Quote from lilduckling:
What they dont realize is that when the "superior" whites were living like animals in huts and crapping in the woods......
...the Romans were enjoying running water, indoor heating from the floors, fine linens, imported goods from every corner of the know world, and of course had the worlds mightiest army........ up until around 450AD
Actually the Celtic empire was the largest of all empires and were the seed population for most of the later "advanced" civilizations.
The celts were a tough people that even, later in history, the mighty Romans had a difficult time conquering ( the Scots, Welsh, Gauls, etc ).
The Celts colonized east to the borders of the later western Han chinese empire ( the ancient Caucasoid mummies of the gobi desert).
Along their journey to the borders of the later Han empire, The Celts were the precursor population upon which the greeks were seeded. Celts seeded the germanic tribes ( mixture of celts pushing north and nordics pushing south) , celts seeded the ancient Persians and the Aryans who colonized the Dravidian civilizations of ancient India.
If you go even further back, what were the original celts were actually a mixture of very white aboriginal Irish and Egyptian aristocratic conquerors. That's why there are many similarities between celtic religious rituals and ancient egyptian rituals.
Also. The Roman empire never died. The Roman civilization migrated to western Europe when the Germanic tribes ( Vandals, Goths, etc ) swept south and took remnants of Roman civilization back to their original homelands.
The only group capable of mitigating ( or even negating ) the Germanic invasion of Rome, were the Huns ( also of Celtic origins ) lead by Attila.
The Germans were no match for the superior attack and retreat strategies of the Huns made possible by their fast horses and excellent horsemanship ( that's why Attila is almost always shown on a horse ).
If Attila the Hun hadn't been killed by his young vengeful German bride, the world would have been completely different today.