The front book jacket begins with:
THE STRANGEST TALE YOU'LL EVER HEAR . . . AND IT'S A TRUE STORY!Is it?
Who is Yuval Noah Harari and why has he become so influential? What is his message? Does his heavily-marketed new book for children echo the same sentiments he so adamantly feeds his adult audiences?
Prof. Yuval Noah Harari is a historian, philosopher, and the bestselling author of Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, and Sapiens: A Graphic History. His books have sold over 40 million copies in 65 languages, and he is considered one of the world's most influential public intellectuals today. [Click here to read the complete bio on Harari's website.]Harari was a keynote speaker at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland in both 2018 and 2020. His speeches and interviews on various media platforms are watched by millions.
Yuval Noah Harari is not shy about stating his beliefs. In a nutshell, in Harari's gospel there is no God, no soul, and no freewill. Once these pillars are accepted as truth by his followers — many of whom are in positions of power — the next step will be deciding the fate of billions of people who are no longer necessary in a future world that consists of Artificial Intelligence, Biotechnology, and Transhumanism.
Harari's book, Sapiens, was endorsed by Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, and Barak Obama.
Christopher Carbone wrote the article, "Humans Will Eventually Merge With Machines, Professor Says," for Fox News in July 2019.
"It's increasingly hard to tell where I end and where the computer begins," Yuval Harari, a professor of history at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, told the audience at the Fast Company European Innovation Festival this week. "In the future, it is likely that the smartphone will not be separated from you at all. It may be embedded in your body or brain, constantly scanning your biometric data and your emotions."In his speech at the 2020 World Economic Forum in Davos, Harari informed his audience that:
. . . Harari continued: "If we told our ancestors in the Stone Age about our lives today, they would think we are already Gods. But the truth is that even though we have developed more sophisticated tools, we are the same animals. We have the same emotions, the same minds. The coming revolution will change that. It will change not just our tools, it will change the human being itself."
Automation will soon eliminate millions upon millions of jobs . . .Chris Anderson, head of the TED media group, interviewed Harari in August of 2022. Anderson commented that Harari strongly recommends meditation. Harari responded that he meditates for two hours each day and that he does the Vipassana meditation which he learned from S.N. Goenka.
Old jobs will disappear, new jobs will emerge, but then the new jobs will rapidly change and vanish. Whereas in the past humans had to struggle against exploitation, in the twenty-first century the really big struggle will be against irrelevance. And it is much worse to be irrelevant than exploited.
Those who fail in the struggle against irrelevance would constitute a new "useless class" - people who are useless not from the viewpoint of their friends and family, but useless from the viewpoint of the economic and political system.
. . . And what will happen to politics in your country in twenty years, when somebody in San Francisco or Beijing knows the entire medical and personal history of every politician, every judge and every journalist in your country, including all their sexual escapades, all their mental weaknesses and all their corrupt dealings? Will it still be an independent country or will it become a data-colony?
When you have enough data you don't need to send soldiers, in order to control a country.
. . . If you know enough biology and have enough computing power and data, you can hack my body and my brain and my life, and you can understand me better than I understand myself. . . . You know more about me than I know about myself. And you can do that not just to me, but to everyone.
A system that understands us better than we understand ourselves can predict our feelings and decisions, can manipulate our feelings and decisions, and can ultimately make decisions for us.
. . . But soon at least some corporations and governments will be able to systematically hack all the people. We humans should get used to the idea that we are no longer mysterious souls - we are now hackable animals. That's what we are.
. . . In the coming decades, AI and biotechnology will give us godlike abilities to reengineer life, and even to create completely new life-forms. After four billion years of organic life shaped by natural selection, we are about to enter a new era of inorganic life shaped by intelligent design.
Our intelligent design is going to be the new driving force of the evolution of life . . . [Click here to read the speech]
And . . . my yearly vacation is to go on a long retreat of between say 30 days and 60 days i just came back last month from a 60 day meditation retreat. [Click here to listen. This begins at 45:20.]During this interview, Harari tells Chris Anderson that he isn't against technology as it "can bring enormous benefits to humanity as a whole." He continues that he "met [his] husband online in one of the first dating sites for LGBT people in Israel in the early 2000s." [Click here to listen. This begins at 40:29.]
Yuval Noah Harari holds great influence with many people in positions of power. Up until recently, this audience has consisted of adults. Now, Harari is introducing his message to children.
Autumn 2022 will see Harari venturing into the world of children's books for the first time, with the pre-teen series Unstoppable Us. Here, he tells the unbelievable true story of humans - our all-conquering and insatiable species — in a way that is accessible to kids. The series will be published in 4 immersive volumes, featuring full-colour illustrations by Ricard Zaplana Ruiz, starting with Unstoppable Us, Volume 1: How Humans Took Over the WorldHarari includes a Timeline of History at the beginning of Unstoppable Us.
He begins with 6 million years ago with a picture of an upright creature that is a cross between a human and an ape. The caption reads that this was the "last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees." He follows with a jump to the 2.5 million years ago mark in which he states that "Humans evolve in Africa." The Gospel of Harari (hereafter GoA) moves forward another half-million years with the "[e]volution of different kinds of humans." By 400,000 years ago, "Neanderthals evolve in Europe and the Middle East" and 300,000 years ago, "Sapiens evolve in Africa." 70,000 years ago, "the Sapiens leave Africa in large numbers." 35,000 years ago the Neanderthals are extinct and "Sapiens are the last surviving kind of human."
"Planet Earth was once ruled by many different animals . . . But now we humans rule everything: the land, the sea, and the sky. . . . The only reason lions, dolphins, and eagles still exist is because we allow them to." He concludes this introduction with, "AND it's a true story." (xv)
Chapter 1 teaches the children that millions of years ago, we were just ordinary animals who ate worms and climbed trees to pick fruit. Until humans learned to make tools, the other animals weren't afraid of them.
Harari explains that when kids wake up in the night frightened that there are monsters under their beds that this is simply "a memory from millions of years ago . . . [when] monsters . . . sneaked up on children in the night." His example is of a lion coming to eat the child. (4) This idea is repeated in the closing of his book.
Next, the humans invented fire.
"A single weak human with a fire stick could burn down an entire forest in a matter of hours, destroying thousands of trees and killing thousands of animals." (9)
Comment: Who thinks like this? Maybe a single weak human like Harari?
Now, the humans could cook their food. As a result, "humans started to change: they had smaller teeth, smaller stomachs . . . and much more free time." (9)
Harari expands on this by stating that some scientists "suggest it was cooking that made it possible for the human brain to start growing." (10)
Once they started cooking . . . humans could spend far less energy chewing and digesting and had more energy to feed big brains. Their stomachs shrank, their brains grew, and people got smarter. (10)
In the next chapter, the children learn that "our planet was actually home to many different kinds of humans." (13)
Harari introduces the Floresians and follows with the "bigger-brained" Neanderthals, and the Denisovans. However, according to him, the Sapiens eventually killed off all of these "ancestors."
". . . when the new super-Sapiens reached Europe, they picked all the pears, ate all the berries, and hunted all the deer. This meant that the local Neanderthals had nothing left to eat, so they died of hunger. And if any Neanderthals tried to stop the Sapiens from taking all the food, the Sapiens probably killed them." (27)
"Then our ancestors went to Siberia and took all the food from the Denisovans. And then they went to Flores, and . . . soon there wasn't a single small human or small elephant to be found. And when all the other humans were gone, our ancestors still weren't satisfied. Although they were now incredibly powerful, they wanted even more power and more food, so they sometimes fought one another." (27)
The next chapter begins with, "You see, we Sapiens are not very nice animals." Often, he concludes, this is due to different skin colors, languages, or religions. (29)
Comment: Yep. Schizoid.
"But a few years ago, scientists discovered that at least some of our Sapiens ancestors didn't kill or starve all the other humans they met." (29) Harari explains that because of our knowledge of DNA, scientists have determined that some Neanderthals had children with Sapiens." I guess Harari intends for these middle-grade students to conclude that some people today are not 100% evil Sapiens since they have some Neanderthal DNA . . .
Harari then speculates as to what the world would be like today if "our ancestors had been nicer and had allowed the Neanderthals and the Floresians to go on living and developing." (32)
Part 2 of the book is Harari's explanation as to the why and how Sapiens ended up ruling the world. He says that cooperation is what makes us so powerful. (40)
Harari then poses the question:
"How did our ancestors learn to cooperate in large numbers in the first place, and how come we can constantly change our behavior?" (45)
"[It's] our ability to dream up stuff that isn't really there and to tell all kinds of imaginary stories." (46)
"If thousands of people believe in the same story, then they'll all follow the same rules, which means they can cooperate effectively." (48)
"Let's say a Sapiens tells everyone this story: "There's a Great Lion Spirit that lives above the clouds. If you obey the Great Lion Spirit, then when you die, you'll go the land of the spirits, and you'll have all the bananas you can eat. But if you disobey the Great Lion Spirit, a big lion will come and eat you!"
"Of course, this story isn't true at all. But if a thousand people believe it, they'll all start doing whatever the story tells them to do." (49)
Comment: This entire narrative is nonsense, and quite simply wrong. More schizoid projection of his own lack of an inner psychic worldview.
He expands on this — just in case it went over any of the kids' heads. "If you say, 'The Great Lion Spirit wants everyone to give a banana to the priest in the temple, and in return, when they die, they'll receive lots and lots of bananas in the land of the spirits,' then a thousand people will bring bananas to the priest."
"You could never persuade a chimpanzee to give you a banana by promising him that when he dies, he'll go to chimpanzee heaven and have all the bananas he can eat . . . only Sapiens believe stories like that. And that's why we rule the world, whereas poor chimps are locked up in zoos." (50)
"Some go fight people on the (50) other side of the world because they believe that a god told them to. Others give lots of money to construct a big building because they believe that a god wants it." (51)
Harari next informs the kids about "one of the most interesting games grown-ups play . . . called 'corporation.'" (54) He uses McDonald's Corporation as an illustration and informs the children that although you can go to the restaurants or talk to the employees, what they see is not McDonald's as "it exists only in our imagination." (58)
". . . If you want to open a restaurant but you don't want to risk losing your socks or going to jail, you create a corporation. And then the corporation does everything and takes all the risks."
"The corporation borrows money from the bank, and if it can't repay the money, nobody can blame you for it, and nobody can take your house or your socks. After all, the bank gave the money to the corporation, not to you. And if somebody eats a burger and gets a really nasty stomachache, nobody can hold you responsible. You didn't make that burger — the corporation did." (60)
"Well, money is also just another imaginary story that grown-ups believe. [Bankers and politicians] tell stories like "This small piece of paper is worth ten bananas," and the grown-ups believe them." (63)
". . . humans can quickly change the way we behave by simply changing the stories we believe." (65)
Harari then uses France to illustrate the next point he wants to make:
"People believed that a great god above the clouds said that France must be ruled by a king and that all French people must do whatever the king commanded. . . . But as long as French people believed this story, they obeyed their king." (65)
He follows with a story about a king's daughter that wanted to rule France. "You can't rule France," they said, "because the great god above the clouds doesn't like girls very much. The great god above the clouds is a boy, so he made boys much smarter and braver than girls. So a girl can't rule the kingdom of France. Only boys can." And because people believed the story, they wouldn't let girls become rulers. In fact, they wouldn't let them do all sorts of things: . . . (68)
"But there are two important things to remember: people need stories in order to cooperate, and they can change the way they cooperate by changing the stories they believe." (71)
On page 72, Harari suggests that someone "might have told them stories" such as:
"The Great Lion Spirit wants us to get rid of the Neanderthals . . . [they] are very strong, but don't worry. Even if a Neanderthal kills you, that's actually a good thing because you'll go to the land of the spirits above the clouds, where the Great Lion Spirit will welcome you and give you lots of blueberries and giraffe steaks to eat."
"And people believed the story, so they cooperated to get rid of the Neanderthals."
". . . This belief in stories gave our ancestors so much power that they spread all over the world, conquering every land on the planet." (72)
The GoH also weighs in on families:
"Nowadays, some people have one partner for their entire life, some have many partners, and some remain single. In a few countries, one man can be married to several women at the same time. In other countries, two women can get married to each other, and so can two men." (87) [Harari is married to a man.]
"Bonobo (chimpanzee) girls don't dream about marrying a handsome prince — they'd usually prefer a cool girlfriend!" (89)
Harari then speculates about the types of families there may have been in Stone Age times:
". . . In the fourth hut, one woman, her three children, and her current girlfriend." (90)
"Well, maybe it was like that . . . and maybe not. It's easy to imagine different possibilities, but scientists need to distinguish imagination from fact. . . . you need evidence." (92)
". . . one tribe might have believed that after you died, you came back as a new baby, or perhaps even as an animal. Maybe a second tribe believed that when you died, you became a ghost. A third tribe may have thought that these two theories were a load of nonsense — when you died, you were gone, and that was that." (103)
". . . There is one thing, though, we are certain our ancestors did, and it's something we know a lot about: they caused most of the world's big animals to disappear." (141)
Comment: Harari is very certain about a lot of things that are actually wrong. Quite remarkable in such a reputed intellectual.
". . . the ancient ancestors of whales were land animals that were no bigger than a large dog. Around 50 million years ago, some of these doglike animals started spending part of their time in rivers and lakes, hunting fish and other small creatures. . . . they spent more and more of their time in rivers, rarely venturing onto land. Their feet, which they no longer needed for walking, evolved into flippers. Their tails also changed to better help them with swimming. Eventually, these animals swam out to sea: completely abandoning land, they spent their whole lives deep in the ocean. And their bodies adapted, growing enormous, until they became whales."
"But this process took millions and millions of years." (146)
"Soon after Sapiens reached Australia, all these huge animals became extinct — and many small animals did too."
"Why did they suddenly disappear exactly when the first humans arrived? Let's be honest and accept the truth: the most plausible explanation is that the Sapiens caused the extinction of all these animals." (152)
". . . They didn't have guns and bombs. . . . But they did have three big advantages: cooperation, the element of surprise, and the ability to control fire." (152)
"Their first advantage was that they could tell stories that brought many people together. . . . If people in one band developed a new trick to hunt diprotodons, they could quickly teach their trick to all the other bands." (153)
". . . The truth is that humans were already the deadliest animals on earth." (154)
"The thing about bad habits is that it's so hard to get rid of them. They tend to stay with you wherever you go. . . . Wiping out so many of Australia's animals was the first big thing they did. The second big thing was to wipe out animals in America." (156)
"Why were our ancestors so cruel? Why did they completely wipe out the mammoths?"
Comment: As the kids say: LOL.
"The thing is, they probably didn't mean to do it. They were just hungry, and their children were hungry, and they hunted a few mammoths every year because they needed something to eat. They didn't know the effect (166) this would have over many, many years. We often do very impactful things without realizing what we're doing."(167)
". . . But over time, the tiny changes accumulate and become very big changes."(167)
"The problem with Sapiens wasn't that they were evil; the problem was that they were too good at what they did. When they started hunting mammoths, they became so good at it that no mammoths survived. So they went on to hunt elk. But they were very good at that too, and very soon the elk also started to disappear." (171)
"So step 1: lots of animals, no Sapiens. Step 2: Sapiens appear. Step 3: lots of Sapiens, no animals." (172)
Harari then lets the kids know that although our ancestors didn't realize the impact of what they were doing, we do. We have no excuse and are responsible for the future of all animals. He challenges these ten- to fourteen-year-old children to become activists and tells them that it doesn't matter how young they are. They can take care of this.
"Remember, even as a kid, you're already more powerful than any lion or whale!" (174)
". . . One whale weighs as much as 5,000 kids. And yet whales can't protect themselves against humans because humans have learned to tell stories and cooperate in very sophisticated ways, which whales can't understand." (175)
"So the corporations hunted more and more whales, and made more and more money. Fifty years ago, blue whales almost disappeared . . . Luckily, some humans noticed what was happening and (176) decided to save the whales. Being humans themselves, they understood what money is and how corporations work, so they knew what to do. They wrote letters to newspapers, they signed petitions to politicians, and they organized demonstrations. They told people not to buy products from corporations that hunted whales, and they asked governments to forbid whaling. Many of the people who did all this were kids." (177)
". . . So that's how we humans became the rulers of planet Earth. And how we came to hold the fate of all other animals in our hands. Even before humans built the first city, invented the wheel, and learned how to write, we had already spread all over the world and killed about half of all large land animals." (179)
". . . And you know that if you invent a good story that enough people believe, you can conquer the world." (180)
******
Has Yuval Noah Harari invented a good enough story?
This book is being heavily marketed. Harari is giving many interviews about Unstoppable Us. Will his gospel message change the worldview of our children? Throughout his book, he talks about made-up good stories that influence people enough to change the world, and yet he declares that his story is a true one. In other words, he wants his readers or listeners to believe his story and act accordingly.
This book is just the first of four volumes. The next volume will be about the Agriculture Revolution. Line upon line; precept upon precept. Each book will build upon the foundation laid in the previous volume. The Gospel of Harari has already convinced at least some of his audience that God is just a made-up story to make people obedient or cooperative. Will no soul and no free will be introduced next?
Will the powers-that-be decide to keep the useless eaters around by giving them a universal income and keeping them entertained in the MetaVerse, or will there be mass genocide? Who is going to argue for human rights if people have no souls or freewill? What would it matter?
Often, I hear parents tell me that their children know better. I hope they are right. Maybe they do attend church every time the doors are open, but who is teaching them and what are they learning? Do you know? Are they being taught or entertained? If they are in a government school, sadly, they have already absorbed much of Harari's message.
Do you know what's between the covers of the books your children are reading?
******
And, Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the works of thine hands. Hebrews 1:10
If the foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do? Psalm 11:3
Reader Comments
Annunaki he is not....
While my own reading was eclectic, from looking at the cover. Mr. Harari will fade like snow on the water
Attempts to explain life completely or to replace God with one more to your own personal liking (ie., ego tripping) result in the law of diminishing returns.
You become more stupid and ugly, not to mention treacherous and deviant, with each passing day.
Technocrats and tyrants in particular, have a problem in this area.
ned,
OUT
@Animanarchy:
Yeah.
For sure.
How big a one does one need?
ned
A study of economics as if people mattered
E.F. Schumacher
1973
Non--fiction
288 pages
Convincing - better call it brainwashing - the children into believe they are inherently evil and worthless. The progressive version of the "original sin".
And offer them assisted suicide once they are grown up. Maybe after one or two sponsored "gender changes" which makes them even more confused and unhappy.
We need for sure to get rid of this WEF crowd, once and forever.
Napoleon once famously quipped that religion was what kept the poor from murdering the rich. But what about the rich murdering the poor?
Hariri is the WEF's new 'savior' for the world, replacing Christ and Christian ethics with a secular 'post-humanism' that melds machines and men and forges a new 'ethics' which reverses Christ (and Napoleon), for it is now right, proper and supremely ethical for 'the rich to murder the poor'. To save the world for them, the ones who actually destroyed it. And Yuval Hariri is teaching this new 'religion' to our children, with the frenzied approval of those in power and their minions who cravenly serve such interests. A new religion for a brave, new world.......
And Yuval Hariri is their Anti-Christ......... :-(
Fri 14 Sep 2018 12.00 BST [Link] "In order to survive and prosper in the 21st century, we need to leave behind the naive view of humans as free individuals – a view inherited from Christian theology as much as from the modern Enlightenment – and come to terms with what humans really are: hackable animals. We need to know ourselves better."
Christianity whether I conform to it or not, did provide the earth's population with the greatest advancements in science, living standards, art, music and is why every hanger-on wants to nest in the tree, because it offered the most to civilization, this idiot is just a bit slow on the uptake that his own kind have plundered all of it's low hanging fruit and knows the only way to plunder what is up top is to saw the whole tree down. Noah enjoys a very decadent lifestyle, free from toil or hardship....but whines at the "Christian" for not having much left for his kind to plunder, met with 7.8 billion people snapping at his heals for more of what his ilk stole and gave to them.
Well tough. Die like a MAN.
[Link]
Lego for ALL
His ideas make no sense, even if I tried to believe what he says, it is so full on contradictions. His story is the worst of all, he can stuff it up there, with the rest of his sh*t.
About the gays, maybe it's because of their difference that makes them more noticeable but it seems we find them in many places of influence, the undesirable kind of influence. Changing things that are fine the way they are just for the sake of change. In blue collar language, fixing thing that don't need fixing.
Mental health centers and a drop-in around here rep the pride flag.
P.S. So I don't seem unduly judgmental I do actually have bi friends, had some gay friends/acquaintances, and am friends with one girl who considers herself trans.
There's my modern resumé.
Prof. Yuval Noah Harari is a historian, philosopher, and the bestselling author of Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind , Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow , 21 Lessons for the 21st Century , and Sapiens: A Graphic History . His books have sold over 40 million copies in 65 languages, and he is considered one of the world's most influential public intellectuals today. [Click here to read the complete bio on Harari's website
Stupefying ignorance to think he’s a legit twistorian/philosopher. He’s a controlled opposition puppet of bs. If he’s calling himself a philosopher/twistorian then I’m a proctologist.
Hitler’s Mein Kampf (My Struggle) book (in all it’s various edited/abridged/redacted versions) was/is nothing new despite it’s popularity with Muslims being their second favorite book next to the Quran/Koran. Keep ‘em ignorant & keep ‘em programmed.
Ask Sisyphus what struggle means. 🤣
“Yuval Noah Harari is not shy about stating his beliefs. In a nutshell, in Harari's gospel there is no God, no soul, and no freewill. Once these pillars are accepted as truth by his followers — many of whom are in positions of power — the next step will be deciding the fate of billions of people who are no longer necessary in a future world that consists of Artificial Intelligence, Biotechnology, and Transhumanism .”
Not sure how much more traction this ass clown & his dog & pony show get.
[Link] - [Link] or [Link] - [Link] - [Link]
Tangentially related to the above proposition - In military leadership at higher levels there is a internal leadership test called the Kobayashi Maru.
Kobayashi Maru - Federation freighter that served as part of the Kobayashi Maru scenario, a simulated Starfleet Academy training exercise wherein cadets had to decide what command decisions to make after receiving a distress call from the freighter.The scenario is considered as unwinnable. But, as a cadet, James Kirk found a way around the test by reprogramming the simulation, thus changing the conditions of the test. In doing so, Kirk defeated the no-win scenario and received a commondation for original thinking.
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.
I have seen some of those scenes.
Also to note, one must retain himself/herself clear as to discern between benevolence, martyrdom, or evil.
I always say... you can't repair the broken window with the hammer that just flew through it.
Ahriman
In Zoroastrianism, the Demon of all Demons and the source of all evil. Ahriman originally was a primordial desert spirit who became the personification of evil in Zoroastrianism. As such, he is not immortal, and eventually his reign of terror will be conquered by the forces of good.
[Link]
Rudolf Steiner, the founder of anthroposophy, said Ahrimanic forces are intelligent, clever spirits that seek to keep people mired in materialism.
I have no real knowledge of Rudolph Steiner (strange name Rudolph, given the time of year). Seems that some are becoming proponents of his message, at this time, although the few Steiner transcripts I have attempted to read, are so simplistic, and leave the message, to be interpreted in the mind of the beholder as they will. Just my interpretation.
RS quote:
"I have told you that the spirits of darkness are going to inspire their human hosts, in whom they will be dwelling, to find a vaccine that will drive all inclination towards spirituality out of people's souls when they are still very young." Rudolf Steiner (1917)
“In the future, we will eliminate the soul with medicine.Under the pretext of a ‘healthy point of view’, there will be a vaccine by which the human body will be treated as soon as possible directly at birth,
(1) so that the human being cannot develop the thought of the existence of soul and Spirit.To materialistic doctors, will be entrusted with the task of removing the soul of humanity.As today, people are vaccinated against this disease or disease, so in the future, children will
(2) be vaccinated with a substance that can be produced precisely in such a way that people, thanks to this vaccination, will be immune to being subjected to the “madness” of spiritual life.He would be extremely smart, but he would not develop a conscience, and that is the
(3) true goal of some materialistic circles.With such a vaccine, you can easily make the etheric body loose in the physical body.
Once the etheric body is detached, the relationship between the universe and the etheric body would become extremely unstable, and man would become
(4) an automaton, for the physical body of man must be polished on this Earth by spiritual will.So, the vaccine becomes a kind of arymanique [Ahrimanic] force; man can no longer get rid of a given materialistic feeling. [Link]
And what I read is a man so intent on causing self hatred in young minds, it makes my blood boil.
Legos + Marbles in comments🥳
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