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There Is No True Freedom Where Ever one Racial or Cultural Group Dominates Another

Essay by   •  July 15, 2011  •  Essay  •  882 Words (4 Pages)  •  1,831 Views

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There is no true freedom where ever one racial or cultural group dominates another. Whether people are indigenous or immigrants, whether through force or majority of population, human subjugation is a world-wide problem from Australia to Eurasia, from Africa to the Americas. It's also an ancient problem. Ever since different segments of humankind shifted from the nomadic flexibility of hunting and gathering, to the more rigid sedentary lifestyle as agriculturalists and pastoralists, people have been forced to compete over the limited natural resources and territorial space necessary for freedom. The result has been, that one group's wealth and freedom comes at the expense of another group's poverty and bondage. At times resulting in the perpetual persecution and complete annihilation of sovereign peoples through secular and religious indoctrinations of blood-lust and genocide.

Throughout most of western civilization, the earliest confrontation of this problem has been rooted historically in the religious scriptures of the Hebrew Old Testament, as the moral example of Cain and Able. Which condenses this ongoing humanistic plight of epic proportions into a single, simple question. "Am I my brother's keeper?"

Apparently stone-age people were perfectly aware of the answer to this question since the earliest dawning of humanity. Which has been all but empirically proven by anthropologist, E. Richard Sorensen in his studies of New Guineans during the 1960s. Where he encountered a nearly extinct human phenomenon of social interaction, he termed as "socio-sensual awareness". You can google the term or click on the link to Magnetic Centre - Preconquest Consciousness, for a fuller explanation in Sorensen's treatise on the subject.

It is a revolutionary re-evaluation of early human consciousness that turns most of western civilization's advanced academics in the humanities and its preconceived notions about the perceptions of so called "primitive" peoples, right onto its modern head. Any one who has considered the need for a revolution to re-establish basic and real freedom to the general population, socio-sensual awareness is where you start.

Myself, I've mostly taken Cain and Able as a generalized, prehistoric account of how humankind has always had to struggle to get along without bloodshed and genocide and still have enough natural resources and freedom for all.

During the axial age, 800 bce - 200 bce, the question was raised again throughout the establishment of early civilizations, by some of the greatest religious and philosophical founders and exponents that history as ever recorded, such as Socrates, Confucius and Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha). Beginning two thousand years ago, with the advent and spread of Christianity throughout western civilization, the question persisted. "Am I my brother's

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