Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
July 9, 2014
A Cornell University study has shown something everyone already knew: black people tip significantly less than Whites.
Though the full research paper is restricted to those with access to the University’s database, an abstract is available on the Cornell website.
The findings of the study are listed thus:
1. Tips from Blacks are, on average, lower than those from Whites;
2. Black-White differences in restaurant tipping are not caused solely by race differences in socio-economic status;
3. Black-White differences in restaurant tipping are evident among the middle-class as well as the lower-class;
4. Black-White differences in restaurant tipping do not disappear when both groups get comparable service;
5. Blacks tip less than Whites even when the server is Black;
6. Blacks are much less familiar with the 15- to 20-percent restaurant tipping norm than are Whites;
7. Blacks tip less than do Whites in many (but not all) other service contexts; and
8. Asian-White and Hispanic-White differences in tipping are smaller, less robust, and have drawn less attention than Black-White differences in tipping.
The bottom-line given as to how society should deal with the problem of low black tipping is given thus:
The research findings suggest that restaurant managers, executives, and the industry as a whole should try to educate all of their customers about restaurant tipping norms. Such an educational campaign could involve informational brochures in restaurants, as well as an industry-wide effort promoted by trade associations.
Once again, the problems that blacks present for White society are explained away by a “lack of education,” rather than the obvious fact that they are biologically incompatible with our civilization.
The reality is that Whites tip higher because they have higher levels of empathy for strangers, this having been developed as a result of a nuclear family-based society which required a high-level of care for those not directly related to you.
Blacks, conversely had a more collectivist, less individualistic society, marked by close extended family relations, wherein your only social duty was to your direct relatives. Everyone else was most likely trying to eat you, and you were trying to eat them.
These simple explanations, borne-out by basic evolutionary biology, are forbidden to discuss even when, as is the case with this Cornell tipping study, they are right in front of your face.