On Mon, Aug 4, 2014 at 3:58 AM, Rupert Boleyn <rupert.boleyn@gmail.com> wrote:
On 4/08/2014 12:59, Kelly St. Clair wrote:
On 8/3/2014 5:48 PM, Rupert Boleyn wrote:

immobile people tied down by possessions and crops they
can't up and leave can be forced to pay taxes, to provide labour, and
this allows specialisation, and once you've started down that road you
can't really go back.

It takes a very long time before farmers are, on an individual level,
better off than hunter-gatherers, though a small segment of the
population has it pretty good from even the earliest days.

And I, for one, am willing to make that tradeoff - even though I'm not
even the top segment (though I may be close, depending on where you
start drawing the curve).  Hunter-gatherers make up stories about the
moon; specialists *go* to it.

I wouldn't want to be a hunter-gatherer either. We're well past the point where everyone can be better off than that. However, our ancestors suffered quite a bit to get us here.


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I would challenge you to go out and try the hunter-gatherer life for your two week vacation and see how it really is. Don't bother learning, fire making or bow making or stone knapping just learn to shoot some food and gather some plants and try it out. Are we really better off? Not saying that we can go back but I think we are not that much better off, perhaps mostly worse off but we are very unaware of what could really be. Also what percent of the Earth's current population is better off? Clearly everyone with a computer is better off that most of the people of this Earth even in nice places like India.

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