Breed with a Dork
The number of human television programs designed to influence the breeding habits of young humans are almost countless. First and foremost, we must start by dividing these programs into two categories based upon the technology they exploited. The more sophisticated virtual reality of programming, first introduced in the 2020’s, deserves a more detailed treatment elsewhere, instead I will focus primarily upon television transmissions aimed at influencing mating/breeding habits.
Category One: Breed with a dork. Programs such as Beauty and the Geek, have at their core, despite their misdirection and cloaking, a central purpose, namely to acquire breeding partners for physically undesirable, socially inept and backward humans with high IQ’s (a archaic and woefully inaccurate human term for measuring their comical human intelligence).
Knowing the power of television upon teenagers, human social engineers sat out upon numerous “experiments” to see if they could influence breeding patterns amongst particularly younger humans.
By modeling the desired behavior on a television program, i.e. “hot chicks” “getting it on” (a primitive human reference to mating) with “dorks” the social engineers hoped to foster increasing sexual activity and perhaps breeding between the two different groups. Evolution, still disputed at the time by many humans, dictated that humans of relatively like attractiveness would breed.
Due to reasons that are still debated by robo scholars to this very day, programs such as Beauty and the Geek set out to turn this evolutionary breeding pattern on its head. With no precise evidence on this topic, we are left wondering whether this was done with the goal of diluting the gene pool or instead to improve the gene pool via allowing opportunities for feeble intellectuals to reproduce with more fit females.
Ultimately, we only know the results of these experiments and not the intentions. Link with me tomorrow and download Category Two of human televisions attempts to socially engineer and direct human breeding habits and decisions. Together we can unlock the mysteries of how human society guided the reproduction of its easily led minions.
|