Page 84 - Darwinist Propaganda Techniques
P. 84
Darwinist Propaganda Techniques
They try to cast a spell over people with
false illustrations and reconstructions
By now, we are all familiar with an ape-man that for many years
has appeared in the pages of newspapers and magazines, that was for
years taught in school books as if it were true, and that people were
told represented important evidence for is an entirely false chronol-
ogy. This fake ape-man was depicted walking with a stooped gait and
an animal-like appearance holding a heavy club in his hands and with
a whole social life. It was also been given an almost unpronounceable
Latin name: Hesperopithecus haroldcookii.
Hesperopithecus haroldcookii was illustrated time and time again in
the pages of the world’s best known magazines. Reconstructions of it
were produced and exhibited in prestigious museums.. Nobel prize-
winning scientists discussed it at conferences, doctoral theses were
written about it, and scientists frequently debated as to what kind of
social life it enjoyed, where and how it lived, where it walked and how
it spoke. It was also better known by another name: Nebraska Man.
One very important point here is that all of these fictitious sce-
nario concerning Hesperopithecus haroldcookii, which Darwinist scien-
tists studied and taught their students for years, was revealed to have
been all invented on the basis of a single pig tooth.
Nebraska Man is an example which illustrates the scale of the
frauds Darwinists perpetrate through visual conditioning, but it is by
no means the only one. All the Darwinist pictures of fictitious ape-
men, with all their characteristics such as enjoying social lives, hunt-
ing and fishing, playing with their children and whatnot, are
sometimes based on nothing more than a single finger bone, a shoul-
der blade or a tooth. Parts of fossil skeletons are sometimes unearthed,
but then such fantastical reconstructions are produced that the result
is a fully fledged ape-man. But this is a complete deception.
82