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Subscribe, Like & Share Frances Cress Welsing (born March 18, 1935), is an afrocentrist psychiatrist who with her 1970 essay: the Cress Theory of Color-Confrontation and Racism (White Supremacy), offered her interpretation on the origins of white supremacy culture in Washington, D.C. She is the author of The Isis Papers; The Keys to the Colors (1991), in which she posits that white people are the result of a genetic mutation of albinism and are the outcast offspring of the original peoples of Africa Welsing states that a system is practiced by the global white minority, on both conscious and unconscious levels, to ensure their genetic survival by any means necessary. According to Welsing, this system attacks people of color, particularly people of African descent, in the nine major areas of people's activity: economics, education, entertainment, labor, law, politics, religion, sex and war. Welsing believes that it is imperative that people of color, especially people of African descent, understand how the system of white supremacy works in order to dismantle it and bring true justice to planet Earth