Friday, 11 September 2020

Fighting Fake News with REAL 11/9/20 ;The Real Threat to Law and Order | Robert Reich First Nations habitats Bruce Pascoe,Grace Karskens Audio;



 



https://youtu.be/fh1xNjguKEM

 

No photo description available.

 

 
FIRST NATIONS HABITATS BEFORE INVASION
First Nations people from the hundreds of different nations managed their lands, food, water and habitats to meet their needs - working with their environment to maintain health, comfort and sustainability.
Researchers in recent years, including Bruce Pascoe, have described how many First Nations nations/tribes lived in villages or towns, while many others lived in villages seasonally.
Once the surviving peoples from the massacres were displaced from 'country' by European colonists, many were forced into exclusively hunting and gathering, therefore building shelters that served the purpose of this transient lifestyle. This was not completely foreign to them because most tribes often travelled around their lands seasonally, and through other tribes lands for regional gatherings.
In reference to the bottom image represented here we provide some observations made by a land party from the Vlamingh Expedition in Western Australia before it was settled by Europeans, he reported to see five huts close together at Wittecarra Creek, near to the mouth of the Murchison River. One of these huts was described as being "made of clay with a roof sloping down on two sides."
In 1803 another report of Aboriginal people living in a larger permanent settlement derived from the Baudin expedition, where they encountered a settlement on the tip of Peron Peninsula, Shark Bay, Western Australia on 18 March 1803.
Three members of the Expedition mention this assemblage of huts, Baudin, Peron and Freycinet, and the ship's artist Petit was ordered to make a drawing. According to Baudin, "Twelve or fifteen huts, much better made, than those we have found hitherto, composed the village where this small tribe lived ... ones that belong to the heads of families ... were much bigger and were built with considerably more symmetry."
Peron's description was, "these huts of the Land of Eendracht [central west coast of WA] ... are in the form of a hemisphere slightly depressed at the top ...... Their height is from 12 to 16 decimetres [1.2 – 1.6 m], by a diameter of 20 to 25 decimetres [2.0 – 2.5 m]. They are composed of small trees implanted in the soil ... On the outside are attached layers of foliage and clumps of grass covered by a large quantity of soil."
The bottom drawing in the collage of abodes was made by the junior artist Petit, which first appeared in 1807 in Peron, Lesueur and Petit's Atlas.
PLEASE NOTE: This information does not intend to undermine the tribes who permanently or semi permanently used very simple dwellings to meet their particular purpose.
 Andrew Bolt's an obsessive white supremacist. A Racist whose against any perspective that attempts to alter Colonial history. He rails against Bruce Pascoe but fails to mention historians like Grac Karskens whos research the very opposite of the myths white men have taught each other and are desperate to maitain. Below is a conversation about the work Grace has done that should alter the history we have been taught and why we have always been on country.

  Grace Karskens Research
 
 Andrew Bolt's an obsessive white supremacist. A Racist whose against any perspective that attempts to alter Colonial history. He rails against Bruce Pascoe but fails to mention historians like Grace Karskens whose research the very opposite of the myths white men have taught each other and are desperate to maintain. Below is a conversation about the work Grace has done that should alter the history we have been taught and why we have always been on country.

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