Horror as prominent doctor's adopted son, 17, stabs sister to death with a kitchen knife in their home
- Travis Gallo, 17, allegedly fatally stabbed his sister Teia Gallo, 20, in front of another sibling
- They were the adopted children of prominent New Jersey OB-GYN, Dr Robert Gallo, who has 12 children
- The victim's friends say Teia claimed Travis was 'aggressive' and she needed to 'get away from his anger' . . .
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2530343/My-family-devastated-Prominent-doctors-adopted-son-stabs-sister-death-kitchen-knife-home.html#ixzz2pNMg36in
The book review below, although over a year old, provides a good overview on this topic, written about a book that inadvertently exposed establishment intellectual and academic elites--even those who specialize in the topic!--as being almost incapable of grasping the obvious white-nonwhite implications of this dysfunction.
Natural, probably partly genetic, Western altruism has now been enforced and put on steroids by all sorts of conditioning, propaganda and rewards and punishments by schools, the media, Hollywood, etc, especially since the 1960s. But the original amount of higher than the world norm altruism among whites must once have made good sense for group survival, back when whites mostly lived amongst themselves, and it was reciprocal.
Today whites seem to be somewhat like the big flightless birds that had lived for eons on tropical islands and were utterly incapable of self defense when new strong carnivorous competitors were brought onto their islands. Things like standing very still and hoping for the best only aiding in their extinction.
Pathological Altruism
Jared Taylor, American Renaissance, July 6, 2012
The psychology of white dispossession.
Barbara Oakley, Et. Al, Pathological Altruism, Oxford University Press, 2012, 465 pp., $55.00.
Pathological Altruism is a fascinating book. As a long-time student of the most common and dangerous of all pathological altruisms—the willingness of whites to give up their homelands to non-whites—I was hoping at least one of the 48 contributions would mention this problem. None does, but several throw useful but indirect light on it. The book is also filled with eye-opening observations about human nature and how the brain works, and its main editor, Barbara Oakley of the University of Michigan, has done a wonderful job of eliminating repetition and contradiction. Even Edward O. Wilson of Harvard has written that this book taught him something completely new, and I believe him. . . .