I found my article where I linked feminism & the Borg. Link below, in case you're interested. I didn't say in the article that feminists are a Borg style collective, but that feminists act as if all women are a Borg-style hive mind, when they claim "Women Need XYZ" although the reality is that Feminists want XYZ...
Thanks. The practice of marriaging girls "outside the tribe" has be has also be practiced time immemorial by homosapiens to create ties and avoid inbreeding. It was still practiced in the Highlands of PNG last century (don't know if it still is).
I read Jared Diamond, (ornithologist, cultural anthropology, sociologist, environmental historian...) fascinating book, "The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?" that delved into societies of the New Guinea Highlands, Pacific islanderss, as well as Inuit, Amazonian Indians, Kalahari San people, and others.
One thing that stuck in my mind was his discussion of why the Highlanders don't sleep under trees; there is a extremely very low risk per night of a branch falling on and killing you if you sleep under a tree, but if you repeatedly engage in low risk activities, the mathmatics of probability tend towards almost certainty of it happening
I found my article where I linked feminism & the Borg. Link below, in case you're interested. I didn't say in the article that feminists are a Borg style collective, but that feminists act as if all women are a Borg-style hive mind, when they claim "Women Need XYZ" although the reality is that Feminists want XYZ...
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/04/feminisms_strange_trans_fruit.html
Thanks. The practice of marriaging girls "outside the tribe" has be has also be practiced time immemorial by homosapiens to create ties and avoid inbreeding. It was still practiced in the Highlands of PNG last century (don't know if it still is).
Thanks for giving it read. I bet the folks in PNG still do, as they population/gene pool are probably not huge.
I read Jared Diamond, (ornithologist, cultural anthropology, sociologist, environmental historian...) fascinating book, "The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies?" that delved into societies of the New Guinea Highlands, Pacific islanderss, as well as Inuit, Amazonian Indians, Kalahari San people, and others.
One thing that stuck in my mind was his discussion of why the Highlanders don't sleep under trees; there is a extremely very low risk per night of a branch falling on and killing you if you sleep under a tree, but if you repeatedly engage in low risk activities, the mathmatics of probability tend towards almost certainty of it happening