Bucher T
American Radio Library is piling in lots of newly found magazines from Italy and other countries. Lots of goodies!
A little weekly newsletter about transistor developments had these two ads in 1962:
For the first time sold in Italy! Precision quality! Exceptional! One of the best Japanese receivers!
Japan was pushing its electronic
products hard in all countries, just as Germany was pushing its Mercedes and cameras hard in all countries.
A German writer on Quora explained how this felt for Germans. After the war Germany was
justifiably unpopular in the rest of the world. Germans understood that meritocracy is nonsense, understood that unpopularity can't be fixed on a personal basis. You have to find a way to make your products and services popular instead.
This is, of course, the
Booker T way of life, a perfect opposition to meritocracy. It works for nations, races, and people.
Caste is innate and permanent.
You can't become popular by using a better deodorant or learning to dance. Those are pure wastes of money and effort. You have to make your PRODUCTS and SERVICES popular instead. Sooner or later the popularity of your OUTPUT will reflect back on your person, but only partly.
Above all you can't FORCE people to accept you as a person or a nation or a race. When you try to FORCE acceptance, you get more friction and dislike.
The latter, of course, is the PURPOSE of meritocracy and "civil rights" and "integration". Under the guise of creating acceptance, these vicious projects are INTENTIONALLY creating mutual hatred. Even worse, meritocracy steers people away from finding their proper
SKILL-BASED niche in the economy and culture, and thus makes them even more dependent on the government that is using them as civilization-destroying weapons.
Labels: Carver, skill-estate