Wednesday, October 29, 2025

The real parasites are not who you think

I used to work as a tire installer, and then later as a chimney sweep and mason, and then after that as a fiber optic designer. I did some other things as well before retiring, some things in government. 

When I worked as a tire installer over the course of 2 years I probably changed about seven or eight tires a day, 4 days per week, 52 weeks a year. 7.5 * 4 * 52 * 2 years = 3,120 tires. This is probably an extremely conservative estimate since many vehicles had all four tires replaced at the same time and during busy times we would do about one car every 35 minutes.

When I worked as a chimney sweep/mason I rebuilt/repaired almost a dozen chimneys and swept a couple of hundred. 

When I worked as a fiber optic designer we had a quota of 1 job per hour, 8 hours a week, 5 days a week, 52 weeks a year for 2 years. Each job was about 1/2 a mile long (.5 * 8 * 5 * 52 * 2 years = about 2,000 miles of fiber optic cable I designed. 

If a waitress serves about 80 people per shift (11 tables, 1 hour at each table, average of two people per table * 8 hours, let's say the tables are half full = 88 people per shift. 

Four shifts per week, 50 weeks per year, for 10 years = 176,000 people served by that one waitress. This is a conservative estimate.

It goes on and on. We could do the math for carpenters, electricians, uber drivers, baristas, cashiers, truckers, farmers, and so forth. Now let us say that these people get worn out, like their bodies get physically broken by labor and they become disabled or they start collecting welfare and food stamps. Now they get labeled as "parasites."

But the problem with this label is that these people have produced more in their short careers than the energy budget for their entire survival. A single burger flipper at McDonald's might feed more people in a few years than they will ever eat in their entire lifespan. A single carpenter will build a hundred times as many homes as he will live in. There is no way these blue collar people could be considered parasites, even if they quit their jobs after 5 years and never work again the sheer volume of their production has more than paid for their survival. 

The point of this mathematical exercise is to show you how fantastically productive the average person is, so productive that they could work only a handful of years and then retire and still be considered a net contributor. Understanding the amount of leverage a single worker has, the sheer volume of production a single person can do is important for understanding the rest of what I'm about to say. 

Let us say you have one gender studies professor. She has a full load of four classes, teaches about 30 students per class, two semesters per year for 20 years. During that time one in 20 of her students decides they are transgender, 40% of those go on to attempt suicide, and 7.5% of the ones who attempt succeed. (The 40% and 7.5% number come from sources)

4 classes * 2 semesters * 30 students per class * 20 years * 1/20th = she makes 240 people transgender.

* .4 try to unalive themselves * .075 = 7.2 suicides that she causes. So she creates 240 trannies and about seven deaths over the course of her career.

Now what about a fentanyl dealer

Let us say that a successful fentanyl dealer sells about 300 pills per week, for 10 years, and the average user gets high three times a day, risking fatal overdose one out of every 3,220 uses. 52 weeks per year * 300 pills * 10 years * 1/3,220 = 48 people murdered over the course of 10 years by that fentanyl dealer. 65,000 people are in jail for drug trafficking. Let us say that the justice system is so good that one in three drug traffickers are in prison. Let us also say conservatively that only one out of 5 drug traffickers sells fentanyl. This would mean, extremely conservatively, that the fentanyl drug dealer class kills 1,872,000 people for the course of 10 years. This lines up nicely with the data showing about 100k people dying from fentanyl overdose every year. 

Now let us say that one jew working at Goldman Sachs crashes the economy. For every 1% increase in unemployment causes 37,000 deaths. 1 billionaire jew decides to crash the economy for profit resulting in an increase of 6 percentage points unemployment. This results in the deaths of 220,000 people.

Everything operates at scale. Everyone is productive at scale. People who contribute to society contribute at scale. People who destroy society destroy at scale.

Here's where people go off the rails. They get butt hurt about that waitress collecting food stamps, they get mad about that construction worker on disability. These people have contributed more in their short careers then they will ever consume in their entire lives. Meanwhile you've got fentanyl dealers walking among you who are literally committing mass murder. You've got gender studies professors handing out mental illness like it's candy. You got private equity scumbags wiping out entire economies, causing hundreds of thousands of deaths of despair and stress, and you're worried about some little mentally ill waitress collecting her itty bitty little food stamp check and calling her a parasite on society! That bitch fed more people in her short career then you will in your whole life. Fuck you! There are these giant sharks destroying thousands of lives and you are butthurt that some tiny fish gets an even smaller check. Food stamps is like 200 a month. Calm down and get your priorities straight. White collar people are far more likely to be parasites than blue collar people. People who control things like ideology and finance are far more destructive then millions of welfare bums. Because of the leveraging effect a single individual who is destructive in a position of power is able to wipe out thousands and thousands of lives. We are the most fantastically productive society in history and that means evil people are more incredibly destructive they have ever been.

Parasitism at scale.





1 comment:

  1. With national socialism this all comes to an end. Vote NS

    ReplyDelete

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