Friday, 14 October 2011

White Supremacy and Racial Economy



White Supremacy and Racial Economy


Cost-Benefit Analysis

Benefit = Black Underdevelopment
Cost = Black Development



"...In seeking to justify the policy, Deakin said he believed that the Japanese and Chinese[9] might be a threat to the newly formed federation and it was this belief that led to legislation to ensure they would be kept out:

"It is not the bad qualities, but the good qualities of these alien races that make them so dangerous to us. It is their inexhaustible energy, their power of applying themselves to new tasks, their endurance and low standard of living that make them such competitors."..."




NSDAP Office of Racial Policy

NSDAP Office of Racial Policy(German: Rassenpolitisches Amt der NSDAP, R.P.A. or RPA) was a Nazi Party office created in 1933 for "unifying and supervising all indoctrination and propaganda work in the field of population and racial politics". It was originally known as the NSDAP Office for Enlightenment on Population Policy and Racial Welfare (German: Aufklärungsamt für Bevölkerungspolitik und Rassenpflege), but was renamed in 1935.



Neues Volk



Nazi Germany

Health

"...The Nazi health care system also held as a central idea the concept of Eugenics. Certain people were deemed 'genetically inferior' and were targeted for elimination from the gene pool through sterilization (Hereditary Health Courts) or wholesale murder (Action T4). Medical information professionals used new processes and technology, like punch card systems, and cost analysis, to aid in the process and calculate the 'benefit' to society of these killings."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Germany#Health



Cost-benefit analysis

Cost-benefit analysis (CBA), sometimes called benefit-cost analysis (BCA), is an economic decision-making approach, used particularly in government and business. CBA is used in the assessment of whether a proposed project, programme or policy is worth doing, or to choose between several alternative ones. It involves comparing the total expected costs of each option against the total expected benefits, to see whether the benefits outweigh the costs, and by how much.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost-benefit_analysis

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