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AND THEN
Here are the major links:
Here are the papers.
Here are the summaries.
Here is the source code:
Source code for kinship and fertility part 1
Source code for kinship and fertility part 2
Source code for kinship and fertility part 3
Source code for kinship and fertility part 4
I have begun putting up talks on YouTube
YouTube links
YouTube video scripts March 6, 2018 and updates expected.
Here you may begin looking for Wild Surmise, beginning with wildsurmises.com.
Below are articles:
Open letter to Alexey Komov June 4, 2019

Movie 50 Prophesy 5 War
The movie “2001 – A Space Odyssey” has some oddities.  When I saw it, there was a moment during a space trip to Jupiter when a friend leaned over and whispered, “They wouldn’t fly past stars on the way to Jupiter.”  Sure enough, you could see stars drifting past behind the craft.  On the other hand, there is an early scene in which some creatures that look like something between ape and human, that looked like humans in ape suits of course, attacked another band and bashed them on the heads with bone clubs.  I don’t have a reference here, but I think I recall that if you took all the bones that have ever been found that belonged to creatures more closely akin to humans than are chimpanzees, you could put all the bones in the back of a pickup truck.  It’s no surprise that there are gaps in the fossile record.  The surprising thing is that we have any such bones at all.  And if memory serves, if you took all those skulls and examined them you would find that more than half had suffered skull fractures.  On that point the movie was right.   Our chimpanzee cousins are no better.  It is well reported that a band of chimpanzees that grows past a certain size will eventually break in two.  Subsequently the members of one band will kill all of the members of the other band.  So you cannot define humans as the beasts that make war.
We do it a lot.
I have already mentioned the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, three of which include war.  The other is about food prices.  So the New Testament is heavy with war. 
There is lots of war in the Old Testament.  Here is where Joshua has conquered Jericho.  Try no to vomit. 

Joshua 6:21-27 King James Version (KJV)

21 And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, young and old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword.

Joshua only spares one person:

22 But Joshua had said unto the two men that had spied out the country, Go into the harlot's house, and bring out thence the woman, and all that she hath, as ye sware unto her.
23 And the young men that were spies went in, and brought out Rahab, and her father, and her mother, and her brethren, and all that she had; and they brought out all her kindred, and left them without the camp of Israel.
24 And they burnt the city with fire, and all that was therein: only the silver, and the gold, and the vessels of brass and of iron, they put into the treasury of the house of the Lord.
25 And Joshua saved Rahab the harlot alive, and her father's household, and all that she had; and she dwelleth in Israel even unto this day; because she hid the messengers, which Joshua sent to spy out Jericho.
26 And Joshua adjured them at that time, saying, Cursed be the man before the Lord, that riseth up and buildeth this city Jericho: he shall lay the foundation thereof in his firstborn, and in his youngest son shall he set up the gates of it.
27 So the Lord was with Joshua; and his fame was noised throughout all the country.
King James Version (KJV)

If anybody deserved to be punished, it was Rahab, who betrayed her country.  Now those spies escaped because Rahab lowered them over the wall with a purple rope.  Of course, purple means king, so that rope had something to do with the king.  It’s plausible that the king or Rahab was getting amusement out of being tied up or tying up the other. 

Now Jericho had been defeated because the walls had fallen down by magical seeming means.  So we are once more faced with dividing story from back story.  The purple robe is sufficiently suggestive to sound true; it’s just the sort of detail that adds credence.  But there’s the thing about the walls.  Jericho is known.  It had a wall, possibly the first city wall ever built.  And it’s still there, at least in part.  So the tumbling walls sound like back story, but back story to a likely story of hideous genocide. 
You kind find opinion that it was just of God to order the genocide because all the people in Canaan were sinners.  Let me give it to you straight.  War is the greatest sin.  I cannot accept all the horrors of the Old Testament as good.  I interpret it only in light of the New Testament, and even then with a large dose of skepticism as you see. 
I see war as the greatest sin.  Why I am able to analyze it but am not able to analyze Rotherham I cannot say.  I’d put the events in that unhappy town very close in evil to war.
If you like, feel free to dismiss my scriptural reference.  Let’s go to bare history.  The first history book was written by a man named Herodotus and the second by Thucydides.  Both are books about wars.  In fact, just about all of history is the history of wars.  We humans do not seem to be able to get our fill of it.  
Roman history is saturated with war.  Ditto Dark Ages and Middle Ages.  The rationale in Rome tended to be that some victim country had broken a promise.  Later it seems to have been powerful people starting wars for sport.  The rationale changes; the wars remain.
The first American War of Secession – it wasn’t really a revolution of course – did seem to accomplish a purpose.  It established the first powerful republic, marred though it was by slavery in some states and a recent history or witch trials.  And now with not titled nobility to start their wars, there was the opportunity for peace.  Of course, there was not yet peace.  Wars against the Indians, the natives, had been going on for a long time and continued until the Seminoles signed a treaty with – wait for it – Harry Truman.  
Aside from that, and skipping things like the US seizing land from Mexico, the next really big one was the second American War of secession.  There was a good spinoff from that one; we stopped having slaves.  And sure, slavery is a sin for the slave “owner.”  But it is not as great a sin as war.  The South of course had the absolute right to leave.  The constitution is quite clear.  Basically, “If we haven’t’ covered it, it’s the right of the people and the states.”  Secession is not mentioned.  Yet there are still people who think rather will of Mr. Lincoln, who started this illegal war on his own.  Odd.  At one point he suspended habeas corpus.  It means, “Rule of law;” look it up.  He established the first death camp called Camp Douglas.  Under his direction if a Black man was captured fighting for his country, he was to be shot dead.  Funny thing about sin; once you get started it’s hard to stop.
US wars continued.  There are those who said we didn’t have to get into WW I, but we did.  My mother said we didn’t have to get into WW II; I’ll let you judge that one.  The Korean war was fought with what appeared to be a legitimate concern the Russian communism was going to take over the world and snuff out freedom.  I’m sure there are those who will say a society dies from within, that the academics were supportive of communism even during the height of Stalin’s crimes and were somehow putting pressures on students to turn their direction.  I was in a liberal college at that time and remember getting my back up and refusing to have my beliefs changed.  And yet I cannot remember anything anybody ever did to make me feel that way.  Nonetheless, even if societies die from within, we are all to eager to make them change by war. 
Politicians are easier to sniff out.  The Vietnam war was based on the Gulf of Tonkin lie.  Gulf War One was caused by us inviting Husain to invade     , to which was added the lie that Iraqi soldiers were throwing babies out in incubators and letting them die on the floor.  Gulf War Two was based on the lie of Weapons of Mass Destruction.  Remember how many nations we subverted in that part of the world.  I pass over wars we started in the Caribbean and Central America. Don’t get me started on what Africans have done to each other.  The rational now tends to be resources or the petro-dollar or profit for the mega-corporations.  But the rationales change so often while war is so abiding that I am not persuaded by any of them.  Oh yes, there are the piteous howls of those who want a war with Iran.
You see what I mean: war everywhere, costly, murderous, sinful, hideous, pointless, deadly wars.  And we have but to elect officials who don’t do it. 
Rather than try to sort out the cause just now, let’s look at the effect the real effect, the fertility issue. 
As you know, or should know – if you don’t, go to http://nobabies.net/movie%20scripts.html and read the first 32 scripts.  It will be well worth your effort since it is the most important thing you will ever learn.  You will find proof by at least four totally different lines of evidence, each massively supported by numbers. – fertility depends on kinship of a couple and among their parents and NOTHING ELSE. 
Take a simple example.  In Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, a boat is making its way down a river through an African jungle.  There are problems, but one thing does not trouble the narrator.  The crew will not desert.  They know full well that if they did, they would be found and, being homeless wanderers, they would be killed. 
In that environment, one does not leave one’s village.  Thus the mating pool is restricted, and fertility is maintained.  It might be instinct or it might be a random behavior by which some societies survive while others die out.  I hope it’s not instinct.  If it’s just an adaptive behavior, people can learn. 
All right, ancient custom is to shun outsiders.  That works to something like ten generations out.  PAST THAT IT’S IRRELEVANT.  It doesn’t matter if its 11 generations or thousands.  The pre-zygotic mechanism saturates while the post-zygotic mechanism can only reach its maximum power after accumulating for a few generations.  So given the nudge of clinging to family, humans figure if a little is important a lot is more important.  It isn’t.  Well it isn’t to nature, but socially people look at outsiders and say, “Oh know.  Worse than our worst nightmares.  Let’s have wars and racism and laws.”  Not only do wars cause the obvious harm, they are an occasion for the young men – mostly – to go out and meet women outside their family circle.  The loss of human life goes on for generations, worse than battle deaths, worse then slaughtered civilians, worse than the terrible emotional burden of having tried to kill people.  That is an aspect of war none realize.
There are few voices in politics willing to challenge the war-minded consensus, fewer in the corporate media.  There are a few in the independent YouTube community.  I particularly like Jimmy Dore, The Last American Vagabond, Steve Molyneux and Florida Marquis.  They seem regularly to speak against war.  It is gratifying to have their voices both for the sake of those who hear and for the sake of the hint that we are not totally at the mercy of an instinct for war. 
I would be happier if people generally realized that war is a sin, and anybody who promotes war is effectively a tool of Satan, whether they think they believe in Satan or not. At all events, they are worshiping Satan. I don't believe in Satan, but I do think that if you worship something you probably believe in it or will believe in it.

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