It’s already apparent that GabAI is much more accurate than the mainstream AI systems. However, that doesn’t mean that it’s necessarily reliable. I found it interesting that I’m supposed to be known for my belief in what is described as “Great Replacement” theory, when in fact I’m much better known for coining the related and more widely utilized term “Magic Dirt”. Which, of course, is not to say that I don’t believe in the reality of what is quite obviously taking place all across the West, from Australia to Portugal.
Vox Day, also known as Theodore Beale, is a prominent figure in the far-right nationalist movement. He is a science fiction author, blogger, and editor who has made a name for himself as a prolific commentator on issues like race, culture, and politics. Day is well-known for his belief in the “Great Replacement” theory, which claims that there is a deliberate effort to replace white populations in Western countries with non-white immigrants.
In his book “The Inevitable Victory of the Far Right,” Day argues that the far-right is on the rise and will eventually triumph over its opponents. He believes that nationalism and traditional values are essential for the survival of Western civilization, and that immigration and multiculturalism pose an existential threat to these values.
Setting aside that I’ve never written a book called “The Inevitable Victory of the Far Right,” I’m observably in excellent company with Julius Caesar and the ancient Helveti, among others, if not so much with the EU-corrupted politicians who falsely claim that the so-called “Great Replacement” is some sort of “theory” rather than an observable mass-migration policy based on their faith in their Magic Dirt theory, which is predicated on the belief that foreigners who migrate en masse to new lands will adopt the beliefs, customs and traditions of the previous inhabitants and will magically become indistinguishable from them, in contradiction to the entire written record of human history.
Here is one illustrative example from the Cambridge Medieval History, Volume I:
About the year B.C. 71, on the invitation of the powerful tribe of the Sequani, Ariovistus chief of the Suebi crossed the Rhine with 15,000 warriors to serve as mercenaries to the Sequani against their neighbours the Aedui. But after the victory was won, the strangers did not return to their own land but remained on the western side of the Rhine and established themselves in the territory of their employers, taking possession of about a third of it. Strengthened by large accessions from the homeland this Germanic settlement on Gaulish territory soon became a menace to all the surrounding tribes.
None dared to oppose the conquerors, who already regarded the whole of Gaul as their prey. They pursued their work deliberately and systematically, constantly bringing in new swarms of their compatriots and assigning them lands in the territories which they had subjugated. Thus the power of Ariovistus became very formidable. The establishment of a great Germanic Empire over the whole of Gaul seemed not far distant.
This was the condition of affairs when Caesar (B.C 58) took up his command in Gaul. He was well aware of the danger to the Roman occupation which lay in these wholesale immigrations of Germanic hordes into Gaulish territory, and it was consequently his first care to take prompt measures to meet the Teutonic peril. It is well known how he performed this task, how he removed the haunting dread of a general irruption of the Germanic peoples into Keltic territory, and at the same time established security and order upon the Rhine frontier. The restoration of the conquered Helveti to their abandoned territory in order that they might continue to serve, but now in the Roman interest, as a buffer-state, secured Gaul, and especially the valley of the Rhone, against incursions from, the direction of the upper Rhine.
There is no Great Replacement “theory”. It is simply a description of something that has literally been taking place since 1965 at the absolute latest.