Word: inferior
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Some friction did exist between the two. The National Review publisher charged in his first 20-minute segment that he would oppose the government stepping in and sterilizing allegedly genetically inferior blacks. But his view was not formulated out of humane considerations. Rusher simply said he could not, in good conscience, trust the government to run a railroad," let alone do a good job of sterilizing the nation's blacks. But Rusher never contested any of Shockley's theories. He did say that he and Shockley may "have some differences of opinion," but only on the point of the validity...
...made the sterilization of Negro rural women, whom he labelled the most genetically inferior, sound so innocuous as to be something even Johnny Carson would be willing to tackle...
...dollars to pay for dwellings inaccessible to ordinary folks; real estate deals that exclude low-income Cambridge dwellers desperately needing such housing; blossoming of cultural activities within the University community, with nothing of any cultural content for or in behalf of the Cambridge community; working for Harvard as "inferior" types, at minimum wages...
...also a different matter to play six teams of nearly comparable ability, and lost to all six, or have to stage great struggles in order to beat teams far inferior in talent...
...whether America should intervene in Europe after the outbreak of the Second World War. He believed the war in Europe was "fratricidal" in that neither side was entirely right or wrong, and he advocated that Western nations stand together as a wall against infiltration by those "of inferior blood" (as he wrote in 1940 in Readers Digest). There should be no confusion about whom he was referring to Lindbergh often spoke of the contrast between "European Germany and Asiatic Russia...