Search Results
7/16/2025, 10:55:48 PM
>>510525507
>lol so, like, I was drunk and stuff and then he was like "sleep in my bed" and I was like "ok"
>so there I was, spread eagle trying to get some quality shuteye, and this bald nigger tried to kiss me! Ew, I was like WTF!
>so then I kissed him back, but just for a minute
you should stop reading at this point. Not because the rest of the story is graphic, but because she admits to being a certified retard
>lol so, like, I was drunk and stuff and then he was like "sleep in my bed" and I was like "ok"
>so there I was, spread eagle trying to get some quality shuteye, and this bald nigger tried to kiss me! Ew, I was like WTF!
>so then I kissed him back, but just for a minute
you should stop reading at this point. Not because the rest of the story is graphic, but because she admits to being a certified retard
7/5/2025, 8:52:59 AM
>>509554076
You just KNOW that if a tall lanklet black man pulled up to the court, walked up to those blond cuties, and touched their butts, that they would just giggle and laugh right?
You just KNOW that if a tall lanklet black man pulled up to the court, walked up to those blond cuties, and touched their butts, that they would just giggle and laugh right?
7/3/2025, 10:53:17 PM
I asked ChatGPT why India has such a high birth rate to save the white race. Here’s what it told me.
1. Early and Universal Marriage
Impact: Extremely high
Why: Women marrying young (often in teens) led to longer reproductive spans, increasing the likelihood of more children.
Context: Early marriage was culturally entrenched and nearly universal in many regions.
2. Lack of Access to Contraception and Family Planning
Impact: Very high
Why: Limited availability, knowledge, and social acceptance of contraceptive methods meant families had little control over the number of children they had.
Context: Family planning programs began in the 1950s but took decades to scale effectively.
3 . Low Female Education and Employment
Impact: High
Why: Women with limited education and few career prospects often became mothers earlier and more frequently.
Context: Education is closely linked with fertility reduction, and literacy rates among women were very low during this time.
4. Rural Agrarian Economy
Impact: Medium to high
Why: In rural economies, more children meant more hands to work on the farm, reinforcing high fertility.
Context: Over two-thirds of India's population lived in rural areas during the peak fertility period.
5. Weak Government Policies and Implementation (initially)
Impact: Medium
Why: Although India was the first country to adopt a national family planning program (1952), it lacked early effectiveness due to poor infrastructure, weak outreach, and resistance.
Context: It took until the late 1970s–1990s for fertility-related programs to show sustained impact.
6 . Limited Role of Mass Media and Public Awareness
Impact: Lower
Why: Mass communication about small families, contraceptive use, and women's rights was limited.
Context: Government campaigns promoting "Hum do, hamare do" ("We two, ours two") became more common only in later decades.
1. Early and Universal Marriage
Impact: Extremely high
Why: Women marrying young (often in teens) led to longer reproductive spans, increasing the likelihood of more children.
Context: Early marriage was culturally entrenched and nearly universal in many regions.
2. Lack of Access to Contraception and Family Planning
Impact: Very high
Why: Limited availability, knowledge, and social acceptance of contraceptive methods meant families had little control over the number of children they had.
Context: Family planning programs began in the 1950s but took decades to scale effectively.
3 . Low Female Education and Employment
Impact: High
Why: Women with limited education and few career prospects often became mothers earlier and more frequently.
Context: Education is closely linked with fertility reduction, and literacy rates among women were very low during this time.
4. Rural Agrarian Economy
Impact: Medium to high
Why: In rural economies, more children meant more hands to work on the farm, reinforcing high fertility.
Context: Over two-thirds of India's population lived in rural areas during the peak fertility period.
5. Weak Government Policies and Implementation (initially)
Impact: Medium
Why: Although India was the first country to adopt a national family planning program (1952), it lacked early effectiveness due to poor infrastructure, weak outreach, and resistance.
Context: It took until the late 1970s–1990s for fertility-related programs to show sustained impact.
6 . Limited Role of Mass Media and Public Awareness
Impact: Lower
Why: Mass communication about small families, contraceptive use, and women's rights was limited.
Context: Government campaigns promoting "Hum do, hamare do" ("We two, ours two") became more common only in later decades.
6/26/2025, 12:09:32 PM
Page 1