This is a postscript to my post yesterday.
It doesn’t matter that in his reply, Adunai insults me with comments like “Chechar has so many mental handicaps…” What really matters —and this should be obvious to any visitor—is that a commenter who trolls against the 14 words (“every time an English rose gets defiled by a Hindu Neanderthal, my heart sings”) and the 4 words (that he would agree with “burning Aryan children alive in tophets”) should be banned from The West’s Darkest Hour whose subtitle reads “priesthood of sacred words.”
Here, I will limit myself to responding to just one phrase from Adunai’s reply to my post yesterday. He claimed, “when children were beaten by cruel fathers, Europe was good.” That, of course, is false. In Christendom, Europeans followed the Hebrew advice in raising their children:
Proverbs 13:24: “Whoever spares the rod hates his son, but he who loves him is diligent to discipline him.”
Proverbs 23:13-14: “Do not withhold discipline from a child; if you strike him with a rod, he will not die.”
Together with the fear of eternal damnation in the New Testament (the fear of eternal fire is something Jews don’t experience, since they wrote the NT for us Gentiles), such childrearing methods produced a caste of humans inferior, in terms of psychoclass, to that of the Greeks and ancient Romans. To understand the concept of “psychoclass,” please read pages 31-192 of my book Day of Wrath.
The most advanced psychoclass that Europe has ever produced occurred during the brief period that opened up for the Aryan man in the Third Reich, which disciplined children and adolescents but didn’t abuse them.

Illustrations from a book encouraging children to colour, cut out, and play with images of the Hitler Youth.
One reply on “P.S.”
On his site, Adunai continues to strawman me:
Of course, the “refrigerator mother theory” on the aetiology of autism has nothing to do with rape.
Then he says I’m stuck on texts from the 70s, when in reality what truly awakened me were the books of Alice Miller, whom I discovered in 2002 at the very late age of 44 (Miller passed away in 2010; before her passing I exchanged some correspondence with her).
Adunai can only continue with those strawmen, but I shouldn’t waste any more time on him. I have other things to do…