Ian Iveson wrote:
>
> > ((The abbos' average IQ is approximately 59, RPO correctly
> > called them
> > "the stupidest of the featherless bipeds" on the earth and
> > noted that
>
> What's IQ?
>
> I've met several members of Mensa, and they were as thick as
> pig****.
>
> Eeyore claims to have a big one. Perhaps he can explain.
>
> > in 50,000 years they were unable to determine that
> > copulation caused pregnancy...[rest of xenophobic rant
> > omitted]
>
> It's not obvious, and what's it got to do with whatever IQ
> is?
>
> Ian
Aborigines didn't invent the wheel, or independantly
evolve to build a city like Paris on the shores of the Yarra River
where Melbourne is.
When a blackfella living in the old style way in a group up the bush,
he'd marry and bonk his missus as much as possible like WT bonk their
White Wives.
But black and white men were pretty clueless about what caused babies
for a heck of a long time
since we evolved into conscious rational thinking wise beings.
In ancient times, if a black, brown, pink, white, yellow bloke didn't
bonk his missus,
which was so rare its hard to imagine,
she still became pregnant.
So it obviously wasn't bonking that caused pregnancy.
Of course what was going on to lead to this logical conclusion was that
the missus
belonging to the bloke would feel so ****ing ***** and randy while out
gathering nuts, grubs,
and edible plants that she'd wander past the neighbours and a single
bloke in that mob
would see her with that look and follow her awhile, and ****ge ****ge,
wink wink,
and """AAAHHHHHHH, OOOHHHH, that feels BETTER!!!"""
And boy, that was easy to do and easy to get away with.
What did abos think about 300 years ago? ***, food, ***, food, ***,
food.
Everyone was ****d, mainly young, lean and ***y and fit (while they
lived.)
There was hardly anyone else in the world, and plenty of big paddocks
and trees and bushes to hide behind.
The world was then a natural Rooter's Paradise, a Fornicators's Heaven.
No condoms, no coppers, no lawyers, divorce settlements, and no complex
silly social rules.
So a bloke had a real job to keep stray semen out of his missus's fanny.
But maybe he was not aware of what was going on. Wives and husbands sure
broke all the tribal rules when it suited them. Always have, always
will,
and people are doin it and doin it right now.
If the abo saw another bloke rootin his missus, maybe he'd just get
riled and
spear the **** right on the spot, and his missus too.
I doubt he'd know why he got so riled, but he would get VERY cranky. He
didn't much know why,
or why so many tribal wars went on either, but they did.
Anyway, the few people who did make it to old age seemed to transfer the
wisdoms of the tribe forward in an unwritten and verbal way,
and that takes some very real intelligence.
Getting to old age was more likely if you were intelligent.
The dumb ones died early.
Had the rest of the world away from Australia not existed, and hadn't
evolved science and doctors et all then perhaps I'd not be here to
discuss this,
and I'd be dead if I was an abo, because life expectancy was rather
short,
one could die anytime, and nobody really knew why. So marriages didn't
last
because death intervened so often. Pregnancy was a death sentance for
many ****elas.
Anyway, there was lotsa irregular rootin goin on, at least while you was
young.
But anyway, without the rest of the world existing,
perhaps in another 25,000 years someone in Oz might have decided to
invent
agrriculture, the wheel, culture and civilisation like in ancient Iraq,
about 10,000 years ago.
The fact that I would be a member of a race such as aboriginies in Oz
wouldn't make me
unintelligent with low IQ because I didn't know what caused babies.
If I'd been an abo, perhaps I'd have been a smarter one, but the abos
never
reasoned there was a need to have a test for it, or some reward for high
scores, " dat white fella BS."
When we see how complex the aboriginal culture and its art actually is,
then we see that you have to be pretty intelligent to follow the thought
of the previous owners of Oz.
Patrick Turner.


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