Summary: A refutation of the myths of Fascist "racial" theories.
Description: Saint Paul's statement of the Christian approach is contrasted to the master-race doctrines of the Nazis and Japan and their effects. A 'typical man', accepting that racial doctrines have caused suffering, still doubts there is really nothing in them, but the commentator (Julian Huxley) assures him "nothing whatever". Only artificially bred domestic animals are truly uniform races: the 'peoples' of Europe are all racial mixtures, and no stereotypes are valid ("the Germans are one of the most mixed of all peoples"). 'Aryan', in science, refers to a group of languages originating in Asia, not to a Nordic race. Physical racial differences do exist, but there are no sharp racial frontiers, and the 'typical' man's suggestion that there might be qualitative differences between racial 'averages' is refuted: examples from the war show 'backward' races producing heroes etc. "Prejudice" or "the Democratic Way" are the alternatives: the film closes with use of the USSR and USA as working examples of the second alternative, peoples from many 'racial' origins cooperating in a common design.