3422 Life as a Refugee in Europe - Call In Show - September 19th, 2016

21/09/2016 2h 50min

Listen "3422 Life as a Refugee in Europe - Call In Show - September 19th, 2016"

Episode Synopsis

Question 1: [1:19] - “Intuition seems to describe a legitimate problem solving technique. I have often arrived at insight without following a serial path of logic. In science and math, I can usually show someone else a logical path but I did not arrive there consciously. I believe Newton intuitively ‘knew’ how gravity worked, but he had to invent the mathematics of calculus to prove what he knew viscerally. In the computer world, serial logic prevails. In the human meat brain, parallel processing prevails. I believe that intuition is the result of this unconscious parallel processing of data in our brains. ““So, what is intuition? Can intuition be the reason behind my ‘non-reasonable’ faith in a Creator? Although, my faith in Jesus does not meet the standards of serial, empirical logic, I have a strong ‘gut feeling’ that there is much 'spiritual' truth about human nature and the nature of the Creator in the Christian faith. I believe that my intuition is not blind even though I lack empirical proof.”Question 2: [10:25] – “I’ve worked for one year at a care home for unaccompanied minors in Sweden. How do I prepare my family for growing up in this environment and how can I help provide answers to helping these kids when they themselves identify these refugee homes as negative and hate their situation? I see multi-culturalism failing around Europe and the US, but these problems have been around so long. Shouldn’t there be a way for each culture to find their own way in each society? The crime is so high for foreigners in Sweden, and not mentioning what these immigrants do to the host population by hiding their nationality. It seems people are waking up to these false narratives. What else can we do to reverse the damage of the past 40 plus years of multiculturalism?"Question 3: [1:08:50] – “Is acknowledging our specific deficiencies and differences as people divisive or helpful? From anecdotal experience, I find myself questioning whether or not it helps to know the truth especially when we're talking about genetic trends. To give a less touchy example, does it help a young girl growing up without a father to make better decisions if she knows that there's a strong likelihood she will make bad decisions due to his absence (in most cases)? Or are you accepting the behavior/likelihood by acknowledging the trend?”Question 4: [1:59:50] – “Many people, noting the West's seeming unwillingness to defend their traditional nations, believe the issue stems from pathological altruism. Yet the Anonymous Conservative website, which details r/K behavior theories, clearly details r related behavior as related to narcissism. Do you think it's possible that the current consensus is incorrect and what we're struggling with is narcissism at the level of general society?”Freedomain Radio is 100% funded by viewers like you. Please support the show by signing up for a monthly subscription or making a one time donation at: http://www.freedomainradio.com/donate