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Subject: (read)Top Scientist Advocates Mas* Culling 90 percent Of Human Population
Replies: 25 Views: 10002

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:55:05
A top scientist gave a speech to the Texas Academy of Science last month in which he advocated the need to exterminate 90 of the population through the airborne Ebola virus. Dr. Eric R. Pianka's chilling comments, and their enthusiastic reception again underscore the elite's agenda to enact horrifying measures of population control *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:55:33
Pianka's speech was ordered to be kept off the record before it began as cameras were turned away and hundreds of students, scientists and professors sat in attendance. Saying the public was not ready to hear the information presented, Pianka began by exclaiming, “We're no better than bacteria!”, as he jumped into a doomsday Malthusian rant about overpopulation destroying the earth *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:55:58
Standing in front of a slide of human skulls, Pianka gleefully advocated airborne ebola as his preferred method of exterminating the necessary 90 of humans, choosing it over AIDS because of its faster kill period. Ebola victims suffer the most tortuous deaths imaginable as the virus kills by liquefying the internal organs. The body literally dissolves as the victim writhes in pain bleeding from every orifice. Pianka then cited the Peak Oil fraud as another reason to initiate global genocide. “And the fossil fuels are running out,” he said, “so I think we may have to cut back to two billion, which would be about one-third as many people.” *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:56:12
Later, the scientist welcomed the potential devastation of bird flu and spoke glowingly of China's enforced one child policy, before zestfully commenting, “We need to sterilize everybody on the Earth.” At the end of Pianka's speech the audience erupted not to a chorus of boos and hisses but to a raucous reception of applause and cheers as audience members clambered to get close to the scientist to ask him follow up questions. Pianka was later presented with a distinguished scientist award by the Academy. Pianka is no crackpot. He has given lectures to prestigious universities worldwide *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:56:35
One horrified observer was able to make notes on the speech and our gratitude goes to Forrest M. Mims for bringing this sickening display to the attention of the world. Throughout history elites have invented justification for barbaric practices as a cover for their true agenda of absolute power and control over populations. Up until the 19th century, the transatlantic slave trade was justified by saying that the practice was biblical and therefore morally redeemable in nature, despite the fact that no such bible passage exists. From 1932 until 1972, the Tuskegee Study Group (pictured below) deliberately infected poor black communities in Alabama with syphilis without their consent and withheld treatment as the diseased rampaged through the town killing families. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:56:58
Pianka's doomsday warning of the population bomb, for which Mims claims he presented no evidence whatsoever, is complete pseudo-science. Populations in developed countries are declining and only in third world countries is it expanding dramatically. Industrialization itself levels out population trends and even despite this world population models routinely show that the earth's population will level out at 9 billion in 2050 and slowly decline after that. 'The population of the most developed countries will remain virtually unchanged at 1.2 billion until 2050,' states a United Nations report. Conservation International's own study revealed that 46 of the earth's surface was an untouched wilderness, that is land areas not including sea. It is commonly accepted that the entire world population could all fit into the state of Texas and each have an acre of their own land. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:57:16
Think about the magnitude of Pianka's statements. He wants to kill nine out of every ten members of your family and he wants to kill them in one of the most painful and agonizing ways imaginable. If Pianka, or 'The Lizard Man' as he likes to be called, is so vehement in the necessity of culling the human population will he step forward to be the first one in line? Will he sacrifice his children for the so-called greater good of the planet? We somehow doubt it. Will the students who so enthusiastically greeted his ideas go home and kill themselves for the cause if it is so righteous? It was noted how Pianka presented his argument with the kind of glee that you would see in a demented serial killer before dispatching his victim. This is an attitude we have encountered again and again. To discuss killing 90 of the world's population via a horrific plague is sick enough within itself but you would at least expect its advocates to be serious and sober in their approach to the subject. The opposite seems to be the case, where the subject is aired in a context of light-hearted lip-smacking and hand-rubbing as if the individual was about to sink his teeth into a T-bone steak *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:57:47
This window gives us a clear view of exactly why these deranged s encompass this ideology. They love death and their lives are motivated by dark influences very different to you or I. In the 21st century the elite are concerned that from over 6 billion people might spring a new elite to challenge their stranglehold on the reigns of power. This is one reason for desire to cull the population down to a manageable level. Another is control over the behavior of the existing serfs and herding them like cattle into the slaughter house. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:58:44
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monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:59:05
As we have documented, members of the elite are quite open in their feverish l*st to commit mass murder and ethnic cleansing. In the foreword to his biography If I Were An Animal, Prince Philip wrote, 'In the event that I am reincarnated, I would like to return as a deadly virus, in order to contribute something to solve overpopulation.' National Security Memo 200, dated April 24, 1974, and titled 'Implications of world wide population growth for U.S. security & overseas interests,' says: 'Dr. Henry Kissinger proposed in his memorandum to the NSC that 'depopulation should be the highest priority of U.S. foreign policy towards the Third World.' He quoted reasons of national security, and because `(t)he U.S. economy will require large and increasing amounts of minerals from abroad, especially from less-developed countries ... Wherever a lessening of population can increase the prospects for such stability, population policy becomes relevant to resources, supplies and to the economic interests of U.S.' *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 5:59:21
Kissinger prepared a depopulation manifesto for President Jimmy Carter called 'Global 2000' which detailed using food as a weapon to depopulate the third world. One of the most chilling admissions of deadly intent came from the lips of the late Jacques Cousteau, the sainted environmental icon. In an interview with the UNESCO Courier for November 1991 the famed oceanographer said: 'The damage people cause to the planet is a function of demographics — it is equal to the degree of development. One American burdens the earth much more than twenty Bangaladeshes. The damage is directly linked to consumption. Our society is turning toward more and needless consumption. It is a vicious circle that I compare to cancer....' *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:00:18
020406coust.jpg *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:00:51
'This is a terrible thing to say. In order to stabilize world population, we must eliminate 350,000 people per day. It is a horrible thing to say, but it’s just as bad not to say it.' The Melbourne Age reported on recently uncovered documents detailing Nobel Peace Prize winning microbiologist Sir Macfarlane Burnet's plan to help the Australian government develop biological weapons for use against Indonesia and other 'overpopulated' countries of South-East Asia. Pianka's ideology is in the same league as *itler, Pol Pot, and the rest of history's despots who advocated mass extermination and had the temerity to dress it up in a 'noble' Straussian facade. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:01:20
Ebola-like virus killing fish in Great Lakes - April 29/07 A deadly Ebola-like virus is killing fish of all types in the Great Lakes, a development some scientists fear could trigger disaster for the USA's freshwater fish. Because of a lack of genetic resistance to viral hemorrhagic septicemia, fish populations could be damaged in the same way the smallpox virus struck Native Americans and Dutch elm disease decimated elm trees, says Jim Winton, chief of fish health at the U.S. Geological Survey in Seattle. The disease has been found in Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, the St. Lawrence Seaway, the Niagara River and an inland lake in New York. The aggressive virus, which causes fish to hemorrhage, was unexpectedly found in the Great Lakes in 2005. Last year, it resulted in large fish kills that struck at least 20 species. Scientists are watching to see whether the disease returns in mid-May when water in the lakes warms to temperatures at which the virus attacks. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:01:49
Jamie Mobley / The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise | April 3 2006 AUSTIN -- A University of Texas professor says the Earth would be better off with 90 percent of the human population dead. 'Every one of you who gets to survive has to bury nine,' Eric Pianka cautioned students and guests at St. Edward's University on Friday. Pianka's words are part of what he calls his 'doomsday talk' - a 45-minute presentation outlining humanity's ecological misdeeds and Pianka's predictions about how nature, or perhaps humans themselves, will exterminate all but a fraction of civilization. Though his statements are admittedly bold, he's not without abundant advocates. But what may set this revered biologist apart from other doomsday soothsayers is this: Humanity's collapse is a notion he embraces. Indeed, his words deal, very literally, on a life-and-death scale, yet he smiles and jokes candidly throughout the lecture. Disseminating a message many would call morbid, Pianka's warnings are centered upon awareness rather than fear. 'This is really an exciting time,' he said Friday amid warnings of apocalypse, destruction and disease. Only minutes earlier he declared, 'Death. This is what awaits us all. Death.' Reflecting on the so-called Ancient Chinese Curse, 'May you live in interesting times,' he wore, surprisingly, a smile. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:02:12
So what's at the heart of Pianka's claim? 6.5 billion humans is too many. In his estimation, 'We've grown fat, apathetic and miserable,' all the while leaving the planet parched. The solution? A 90 percent reduction. That's 5.8 billion lives - lives he says are turning the planet into 'fat, human biomass.' He points to an 85 percent swell in the population during the last 25 years and insists civilization is on the brink of its downfall - likely at the hand of widespread disease. '[Disease] will control the scourge of humanity,' Pianka said. 'We're looking forward to a huge collapse.' But don't tell local 'citizen scientist' Forrest Mims to quietly swa11ow Pianka's call to awareness. Mims says it's an 'abhorrent death wish' and contends he has 'no choice but to take a stand.' Mims attended the educator's doomsday presentation at the Texas Academy of Science's annual meeting March 2-4. There, the organization honored Pianka as its 2006 Distinguished Texas Scientist - another issue Mims vocally opposes. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:02:32
This guy is a loose cannon to believe that worldwide genocide is the only answer,' said Mims, who filed two formal petitions with the academy following the meeting. Joining the crusade, James Pitts, who recieved a Ph.D. in physics from UT-Austin, became the second to publicly chastise Pianka when he filed a complaint Sa ay with the UT board of regents. He insists a state university is no place to disseminate such views. He writes: 'Pianka's message does not fall within the realm of his professional competence as a biologist, because it is a normative claim, not a descriptive one. Pianka is encouraged to use his ecological expertise to predict the likely consequences of certain technological and reproductive strategies, but to evaluate some as good, bad, or worthy of prevention by genocide is the realm of philosophy or political science, not science. His message falls no more within his professional competence than it would for a physicist to teach religion in class or a musician to encourage racism.Â' But Pianka, a 38-year UT educator, maintains he's not campaigning for genocide. He likens mankind's story to an unbridled party on a luxury cruise liner. The fun's going strong on the upper deck, he says. But as crowds blindly absorb the festivities, many fail to notice the ship is sinking. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:02:49
'The biggest enemy we face is anthropocentrism,' he said, describing the belief system in which humans are the central element of the universe. 'This is that common attitude that everything on this Earth was put here for [human] use.' To Pianka, a human life is no more valuable than any other - a lizard, a bison, a rhino. And as humans reproduce, the demand for resources like food, water and energy becomes more than the Earth can sustain, he says. Ken Wilkins, a Baylor University biology professor and associate dean, agrees the inevitability of a crashing point is unarguable. 'The human population is growing,' he said. 'We will see a point when we reach the carrying capacity - there aren't enough resources.' But resources aren't the only threat, Pianka says. It's the Ebola virus he deems most capable of wide scale decimation. 'Humans are so dense (in population) that they constitute a perfect substrate for an epidemic,' he says. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:03:13
He contends Ebola is merely an evolutionary step away from escaping the confines of Africa. And should an outbreak occur, Pianka assuredly says humanity will quickly come to a 'grinding halt.' The professor's not the only one who can articulate this concept. Because Pianka includes his doomsday material in his coursework, Ebola and its potential play a notable role in some students' studies. A syllabus for one course reads: 'Although [Ebola Zaire] Kills 9 out of 10 people, outbreaks have so far been unable to become epidemics because they are currently spread only by direct physical contact with infected blood. However, a closely-related virus that kills monkeys, Ebola Reston, is airborne, and it is only a matter of time until Ebola Zaire evolves the capacity to be airborne.' It is here that some say Pianka ventures from provocative food for thought to, as Wilkins said, 'very extreme material' that violate many people's views - including his own - about the treatment of human life. While many praise Pianka's boldness and scientific know-how, others say he crosses an ethical line in his treatment of Ebola's viability as a killer. In an evaluation of Pianka's course - performed anonymously in keeping with university policy - one student offered: *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:03:43
'Though I agree that conservation biology is of utmost importance to the world, I do not think that preaching that 90 percent of the human population should die of Ebola is the most effective means of encouraging conservation awareness.' Mims says he's seen countless doomsday predictions come and go. But Pianka's is different, Mims said. Pianka, he insists, exhibits genuine cause for alarm. Mims worries fertile young minds with a thirst for knowledge may develop into enthusiastic supporters of a deadly disease, advocating the fall of humanity. 'He recommended airborne Ebola as an ideal killing virus,' Mims said. 'He showed slides of the Four Hor of the apocalypse and human skulls. He joked about requiring universal sterilization. It reminded me of a futuristic science fiction movie with a crazed scientist planning the death of humanity.' But as confident as Mims is in his assessment, he faces one unarguable fact: Most of Pianka's former students are bursting with praise. Their in-class evaluations celebrate his ideas with words like 'the most incredible class I ever had' and 'Pianka is a GOD! *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:04:01
Mims counters their ovation with the story of a Texas Lutheran University student who attended the Academy of Science lecture. Brenna McConnell, a biology senior, said she and others in the audience 'had not thought seriously about overpopulation issues and a feasible solution prior to the meeting.' But though McConnell arrived at the event with little to say on the issue, she returned to Seguin with a whole new outlook. An entry to her online blog captures her initial response to what's become a new conviction: '[Pianka is] a radical thinker, that one!' she wrote. 'I mean, he's basically advocating for the death for all but 10 percent of the current population. And at the risk of sounding just as radical, I think he's right.' Today, she maintains the Earth is in dire straits. And though she's decided Ebola isn't the answer, she's still considering other deadly viruses that might take its place in the equation. 'Maybe I just see the virus as inevitable because it's the easiest answer to this problem of overpopulation,' she said. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:04:19
Though listeners like McConnell may walk away with a deadly message, Pianka maintains this is inconsistent with his lecture. One UT official said Pianka is likely well within his rights as a tenured educator. The 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure - a set of guidelines recognized nationwide - guarantees college professors vast classroom liberties. But Neal Armstrong, vice provost for faculty affairs at UT, said even this freedom is not without limits. 'Faculty members have the right of free speech like anyone else,' he said. 'In the classroom, they're free to express their views. There is the expectation, though, that in public - especially when speaking on controversial topics - they must make every effort to be clear that they are not speaking on behalf of the university.' Students should be able to discern on their own the validity of views like Pianka's, Armstrong said. But if allegations of Pianka actively advocating human death were to be confirmed, he said 'there might be some discussion about the appropriateness of that subject.' 'I would hope that's not what's intended,' he said. 'I don't think that's appropriate for the classroom, but that's my personal statement.' *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:04:53
Robert K. Jansen, chair of the section of integrated biology under which Pianka is classified, said his understanding of the doomsday material left no cause for concern. 'It's important for students to get all opinions, and they have to do that on a daily basis,' he said. To hold a classroom's attention, Jansen says educators must often 'speak their mind' in a fashion bold enough to garner a bit of shock. The Texas Academy of Science uses a similar approach in defending its decision to honor Pianka with the Distinguished Scientist award. Though TAS offered no direct comment to the Gazette-Enterprise, an email sent from TAS President David Marsh to Mims in response to Mims first letter of protest reads: 'We select the DTS speaker based on his/her academic credentials and contributions to science. We do not mandate the subject he/she decides to address, nor will we ever. I would suggest that one of the purposes of any such presentation is to stimulate discussion - which indeed it did.' In his petitions, Mims inquires about the group's stance on Pianka's talk, asking if the recent honor should be interpreted as an endor t by TAS. Marsh responded firmly, saying the award does not represent any formal backing of Pianka's ideas. *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:05:12
But despite the academy's flat denial of any wrongdoing, Mims maintains his stance. He said thus far, he's seen no response to the second petition. 'I completely agree with one assertion made several times by Dr. Pianka: 'The public is not ready to hear that he hopes 90 percent of them will be exterminated by disease,'' Mims said. McConnell said the TAS audience, unlike Mims, was in awe of PiankaÂ's words. They offered a standing ovation, and enthusiastically applauded Pianka's position, Mims said. 'There was a good deal of shock and just plain astonishment at what he had to say,' the student said. 'Not many folk come out and talk about the end of the human population in as candid of a manner as he did. Dr. Pianka received a standing ovation at the end of his talk, if that says anything. What he had to say was radical, no question about it, but that is not to say that at least some of what he had to say is not true.' Though Pianka turned down requests for a sit-down interview, he maintains he is not advocating human death. Does he believe nature will bring about this promised devastation? Or is humanity's own dissemination of a deadly virus the only answer? And more importantly, is this the motive behind his talks? *

monitor 7/23/2007 - 6:05:49
Responding to these very questions, Pianka said, 'Good terrorists would be taking [Ebola Roaston and Ebola Zaire] so that they had microbes they could let loose on the Earth that would kill 90 percent of people.' As of press time, Pitts - who sent his appeal via email Sa ay - had received no response from the university, but he says, 'It's too early for any responses to have been made.' Meanwhile, Pianka urges humanity to heed his call to be prepared, saying 'we're going to be hunters and gatherers again real soon.' 'This is gonna happen in your lifetime,' he told his St. Edward's audience. 'Do you wanna go there? We've already gone there. We waited too long.' · Read more about Pianka by visiting his lab page at uts.cc.utexas.edu/~var / · Read more about Forrest Mims at www.forrestmims.org or visit the Citizen Scientist at http://www.sas.org/tcs/index.html Editor's note: A correction was made to this story to reflect that while Pitts got his Ph.D. from the university, he is not a professor there *

jamesdj 3.02.11 - 07:50am
It doesn't sound like a joke, i mean this guy is more a devil than someone who is advocating for a better life.if not for people like you we may just feel our throats slithed anytime without any knowledge.its aweird world we are in right now thanks alot.JAMES DJ. *


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