The Final Solution - Yale prof suggests elderly should just engage in mass suicide

Joined
Aug 31, 2007
Messages
117,591
That is the primary difference The West has over all other cultures and ethnicities on the planet.

The Christian idea that all men are created in the image of God, that all men have universal basic rights and that all men have worth, even if wretched sinners.

And that is what we losing.

And the true Final Solution is what the globalist demons have in store for us.

The queeers told you they were not "coming for your kids" and now we know, all along, they were.

The banksters told you they were not "coming for your jobs and money" and now we know, all along, they were.

The migrant invaders told you they were not "coming to replace you" and now we know, all long, they were.

The ruling class globalist elites are now telling you, "we are not coming to exterminate you in a global Final Solution".

Are you going to do anything about it, or die?




‘The Only Solution:’ Yale Prof Suggests Mass Suicide for Elderly in Japan

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2023...f-suggests-mass-suicide-for-elderly-in-japan/

ALANA MASTRANGELO 13 Feb 2023

Yale University professor Yusuke Narita is suggesting mass suicide for elderly people in Japan, according to a report by the New York Times. The professor is now backtracking, claiming that his in-depth discussion of mass suicide is “an abstract metaphor.”

“I feel like the only solution is pretty clear,” Narita, an assistant professor of economics at Yale. “In the end, isn’t it mass suicide and mass ‘seppuku’ of the elderly?”

Seppuku refers to “an act of ritual disembowelment,” noted the New York Times, which also described the Yale professor as an individual who has “taken on the question of how to deal with the burdens of Japan’s rapidly aging society.”

Last year, after being asked to elaborate on his mass suicide ideas, Narita suggested it could be a “good thing” to “work hard toward creating a society” like the one depicted in the 2019 horror film Midsommar, in which a Swedish cult has elderly members of its community commit suicide by jumping off a cliff.

“Whether that’s a good thing or not, that’s a more difficult question to answer,” the Ivy League professor said. “So if you think that’s good, then maybe you can work hard toward creating a society like that.”

When it comes to euthanasia, Narita has suggested “the possibility of making it mandatory in the future.”

After facing some backlash, the 37-year-old professor said his comments were “taken out of context,” and that he was mainly addressing a growing effort to push seniors out of leadership in business and politics in order to make room for younger generations.

While not everyone agrees with Narita’s remarks about mass suicide for the elderly, he has garnered hundreds of thousands of followers on social media in Japan, many of whom are frustrated young people who think their economic success is being hindered by older generations in their society, NYT pointed out.

As the Yale professor grows more popular, he has appeared on magazine covers, comedy shows, in an advertisement for energy drinks, and has even “spawned an imitator” on the China-owned TikTok app, the report added.

In response to pushback, Narita claimed that he was using the phrases “mass suicide” and “mass seppuku” as “an abstract metaphor.”

“I should have been more careful about their potential negative connotations,” the Yale professor said. “After some self-reflection, I stopped using the words last year.”

But columnist Masato Fujisaki argued in Newsweek Japan that Narita’s comments “should not be easily taken as a ‘metaphor,'” adding that the professor’s fans are people “who think that old people should just die already and social welfare should be cut.”

Not everyone, however, agrees with Fujisaki’s assessment.

Josh Angrist, one of Narita’s doctoral supervisors at MIT, referred to his former student as a “talented scholar” with an “offbeat sense of humor.”

“I would like to see Yusuke continue a very promising career as a scholar,” Angrist said. “So my main concern in a case like his is that he’s being distracted by other things, and that’s kind of a shame.”
 
How so?

“Somenody calling for mass killing olds & press printing it & spreading it

& any good healthy minds, still left..... having to read it

Great psyop.
 
Surprised the professor didn’t mention they should be fully vaccinated first before they take their lives.
 
After facing some backlash, the 37-year-old professor said his comments were “taken out of context,” and that he was mainly addressing a growing effort to push seniors out of leadership in business and politics in order to make room for younger generations.
Ah yes the good old "I never said that it was taken out of context" self defense.
 
...
Last year, after being asked to elaborate on his mass suicide ideas, Narita suggested it could be a “good thing” to “work hard toward creating a society” like the one depicted in the 2019 horror film Midsommar, in which a Swedish cult has elderly members of its community commit suicide by jumping off a cliff.

“Whether that’s a good thing or not, that’s a more difficult question to answer,” the Ivy League professor said. “So if you think that’s good, then maybe you can work hard toward creating a society like that.”

When it comes to euthanasia, Narita has suggested “the possibility of making it mandatory in the future.”
...

 
‘Mass Suicide… of the Elderly’ Is Being Proposed and Accepted

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...f-the-elderly-is-being-proposed-and-accepted/

JOHN NOLTE 14 Feb 2023

Yusuke Narita, a 37-year-old economics professor at Yale, says the solution for Japan’s population problem is “mass suicide and mass ‘seppuku” of the elderly.

He has also said of euthanasia that the “possibility of making it mandatory in the future [will] come up in discussion.”

Japan’s population problem is what Breitbart’s John Hayward described as a “demographic death spiral:”

[Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio] noted on Monday that births in Japan fell below 800,000 in 2022, reaching that landmark of decline fully eight years ahead of projections. As with other wealthy nations, this will result in a shortage of workers, and a shortage of young taxpayers to cover the cost of retirement and medical care for the elderly.



“Our nation is on the cusp of whether it can maintain its societal functions. It is now or never when it comes to policies regarding births and child-rearing – it is an issue that simply cannot wait any longer,” Kishida said.

So what’s this Yale professor’s solution to this problem? One way or another, old people have to die. Either the elderly will do the right thing and start committing mass suicide, or *ahem* the “possibility of making it mandatory in the future [will] come up in discussion.”

China is feeling the same population strain as is the United States. Part of the problem is cultural. The American culture has transformed into something so prosperous that you can delay adolescence until you die. Additionally, people do not feel the societal pressure to have a family anymore. In fact, the opposite is happening. Left-wing feminists basically describe child-rearing as slavery, and the lying environmentalists claim overpopulation (which is not a problem) is killing the planet.


Then there’s idiotic programs like Social Security and Medicare. Instead of making every American responsible for ensuring their own retirement, the government ensures—which means the taxpayers ensure it. Between the population decrease and people living longer, there just aren’t enough young people paying taxes to sustain these programs. Worse still, these programs are insanely popular, so even basic reforms are out of the question.

So what do monsters like this Yale professor suggest? Does he suggest we incentivize having children? Nope. Does he suggest we reform entitlements? Nope. Instead, he goes right to the mass slaughter of the elderly.

Welcome to the leftist utopia. Soylent Green meets Logan’s Run, where what were cautionary tales are blueprints for the future.

Naturally, butchering the inconvenient elderly is catching on among the godless:

While he is virtually unknown even in academic circles in the United States, his extreme positions have helped him gain hundreds of thousands of followers on social media in Japan among frustrated youths who believe their economic progress has been held back by a gerontocratic society.

People are embracing and accepting this idea:

Appearing frequently on Japanese online shows in T-shirts, hoodies or casual jackets, and wearing signature eyeglasses with one round and one square lens, Dr. Narita leans into his Ivy League pedigree as he fosters a nerdy shock jock impression. He is among a few Japanese provocateurs who have found an eager audience by gleefully breaching social taboos. His Twitter bio: “The things you’re told you’re not allowed to say are usually true.”

But.

Dr. Narita, 37, said that his statements had been “taken out of context,” and that he was mainly addressing a growing effort to push the most senior people out of leadership positions in business and politics — to make room for younger generations. Nevertheless, with his comments on euthanasia and social security, he has pushed the hottest button in Japan.

But they always say that, don’t they? It’s like Critical Race Theory. The left claims no one is teaching it and then howls when something no one is teaching is banned.

As our culture becomes more and more prosperous, as we become a Western Civilization where the Holy Trinity perverts into 1) internet porn, 2) nerd culture, and 3) marijuana, as we become a civilization where you can work at a grocery store, rent a small apartment, hook up to the Internet, get high, and confuse distraction with fulfillment, old people feel less necessary–like they are in the way instead of what they are: a font of wisdom and knowledge, those who have paid their dues, made their mistakes, and have something to pass along. Additionally, we become better human beings, more empathetic, patient, and compassionate, caring for our elderly friends and relatives. In every way, the elderly are good for society and for our own souls.

Dr. Narita now says, “I should have been more careful about their potential negative connotations. After some self-reflection, I stopped using the words [“mass suicide” and “mass seppuku”] last year.”

Yeah, for now.


Here in America, nearly ten years ago, one of the architects of Obamacare said it was selfish for people to live past the age of 75. The economic burden was just too much of a strain on the healthcare system.

Canada has already red-lined their demonic euthanasia machine.

These are the same people pushing trans-mutilations and drag queens on our kids. Do you honestly believe they aren’t heart attack-serious about slaughtering the elderly in the name of “compassion” and “equity?”
 
A patient recently was telling me that a dear friend recently transitioned in Canada and went on to tell me that it was a beautiful process. I listened with professional attentiveness as I realized that she wasn't talking about sexual identity. When she mentioned that Canada is much more advanced than us, I asked, "do you mean she..." I paused.

Transitioning in this case meant assisted suicide and transitioning to the next world.

I was an atheist for 15 years. I never thought that I would say this back then, but I am really concerned for the souls of those around me. They use these new words to describe death and mutilation. They put on peaceful faces and speak in glowing terms, but I can see in their eyes that they are suffering and know this is wrong, but to say this, I know that they will release that anger on me, so I keep quiet. It keeps the peace, but I don't know how long. People look like they are about to detonate.
 
I was once on a forum discussing the fake issue "climate change." There were, of course, paid trolls on there. One loser kept rejoicing in the idea that all the oldsters will soon die and all their alarmists would make everything right.
 
A patient recently...

Are you in the medical business? After much experience (unwanted) in the death and dying industry, I find the hyperbole that occurs in the political spectrum to be absurd. One needs look no further than "comfort care" to know that there are many things that happen in the real world that can both make sense, and be atrocious at the same time. Anyone who believes that "euthanasia" does not occur daily, on a regular basis, in America, and in every society is delusional.
 
ETA: TLDR: I worry that instead of death panels we will have transitioning (to the next life) panels.

Are you in the medical business? After much experience (unwanted) in the death and dying industry, I find the hyperbole that occurs in the political spectrum to be absurd. One needs look no further than "comfort care" to know that there are many things that happen in the real world that can both make sense, and be atrocious at the same time. Anyone who believes that "euthanasia" does not occur daily, on a regular basis, in America, and in every society is delusional.

I was a CNA in hospice care years ago. Basically I changed diapers and fed older people who couldn't even lift a spoon. I almost quit the first day when I went into the dining hall. I never imagined life could drag on for people before finally ending. There is a line between artificially ending a life and artificially extending a life when the spirit has left the body. I am not delusional about the realiies. It was quite soul crushing to work there for 2 years. Me personally, I bluntly told my family that I prefer to go the way Lemmy Killmiester went. I am not going under medical care until I have to be wheeled in against my will.

I am currently in a more holistic form of health care far from end of life care. I much prefer it and have great respect for those in the medical field.

My critique that you responded to is the changing of terms that is taking place influenced by recent wokism. To me it's everything from Canada allowing transistioning (assisted suicide) for seemingly anything to gender transitioning. The less impactful words hide the reality of ones actions not just in death. In a social situation, I heard someone describe her abortion as "releasing the spirit back to the universe." Although as she talked she finally did say that it hurt giving it up and I could tell the veneer of new-agey words were wearing off and the reality of the abortion was hitting her as she could no longer get pregnant and now wanted a child-- that came out as she drank wine. Injuries occur to those transisitioning genders. People get injured on the job as they loose muscle strength due to estradiol, or they have radical changes of emotional responses due to sudden fluctuations of artificial hormones and they were never told of the potential adverse side effects or regrets. It goes way beyond all this. This is just the latest and most noticeable.

I don't judge people. They have my compassion. Stuff is sold to us everyday. There are a lot of people suffering these days under the nice sounding words, and society will crash when that bandage is ripped away when the reality can't be ignored anymore.


 
Last edited:
The medical tyranny is ramping up in full force. Time to stay out of their system as much as possible.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RJB
Back
Top