Theme: Ethnoculture
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Four Africas
FOUR AFRICAS If you look at Africa, North Africa developed rapidly under the Egyptians and Phoenicians, and only failed under islam. If you look at west africa, it sure looks like civilization should have taken off there, and the only thing I can see so far is (a) limited productivity of the territory meaning high cost of administration, (b) lack of eurasian or south american domesticated animals and vegetables, (c) painful disease gradients, and (d) isolation from trade once they reached sufficient scale, that they needed eurasian technology from others to continue scale. I’m just too ignorant still to understand. But it looks like a ‘Jared Diamond’ argument there. If you look at east africa, the two red sea routes (the isthmus across the south, and the river at the north) this territory was ‘hostile and unexplored’ and the trade route poorly usd until roman times (and was prime booty for islam). If you look at the territory between east and west africa, and between east africa and the highlands of southern africa, these regions are just too costly to transit for trade – especially in comparison to the mediterranean. I mean, geography is just … damn, africa is HUGE. The route across the isthmus like that between alaska and siberia was walkable or at least open to simple migration out of africa. The semitic peoples (i think) developed out of west eurasians on this land bridge route, then moved north, and once the semitic peoples developed they migrated southward and established kingdoms in the horn of africa. (the one that is now slowly splitting off of africa to form a large island as big as the british isles.) Even once horses were introduced, the climate is not beneficial for raising horses (especially compared to mongolia or the european plain). Trade tended to round the west coast rather than cross the center. Meaning that trade with west africa was prohibitively distant until the age of sail. —“cavalryman in West Africa ultimately lost out to the musketeer. Firearms were not only, eventually, a more efficient arm of warfare: they were also very much cheaper than horses. The same happened in Asia, of course: but perhaps not quite so inevitability. For a very long time firearms were inferior both in range and rate of fire to the Turkish compound bow. The Tatars of the Crimea were still, in the seventeenth century, raiding effectively in Eastern Europe against the opposition of field artillery and troops armed with muskets. And western writers on Ottoman expansion have tended to lay too much emphasis on the Janissaries – infantry musketeers – as against the Ottomans’ more significant light cavalry. But gunpowder had nevertheless sounded the death-knell of the mounted archer’s invincibility. In West Africa the heyday of the cavalryman lasted for a much shorter period than in Asia – not more than five centuries”— Still have to study each of these west african empires, because it sure looks like there was sufficient mass there.Apr 04, 2018 6:30pm -
Four Africas
FOUR AFRICAS If you look at Africa, North Africa developed rapidly under the Egyptians and Phoenicians, and only failed under islam. If you look at west africa, it sure looks like civilization should have taken off there, and the only thing I can see so far is (a) limited productivity of the territory meaning high cost of administration, (b) lack of eurasian or south american domesticated animals and vegetables, (c) painful disease gradients, and (d) isolation from trade once they reached sufficient scale, that they needed eurasian technology from others to continue scale. I’m just too ignorant still to understand. But it looks like a ‘Jared Diamond’ argument there. If you look at east africa, the two red sea routes (the isthmus across the south, and the river at the north) this territory was ‘hostile and unexplored’ and the trade route poorly usd until roman times (and was prime booty for islam). If you look at the territory between east and west africa, and between east africa and the highlands of southern africa, these regions are just too costly to transit for trade – especially in comparison to the mediterranean. I mean, geography is just … damn, africa is HUGE. The route across the isthmus like that between alaska and siberia was walkable or at least open to simple migration out of africa. The semitic peoples (i think) developed out of west eurasians on this land bridge route, then moved north, and once the semitic peoples developed they migrated southward and established kingdoms in the horn of africa. (the one that is now slowly splitting off of africa to form a large island as big as the british isles.) Even once horses were introduced, the climate is not beneficial for raising horses (especially compared to mongolia or the european plain). Trade tended to round the west coast rather than cross the center. Meaning that trade with west africa was prohibitively distant until the age of sail. —“cavalryman in West Africa ultimately lost out to the musketeer. Firearms were not only, eventually, a more efficient arm of warfare: they were also very much cheaper than horses. The same happened in Asia, of course: but perhaps not quite so inevitability. For a very long time firearms were inferior both in range and rate of fire to the Turkish compound bow. The Tatars of the Crimea were still, in the seventeenth century, raiding effectively in Eastern Europe against the opposition of field artillery and troops armed with muskets. And western writers on Ottoman expansion have tended to lay too much emphasis on the Janissaries – infantry musketeers – as against the Ottomans’ more significant light cavalry. But gunpowder had nevertheless sounded the death-knell of the mounted archer’s invincibility. In West Africa the heyday of the cavalryman lasted for a much shorter period than in Asia – not more than five centuries”— Still have to study each of these west african empires, because it sure looks like there was sufficient mass there.Apr 04, 2018 6:30pm -
photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/29694489_10156264709207264_61685063
photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/29694489_10156264709207264_6168506320564518912_o_10156264709202264.jpg FOUR AFRICAS
If you look at Africa, North Africa developed rapidly under the Egyptians and Phoenicians, and only failed under islam.
If you look at west africa, it sure looks like civilization should have taken off there, and the only thing I can see so far is (a) limited productivity of the territory meaning high cost of administration, (b) lack of eurasian or south american domesticated animals and vegetables, (c) painful disease gradients, and (d) isolation from trade once they reached sufficient scale, that they needed eurasian technology from others to continue scale. I’m just too ignorant still to understand. But it looks like a ‘Jared Diamond’ argument there.
If you look at east africa, the two red sea routes (the isthmus across the south, and the river at the north) this territory was ‘hostile and unexplored’ and the trade route poorly usd until roman times (and was prime booty for islam).
If you look at the territory between east and west africa, and between east africa and the highlands of southern africa, these regions are just too costly to transit for trade – especially in comparison to the mediterranean. I mean, geography is just … damn, africa is HUGE.
The route across the isthmus like that between alaska and siberia was walkable or at least open to simple migration out of africa. The semitic peoples (i think) developed out of west eurasians on this land bridge route, then moved north, and once the semitic peoples developed they migrated southward and established kingdoms in the horn of africa. (the one that is now slowly splitting off of africa to form a large island as big as the british isles.)
Even once horses were introduced, the climate is not beneficial for raising horses (especially compared to mongolia or the european plain).
Trade tended to round the west coast rather than cross the center. Meaning that trade with west africa was prohibitively distant until the age of sail.
—“cavalryman in West Africa ultimately lost out to the musketeer. Firearms were not only, eventually, a more efficient arm of warfare: they were also very much cheaper than horses. The same happened in Asia, of course: but perhaps not quite so inevitability. For a very long time firearms were inferior both in range and rate of fire to the Turkish compound bow. The Tatars of the Crimea were still, in the seventeenth century, raiding effectively in Eastern Europe against the opposition of field artillery and troops armed with muskets. And western writers on Ottoman expansion have tended to lay too much emphasis on the Janissaries – infantry musketeers – as against the Ottomans’ more significant light cavalry. But gunpowder had nevertheless sounded the death-knell of the mounted archer’s invincibility. In West Africa the heyday of the cavalryman lasted for a much shorter period than in Asia – not more than five centuries”—
Still have to study each of these west african empires, because it sure looks like there was sufficient mass there.William L. BengeThe space race has money flowing into whether or not and then how to teraform Mars, while there’s an entire continent on earth that could benefit from a similar tecnnological push for teraforming: Africa. Except, very unlike Mars, there’d be scores of corrupt governments on the continent to have to contend with at every turn. Definitely prohibitive. Unfortunate.Apr 05, 2018 1:44amWilliam L. BengeLushness from coast to coast on the continent, along with robust agg, would be the next wonder of the world.Apr 05, 2018 1:47amWilliam L. BengeWould make the great pyramids of Egypt look like child’s play, Panama canal too.Apr 05, 2018 1:49amWilliam L. BengeNevermind, the mohammedans would have to be domesticated first. Idea wrecked.Apr 05, 2018 1:52amJames HarroldThough wouldn’t terraforming a subsection of the planet have possible unforeseen consequences for the whole planet. At least on mars, there’s no life (that we’ve detected) so theres little collateral damage if we attempt to terraform it.Apr 06, 2018 9:09amWilliam L. BengeYes, seems undeniable would offer surprises but since my expertise here is nil have to say IDHDC as to what a reasonable purview looks like on the topic. I mean, the fact that actual scientists are conversing about terraforming a planet and even conducting field research for it has me, well it’s surreal my man.Apr 06, 2018 9:37amJames HarroldOh yeah definitely. And usually they start with smaller scale proof of concept and for the most part I think Africa has parts that could be interesting to experiment with. I was just kind of running that simulation in my head and remembering some case studies of even much smaller changes completely changing ecosystems for better or for worse.Apr 06, 2018 9:48amFOUR AFRICAS
If you look at Africa, North Africa developed rapidly under the Egyptians and Phoenicians, and only failed under islam.
If you look at west africa, it sure looks like civilization should have taken off there, and the only thing I can see so far is (a) limited productivity of the territory meaning high cost of administration, (b) lack of eurasian or south american domesticated animals and vegetables, (c) painful disease gradients, and (d) isolation from trade once they reached sufficient scale, that they needed eurasian technology from others to continue scale. I’m just too ignorant still to understand. But it looks like a ‘Jared Diamond’ argument there.
If you look at east africa, the two red sea routes (the isthmus across the south, and the river at the north) this territory was ‘hostile and unexplored’ and the trade route poorly usd until roman times (and was prime booty for islam).
If you look at the territory between east and west africa, and between east africa and the highlands of southern africa, these regions are just too costly to transit for trade – especially in comparison to the mediterranean. I mean, geography is just … damn, africa is HUGE.
The route across the isthmus like that between alaska and siberia was walkable or at least open to simple migration out of africa. The semitic peoples (i think) developed out of west eurasians on this land bridge route, then moved north, and once the semitic peoples developed they migrated southward and established kingdoms in the horn of africa. (the one that is now slowly splitting off of africa to form a large island as big as the british isles.)
Even once horses were introduced, the climate is not beneficial for raising horses (especially compared to mongolia or the european plain).
Trade tended to round the west coast rather than cross the center. Meaning that trade with west africa was prohibitively distant until the age of sail.
—“cavalryman in West Africa ultimately lost out to the musketeer. Firearms were not only, eventually, a more efficient arm of warfare: they were also very much cheaper than horses. The same happened in Asia, of course: but perhaps not quite so inevitability. For a very long time firearms were inferior both in range and rate of fire to the Turkish compound bow. The Tatars of the Crimea were still, in the seventeenth century, raiding effectively in Eastern Europe against the opposition of field artillery and troops armed with muskets. And western writers on Ottoman expansion have tended to lay too much emphasis on the Janissaries – infantry musketeers – as against the Ottomans’ more significant light cavalry. But gunpowder had nevertheless sounded the death-knell of the mounted archer’s invincibility. In West Africa the heyday of the cavalryman lasted for a much shorter period than in Asia – not more than five centuries”—
Still have to study each of these west african empires, because it sure looks like there was sufficient mass there.
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 18:30:00 UTC
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The united states was (and is not any longer) a great experiment that was ended
The united states was (and is not any longer) a great experiment that was ended in the 1960’s because of vast underclass immigration. Most of the ‘good’ was from german and dutch immigrants. I admire the swiss and japanese. The rest are all ‘less’. I dislike chinese dishonesty.
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 17:20:10 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981582211966226433
Reply addressees: @Superhero_sky
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981581422963109888
IN REPLY TO:
Unknown author
@Superhero_sky I prefer Corporate government in the Chinese (or German) model, insular strategy in the Han model, but northern european ethics, legal system, value of human life, arts – particularly our speaking the truth regardless of impact on the status hierarchy – and Slavic family culture.
Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/981581422963109888
IN REPLY TO:
@curtdoolittle
@Superhero_sky I prefer Corporate government in the Chinese (or German) model, insular strategy in the Han model, but northern european ethics, legal system, value of human life, arts – particularly our speaking the truth regardless of impact on the status hierarchy – and Slavic family culture.
Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/981581422963109888
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4 – While the french, spanish and british were exploitative the english, left be
4 – While the french, spanish and british were exploitative the english, left behind a great work unfinished because of the russian vs german competition over the Intermarium.That said,had england completed her mission it would have been the greatest achievement in human history.
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 16:14:15 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981565620830515200
Reply addressees: @JulesWarr @neovictorian23
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981565027219050496
IN REPLY TO:
Unknown author
@JulesWarr @neovictorian23 3 -The dirty secret of western civilization is that while we invented Sovereignty, Reciprocity, Natural Law,and Market Politics that gave us reason and science, we started out as cattle raiders, pirates, and conquerors, and all the ‘goods’ that we gave the world were a byproduct.
Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/981565027219050496
IN REPLY TO:
@curtdoolittle
@JulesWarr @neovictorian23 3 -The dirty secret of western civilization is that while we invented Sovereignty, Reciprocity, Natural Law,and Market Politics that gave us reason and science, we started out as cattle raiders, pirates, and conquerors, and all the ‘goods’ that we gave the world were a byproduct.
Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/981565027219050496
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1 – False dichotomy. a) Aryanism (since the time of the Yamna) has always been e
1 – False dichotomy. a) Aryanism (since the time of the Yamna) has always been expansionary and to some degree, messianic. b) the principle purpose of expanding trade was not originally enrichment so much as creating trade interdependence in order to limit war.
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 16:07:34 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981563939367587842
Reply addressees: @JulesWarr @neovictorian23
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981455386501935105
IN REPLY TO:
@RoastfaceK1llah
@neovictorian23 @curtdoolittle Couple of points in response – 1. The enlightenment of others was not primary driver for colonialism, personal enrichment was, 2. Brings to mind Lenin’s observation regarding omelettes and eggs.
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981455386501935105
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An Indian friend recently explained how they eat with their hands – which is the
An Indian friend recently explained how they eat with their hands – which is the best instrument for eating. … I looked at him blankly. … People in india defecate in the wild, it’s the dirtiest country on earth, and we need shots before going there. …
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 15:01:34 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981547331664441344
Reply addressees: @Communism_Kills
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981538401123033089
IN REPLY TO:
Original post on X
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Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/981538401123033089
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1 – False dichotomy. a) Aryanism (since the time of the Yamna) has always been e
1 – False dichotomy. a) Aryanism (since the time of the Yamna) has always been expansionary and to some degree, messianic. b) the principle purpose of expanding trade was not originally enrichment so much as creating trade interdependence in order to limit war.
2 – c) the scholistics were horrified by the new world slaughter, and d) the church was exceptionally interested in education and conversion. 3) so it is more accurate to say that colonialism was a continuation of “Heroism, Rule for Profit”, just as was practiced by China.
3 -The dirty secret of western civilization is that while we invented Sovereignty, Reciprocity, Natural Law,and Market Politics that gave us reason and science, we started out as cattle raiders, pirates, and conquerors, and all the ‘goods’ that we gave the world were a byproduct.
4 – While the french, spanish and british were exploitative the english, left behind a great work unfinished because of the russian vs german competition over the Intermarium.That said,had england completed her mission it would have been the greatest achievement in human history.
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 14:08:00 UTC
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What is the cause of Scandinavian (including British) virtue signaling and virtu
What is the cause of Scandinavian (including British) virtue signaling and virtue spirals? I mean, seriously. It is just a wealth effect and the absence of competitors on borders?
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 11:05:00 UTC
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good about scandinavia existed before their ‘experiment’. Everything bad about s
https://t.co/6Wci7aYHh4Everything good about scandinavia existed before their ‘experiment’. Everything bad about scandinavia has occured because of their experiment. Geographic insularity breeds economic, social, political, and military complacency.Wealth allows greater expression of folly. That’s bad. https://t.co/6Wci7aYHh4
Source date (UTC): 2018-04-04 10:55:00 UTC