Anonymous ID: f704cb May 3, 2020, 9:48 a.m. No.9011328   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9011205

This is straight out of Aldous Huxleys Brave New World !

 

the DNA samples are frequently tucked away for future use unrelated to the purposes of the screening… as it stands now, babies’ DNA may be used in federally funded research without parents’ consent or even notification. When all babies’ DNA is stored forever and accessible to whoever has the most money or political clout, no one’s most fundamental privacy is secure.

https://t.co/Y9eEZPQ5CQ — The Federalist (@FDRLST) May 1, 2020

 

In the non-fiction BNW ' Revisited ' book we find this. - ( can anons say "master race" cookbook by cabal ? )

 

Quantity, Quality, Morality

In the Brave New World of my fantasy eugenics and dysgenics were practiced systematically. In one set of bottles biologically superior ova, fertilized by biologi­cally superior sperm, were given the best possible pre­natal treatment and were finally decanted as Betas, Alphas and even Alpha Pluses. In another, much more numerous set of bottles, biologically inferior ova, ferti­lized by biologically inferior sperm, were subjected to the Bokanovsky Process (ninety-six identical twins out of a single egg) and treated prenatally with alco­hol and other protein poisons. The creatures finally decanted were almost subhuman; but they were capa­ble of performing unskilled work and, when properly conditioned, detensioned by free and frequent access to the opposite sex, constantly distracted by gratuitous entertainment and reinforced in their good behavior patterns by daily doses of soma, could be counted on to give no trouble to their superiors. '

Anonymous ID: f704cb May 3, 2020, 10 a.m. No.9011449   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9011388

FREEDOM slips away , Q

 

Brave New World presents a fanciful and somewhat ribald picture of a society, in which the attempt to re­create human beings in the likeness of termites has been pushed almost to the limits of the possible. That we are being propelled in the direction of Brave New World is obvious. But no less obvious is the fact that we can, if we so desire, refuse to co-operate with the blind forces that are propelling us. For the moment, however, the wish to resist does not seem to be very strong or very widespread. As Mr. William Whyte has shown in his remarkable book, The Organization Man, a new Social Ethic is replacing our traditional ethical system – the system in which the individual is primary. The key words in this Social Ethic are "adjustment," "adaptation," "socially orientated behavior," "belongingness," "acquisition of social skills," "team work," "group living," "group loyalty," "group dynamics," "group thinking," "group creativ­ity." Its basic assumption is that the social whole has greater worth and significance than its individual parts