Socio-Parasitic Gene Discovered
Scientists have discovered the gene that predisposes some people to human socio-parasitism.
Scientists at the Berkley Institute for Anti-Social Behaviour in California have completed a study involving over 5000 volunteers from the three social classes:
- The first-class group was made up of wealth creators, those people who create all the physical artifacts that form the basis of all perceived wealth.
- The second-class group consisted of everyone that provides support for the first class group, the designers, technicians, engineers, educationalists, managers, distributors and sellers etc.
- The third-class group was made up of those people in society that create nothing, who in order to survive prey upon the first two classes, the bankers, financial services, insurance providers et al.
In a study experiment that took over five years to complete a range of tests and observational studies were carried out. The volunteers from each class group underwent extensive tests including brain scans, blood tests and psychiatric analysis. The purpose of the study was to determine if there was any physiological and mental differences between the three classes.
The study showed there was very little physiological difference between each class and that any mental differences could be attributed to the differing environments in which each class existed.
The breakthrough came at the genetic level, Professor Tat Wright a specialist in genetic engineering identified during routine genome tests a gene that existed in only, but not all of those tested in the third class group. The gene, aptly named the ‘socio-parasitic gene’ apparently blocks their ability to create or to do anything that is beneficial to society.
By studying the genomic sequence, it was discovered that the gene is not hereditary but spontaneous. Asked what this means, Professor Wright explained that the apparent randomness of this gene and its predisposition to interact with the environment is probably the reason why there has been a significant increase in the number of people in the third class over the last 100 years or so, an increase disproportionate to the other two classes.
The collapse of the world financial system may be an indication of the power of the socio-parasitic gene and urgent research is required in order to understand what triggers this gene into existence. Only by understanding the trigger mechanism will we be able to halt these genes insidious effect upon society said Professor Wright. The number of parasitic freeloaders in society today is reaching epidemic proportions, a level that cannot be supported by the diminishing number of wealth creators.
