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BlueToTheBone

(3,747 posts)
12. Well, of course!
Fri Apr 13, 2012, 02:18 PM
Apr 2012

I left out the only one I have ever been able to understand. I have loved the Earth since I can remember and ate dirt as a small child.

I have been studying my family history and it is a long and winding tale through Wales and The Isle of Manu and on to Babylon. But the story is really stymied when Charles killed every bard and poet in the land. Because of After that there was a diaspora and the family went to Australia, Barbados and Aomerica (Brittany) and England. My branch went to Barbados, became rum runners, came to America, purchased Broncksland (today's Bronx), became statesmen and helped found the country. The story ends with my generation.

But, in all the story, I can't find where the hatred came in. It seems it was always there in the history, but with the death of the oral Welsh her/history, I feel stopped again.

I know that 30,000 bc in what is now Turkey, in the Anatolia plains a civilization existed for a long time, layers of the society on layers. At first, they though that they had uncovered a religious center, but as the excavation continues, they have found that the entire site was the same. The Goddess was the center of the society with incredible statues and frescoes. They searched the grave sites, found both sexes were treated equally in death and most importantly, there were no smashed bones or skulls; death didn't come from battle. So we have this as a model of what society was; but no real idea why it became what it did.

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