Comment on Hot Take (?) On Antiwork "Doreen's" Fox Interview: Was Consistent From Their Viewpoint
masterofballs@wolfballs.com 2 years agodidn’t watch vids but I assume those are vids of currently existing hunter gatherers?
yeah
picture some kind of society like we have now existing at the beginning of the world, in Genesis, and then a few people leaving that to go live “innawoods”, and I argue that’s how we get hunter gatherers today
Abel was a herder so not much of a hunter and Cain was a farmer. So I guess it is a decent reading to say we started as farmers after the fall. Only later become hunter gather'r. The fall seemed really intentional to me though. I mean why would you put that tree there if you didn't want them to eat it. And it was called the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
But we do have hunter gathers and they don't work 60 hours a day for sure. It is a valid lifestyle.
I do know one “Christian missionary” tried to contact a group that lives on an island and was killed by the tribe for trying to do so
To be fair this is because 100 years or so prior some Christians (really just some Europeans who happened to be Christians) kidnapped a few of them carried them around on a boat back to Europe (with the goal of convincing them their lifestyle was good or something to get their land). Some died, so they took the rest back. Now they kill all foreigners. I can't really blame them for it.
squashkin@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
yeah, some of the mythology of anarcho-primitivists overlaps with Christian belief. Adam and Eve were kind of hunter gatherer, in a way, but maybe not, as they weren't going to die if they didn't have technology. Then after the Fall there's a growth of the use of technology, which is used to prolong life to avoid death.
I like some primitivism and off grid stuff, not sure what to think of hunter gatherers today. We're almost forced to use technology. Those hunter gatherer tribes could be wiped out by the wrong person who decides to attack them, but they haven't been yet so they survive. Lacking technology puts them in a fragile position, but again, they're still here. It's the idea of security by obscurity, their hunter gatherer lifestyle is in a sense only enabled by competing technological societies around them kept in check. Thus the criticism is perhaps it's not globally viable.