Topic: Reproduction

3 chapters across the catalog

88: Business Decision
1:23:00 - 1:29:54

88: Business Decision

Black Brain Drain, Interracial Reproduction Strategies

The recruitment of top black talent into elite white corporations and universities is described as a domestic "brain drain" that leaves black communities without leadership. The hosts discuss the social engineering aspect of placing black elites in PWIs, where they are more likely to meet interracial partners. They cite figures like Ketanji Brown Jackson and Kamala Harris as examples of this phenomenon, which they argue is an attempt to create an "acceptable" form of blackness.

84: More or Less
3:05:08 - 3:07:22

84: More or Less

Shockley on Reproduction Rates and "Lowest Social Class"

William Shockley cites Census Bureau data to argue that black women of the "lowest intellectual social class" have significantly more children than those with college degrees. He claims this pattern is "unfavorable" for the future of intellectual capacity. He notes that while this trend exists among whites, he views it as more "severe" in the black community.

47: Killer Wasp
54:43 - 58:38

47: Killer Wasp

Population Growth in Africa and Reproductive Rights

In a Financial Times interview, Bill Gates discusses the projected doubling of Africa's population by 2050 and its impact on extreme poverty. He advocates for "reproductive health tools" and education for girls as a means to moderate population growth. The dialogue suggests that these initiatives are viewed by some as a eugenics-based approach to managing "undesirable" populations.