological finds seem to corroborate the ancient stories (e.g. Caesar’s expedition to Gaul, Romans’ massive expeditions into Germania, “lost tribes” of Israel). Most details that can be practically confirmed have been confirmed and, as a rule, no real evidence to the contrary has been found.
And stories that made no sense 100 years ago, like Heliogabalus wanting to be a woman or Caligula making his horse a senator, seem more and more plausible as time goes by.
I’m not really looking forward to fully understanding what the ancients “really” meant in some obscure passages (which would have been obvious to the early medieval copyists who thought they were important enough to preserve), but have a hunch that we may gain a fairly practical understanding, a couple of decades down the road.

Dave
Dave
6 years ago

“How did it cross this gulf of evolution created by post-scarcity, and not end up spontaneously being devolved by the imbeciles and degenerates within its population?”

Perhaps the reason we see no evidence of ET civilizations is that none of them have yet solved this problem. It might be one of those engineering problems, like small-scale self-sustaining nuclear fusion, that has no solution.

tesla
tesla
6 years ago

Give it five years and it will be a human rights violation to dissallow “twincests” to marry and subsequently bring up children.
This seems to be the modern way, push the boundaries of degeneracy, but then want to further their genes and way of life into a new generation. Its not just allowing human freedoms, its gene wars.

trackback
6 years ago

[…] without further comment: The NPR post screenshotted, and a post by Anonymous Conservative which, despite the date, does NOT appear to be an April Fools […]