A new "wild" theory Speaking of the need for new "wild" theories to replace old ones that turned into plain truth, here's a good candidate.
Vlogger 'Ashera Star Goddess' discusses the reasons for changing abortion laws.
Ever since Sanger, abortion has primarily been a pogrom against dark-skinned people. This is a well-known truth.
'Ashera' extends this truth with some facts I hadn't heard before.
Checking some neuro sources, turns out she's right about the quick development of melanin and melanocytes. Melanocytes develop from the neural crest, and are part of the stem-cell lineage. Stem cells are a high-profit resource.
Her description of the philosopher's stone as a source of melanin sounds wild, but surprisingly turns out to be a valid interpretation. We think of the stone as a way to make gold, but the broader and older purpose of the stone was regeneration (as in stem cells) and the first stage in preparing the material was black.
She's also STRONGLY ACCURATE about the motives of Deepstate and tech-monsters and big-money "scientists". Their purpose is to exterminate all Deplorables. Abortion is one end of the pogrom.
Her theory: Melanin merchants are paying some states to ban abortion in order to drive up the scarcity and price of melanin.
I'm not convinced by this, mainly because I'm not convinced that melanin is a major commodity. I'd immediately go along with a broader version: Planned Parenthood is paying some states to ban abortion in order to raise the price of all fetal commodities.
This is how laws work now. All laws and regulations and wars are solely designed to eliminate competitors. The old Bootleggers and Baptists alliance.**
So I'm not convinced by the specific conclusion, but all the pieces are broadly correct, and her description of the pieces is more accurate than any "scientist" or standard religious or political type.
In other words, this "wild" theory is already plausible if not guaranteed true. Can't stay ahead of the demons, can we?
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** Fussy footnote: All online sources credit the B and B concept to economist Bruce Yandle in 1983. Yandle might have been the first to publish the concept, but it was common currency in Okla in the '50s, probably earlier.