I have promised Eirik to revisit his vast book on neo-barbarism monthly. So here it is, another reason why Eirik—who cannot write under his real name for fear of persecution—will hopefully get this book in print. 36 pages in we are still in the introduction discussing the metaphysics and physics of cultural collapse. Unfortunately Eirik points out proof that aboriginal men are vicious to their women, which is puzzling, since we in the West understand that spousal abuse is the exclusive province of white men.
Below is a quote from page 36 of this amazingly detailed, dark document on the failing state of the human condition in the Western World, with associated footnotes.
“In Australia, Aboriginal women are 80 times more likely to be hospitalized for assault and injury than women in the rest of the population. According to one mainstream article: “[m]any of the assaults are perpetrated by the women’s husbands or partners and include being raped with wooden or metal objects, or being murdered by being repeatedly punched and struck with a saucepan, stones, a wheel rim and a wheel brace.” Aboriginal women have also been raped by burning fire sticks. The issue of violence against Aboriginal women and children was raised by Aboriginal Northern Territory MP Bess Price, who has said that she has been “routinely attacked” and “obscenely insulted” by the “progressive left and its comfortably middle class urban Indigenous supporters.” This is all part of an enormously complex social problem, with no easy solution, arising from a fundamental clash of cultures."
The footnote citations are at the end of this review.
I highly recommend Eirik’s work and am hoping he will write something for this site about his experiences in a western nation that we in the U.S. don’t hear a lot from in terms of cultural collapse.
Footnotes
“Violence against Aboriginal Women 80 Times Worse,” June 10, 2013, at
.
As above. See further: T. Thomas, “ ‘Yabbered’ to Death – Part I,” Quadrant, May 6, 2013, at
; Stephanie Jarrett, Liberating Aboriginal People from Violence, (Connor Court, Ballan, 2013); P. Sutton, The Politics of Suffering, (Melbourne University Publishing, Carlton, 2011).