The Junk Drawer

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
HOW FIRST NATIONS PEOPLE MANAGED COUNTRY

First Nations populations matched the carrying capacity of the land because Aboriginal people saw their primary mandate as caring for the land and each other, their society was focused on the development of sophisticated technologies for land management, resource husbanding and population control.
The structure of Aboriginal society also reflected these ecological considerations and eldership was attained not simply through age, but by demonstrated and accumulated merit in both religious and secular knowledge. There was therefore no division between church and state, because elders had to demonstrate a unified knowledge base as well as a communal approach to decision making.
Through this blending of spiritual and secular authority in a system of eldership. Aboriginal society might be best described as a 'Druidic Meritocracy'. It was therefore a truly communalist society with no individual or specific group having control over resources.
There was no individual accumulation of wealth or power and as a consequence there was conversely no accumulated poverty or disadvantage. there were no social class differences apart from the respect due to age and merit, and as indicated. decision making was by consensus rather than edict.
All tribal areas were based on water catchment areas and the totemic system was utilised as a means of species conservation and land management.' The totem system therefore had a primary ecological purpose and all knowledge was integrated through the totem system to serve that primary ecological purpose.
This ecological focus was achieved by the universal way in which the totem system was structured across Australia and in turn how this determined the structure of Aboriginal society itself. Aboriginal family kinship was therefore an integral part of their system of ecological relationship and control. Aboriginal people therefore saw human society as an interdependent part of the whole ecology and not separate from or holding dominion over it.
For instance in all Aboriginal societies a Yin and Yang type of conceptual division existed, where every living and non living thing was divided between these two halves or 'moieties'. At the simplest level (and there were several ritual exceptions) this meant that an individual was not allowed to hunt or eat any of the animals in their own moiety. because they were his or her spirit cousins.
In this way at least half the food sources were taboo to an individual and for instance it might mean you could eat wallaby but not grey kangaroo, or ring-tailed possum but not brush-tailed possum. As indicated, the totem system also governed marriage and family relationships and together with common male and female contraceptive practices, all tribes ensured that their population remained consistent with the natural carrying capacity of the land.
This was however not just the carrying capacity of the land in a good or average year, but in the worst of years. For Aboriginal people abundance was the norm.' These land management and population control practices therefore meant that prior to British settlement in 1788 Aboriginal people in Australia enjoyed the highest common standard of living of any people in the world.
From:
'The Dust of the Mindye' The use of Biological Warfare in the Conquest of Australia. By Jim Poulter (PhD.M.S.W. Dip.Crim. Dip. Soc.Stud. MAASW
 

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
I will do what I have always done
Survive
Thank you @HGCC for your comment
Hey Jim, been there, done that. You’ll be fine. It took me about 3 weeks and a trip to Guatemala before I moved on ;). We became friends again, stood by me when I had the heart issues (9 days in cardiac intensive care) and there they were, my girlfriend and ex-wife bedside…..it was kinda weird lol. The day I moved into my new place I hooked up my new Bose acoustimass 15 and blew the shit off the walls and bbq’d steak, then created a profile on plenty of fish lol.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Hey Jim, been there, done that. You’ll be fine. It took me about 3 weeks and a trip to Guatemala before I moved on ;). We became friends again, stood by me when I had the heart issues (9 days in cardiac intensive care) and there they were, my girlfriend and ex-wife bedside…..it was kinda weird lol. The day I moved into my new place I hooked up my new Bose acoustimass 15 and blew the shit off the walls and bbq’d steak, then created a profile on plenty of fish lol.
Good ole plenty of fish, I was stabbing grannies for awhile using it! :lol:
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
HOW FIRST NATIONS PEOPLE MANAGED COUNTRY

First Nations populations matched the carrying capacity of the land because Aboriginal people saw their primary mandate as caring for the land and each other, their society was focused on the development of sophisticated technologies for land management, resource husbanding and population control.
The structure of Aboriginal society also reflected these ecological considerations and eldership was attained not simply through age, but by demonstrated and accumulated merit in both religious and secular knowledge. There was therefore no division between church and state, because elders had to demonstrate a unified knowledge base as well as a communal approach to decision making.
Through this blending of spiritual and secular authority in a system of eldership. Aboriginal society might be best described as a 'Druidic Meritocracy'. It was therefore a truly communalist society with no individual or specific group having control over resources.
There was no individual accumulation of wealth or power and as a consequence there was conversely no accumulated poverty or disadvantage. there were no social class differences apart from the respect due to age and merit, and as indicated. decision making was by consensus rather than edict.
All tribal areas were based on water catchment areas and the totemic system was utilised as a means of species conservation and land management.' The totem system therefore had a primary ecological purpose and all knowledge was integrated through the totem system to serve that primary ecological purpose.
This ecological focus was achieved by the universal way in which the totem system was structured across Australia and in turn how this determined the structure of Aboriginal society itself. Aboriginal family kinship was therefore an integral part of their system of ecological relationship and control. Aboriginal people therefore saw human society as an interdependent part of the whole ecology and not separate from or holding dominion over it.
For instance in all Aboriginal societies a Yin and Yang type of conceptual division existed, where every living and non living thing was divided between these two halves or 'moieties'. At the simplest level (and there were several ritual exceptions) this meant that an individual was not allowed to hunt or eat any of the animals in their own moiety. because they were his or her spirit cousins.
In this way at least half the food sources were taboo to an individual and for instance it might mean you could eat wallaby but not grey kangaroo, or ring-tailed possum but not brush-tailed possum. As indicated, the totem system also governed marriage and family relationships and together with common male and female contraceptive practices, all tribes ensured that their population remained consistent with the natural carrying capacity of the land.
This was however not just the carrying capacity of the land in a good or average year, but in the worst of years. For Aboriginal people abundance was the norm.' These land management and population control practices therefore meant that prior to British settlement in 1788 Aboriginal people in Australia enjoyed the highest common standard of living of any people in the world.
From:
'The Dust of the Mindye' The use of Biological Warfare in the Conquest of Australia. By Jim Poulter (PhD.M.S.W. Dip.Crim. Dip. Soc.Stud. MAASW
Brilliant essay

They were/are a truly a remarkable people to exist in & overcome a very hostile enviromint (maybe they can help us? )

Too bad the Brits showed up and proceeded to decimate them, those Native Peoples of Australia, the Aborigines (Irish/American Indians/Indians in India (in case your confused :) ) Palestinians, Chinese & anyone else they also contacted comes to my mind) & were murdered/destroyed by those cocksuckers.

You know what the Brits did best?

Destroying Nations in the name of their fucking King or Queen, whoever it was at that moment.

Fuck the British "Empire"

I'm glad it's their turn to get fucked over (How's Brexit going/not too well?)


Yea, we fucked them up

Very nice, Indeed :)
 

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
Fuck the British "Empire"

I'm glad it's their turn to get fucked over (How's Brexit going/not too well?)

[ :)
I was just thinking about brexit this morning. I've previously thought they were silly to leave. But I'm now wondering if it might end up being better for them financially. As more poor countries are accepted into the EU at an ever increasing pace the more money that the very few profitable countries that prop up the EU will have to spend. It may well be a house of cards.
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
it might end up being better for them financially.
Ya think?

They are losing advantages they had in Europe, specifically having a dependable market for it's agricultural industry, which will have to pay more VAT now & in order to offset the added cost they must raise their prices, thus reducing the demand for English products in the EU

I think this bullshit Nationalism took hold, and that took over common sense.

They really didn't think to the future I think, & with Scotland ready to leave & take their gas with them, they sorta/definitely fucked themselves.

Good

 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
I fell in love with her first time I listened/saw her.
I 1st saw her in 1981 when she was the opening band for Bob Dylan.
I can't remember a fucking thing about Dylan, but her act is imbedded in my memory.
She was great & watching her spitting all the time made me laugh :)

You do know what I'm doing next, right?

Turn it up :)

 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
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Budley Doright

Well-Known Member
I 1st saw her in 1981 when she was the opening band for Bob Dylan.
I can't remember a fucking thing about Dylan, but her act is imbedded in my memory.
She was great & watching her spitting all the time made me laugh :)

You do know what I'm doing next, right?

Turn it up :)

Thanks for adding a shit ton of music to my playlist Jim, and everyone else here! I only have one and it’s got 29 hours lol.
 
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