Page 109 - The Social Weapon: Darwinism
P. 109

107




                                         Sir Douglas Nicholls, the first native
                                         Australian to be knighted, and his
                                         wife.


                                         there. Their lives and their property, the
                                         nets, canoes ... are held by the Europeans
                                         as being at their absolute disposal. Their
                                         goods are taken, their children forcibly
                                        stolen, their women carried away, entirely
                                        at the caprice of white men. The least show
                                       of resistance is answered by a rifle bullet...
                                     [those] who fancied the amusement have
                                   murdered, ravished, and robbed the blacks with-
                              out let or hindrance. Not only have they been
                   unchecked, but the Government of the colony has been always at
                   hand to save them from the consequences of their crime. 9
                   What has been recounted here is only a tiny part of Social
               Darwinism's dark face, but is enough to suggest the full scale of the
               disasters that atheism and Darwinism wreaked on humanity.












                1. Joe Stephens, “The Body Hunters: As Drug Testing Spreads, Profits and
                Lives Hang in Balance,” Washington Post, December 17, 2000.
                2. David Monaghan, “The Body-Snatchers,” The Bulletin, November 12, 1991,
                pp. 30-38.
                3. Ibid., p. 33.
                4. Ibid., p. 34.
                5. Ibid., p. 33.
                6. Sharman Stone, Aborigines in White Australia: A Documentary History of the
                Attitudes Affecting Official Policy and the Australian Aborigine 1697–1973,
                Melbourne: Heinemann Educational Books, 1974.
                7. Ibid., p. 83.
                8. Ibid., p. 96.
                9. Ibid., p. 93.

                                 Harun Yahya - Adnan Oktar
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