The problem with libs/dems

Bongoloid

Well-Known Member
Resistance is futile, you will be assimilated into the collective, but shit might not be on the collective's diet, so you could get a pass.
Your leader just built the biggest cricket factory in the world in London Ontario,what do you figure that could be for?
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Don't you guys have more friends to help attack me? Go get them
Hey they just drop by, this is a nest of American liberalism, the form is owned by a Canadian and speech is free. If you want abuse, you've come to the right place! :lol: I'll watch, but I'm mostly following the war, being one of those liberal hawks who would vaxx yer ass with a dart gun. Too bad it's a provincial power, but that needs to change with global pandemics. The federal government needs the power to mandate vaccines for morons. However vaccines are improving and this fall's booster is made with Omicron in mind, so maybe only the stupid need die. I plan on getting boosted in the fall, along with a flu shot.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I already acknowledged that but he’s light years ahead of delduca who couldn’t even win his own riding. It’s your poorest poll yet, wait till 2025 when the big blue wave comes rolling through. Though personally I really hope your kind has said let’s go to californy it’s the place we outta be
Hey I'm in rural Nova Scotia Cape Breton, worked in Winnipeg and retired back home with a corporate pension on top of a government pension.
 

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
stop the nonsense,we are superior,we run the planet regardless,we are the hunter the rest is at our mercy. I am an animal lover,in fact I prefer their company over humans but face reality.
I think the belief in your god makes you feel superior. No superior animal would destroy its own ecosystem and therefore hasten its demise.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Your leader just built the biggest cricket factory in the world in London Ontario,what do you figure that could be for?
No idea, I haven't been following domestic politics much lately, or things in Ontario, if I'm interested I'll read about it in the regular news, unless you believe that is fake news?
 

Bongoloid

Well-Known Member
I think the belief in your god makes you feel superior. No superior animal would destroy its own ecosystem and therefore hasten its demise.
I'm agnostic, are you the guy who's always assuming? Didn't you already do that on a previous reply with me?
 

HydoDan

Well-Known Member
Hydo = irresponsible fuck boy who’s told more women to abort than he can remember cause he’s still in mommas basement working on his rap game
Retired with 2 adult daughters older than you, BOY!! I took responsibility at 17, been married 54 years..
You really don't have a fucking clue about anything!
 

Lucky Luke

Well-Known Member
That's not saying much conversing with you.
Superior humans did once exist and they didnt shit where they slept or ruined their environment.

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.



Humans are no longer superior to say a crocodile who is at one with its environment and has been for far longer than humans have been around.
 
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Bongoloid

Well-Known Member
Superior humans did once exist and they didnt shit where they slept or ruined their environment.

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.



Humans are no longer superior.to say a crocodile who is at one with its environment and has been for far longer than humans have been around.
Should have just gave the link
 

Grampah

Well-Known Member
I think the belief in your god makes you feel superior. No superior animal would destroy its own ecosystem and therefore hasten its demise.
No superior
Hey I'm in rural Nova Scotia Cape Breton, worked in Winnipeg and retired back home with a corporate pension on top of a government pension.
funky. Take a trip down to the ovens provincial park and check the display case in the museum, you’ll find a large matrix with like 30 large pyrite crystals, I mined that out of the old vein at low tide and donated it to them for display
 
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