Jensen is so right to call people in the developed world Nazis. We most certainly are and it's no wonder we all carry a big stick to fend off others and subdue the natural world. We might better use that stick to help us keep our footing while wading through cesspools of propaganda we refer to as knowledge and "the way things are". Social Darwinism as a theory of what makes the world go round, is one of the stinkier bits of unlovliness we have to get through.
Darwinism is mired in capitalist theories of ongoing struggle and will at some point yield to more subtle and complete theories of life that place far more emphasis on cooperation than competition. People may strive to create a smaller personal footprint, in the future, in deference to their new found ideas of what is natural and inevitable and what is not. Darwinism, social and otherwise will be seen as a hidebound ideology of the conceptually narrow thinker, who focusses on one dynamic of life at the expense of others. You might like this article.
Kropotkin vs Darwin -- Cooperation as an evolutionary force
We have all heard of Charles Darwin. Some of us have even heard of Alfred Russell Wallace, the scholar who independently came up with the theory of evolution by natural selection. But few of us have heard of Prince Peter Alexeivich Kropotkin. Although reduced to a footnote in historical surveys of intellectual thought, the czarist-era Russian nobleman and geographer made significant contributions to evolutionary theory, ecology, and social criticism. In 1902, he gathered these ideas together in Mutual Aid, a Factor in Evolution, a work that has mostly disappeared down the Anglo-American memory hole. Yet his ideas on the cooperative nature of life on Earth, though radical in his time, have received greater support over the past 30 years. Life, it turns out, may even be more cooperative than Kropotkin thought
http://www.commonground.ca/iss/0509170/ ... eoff.shtml