Soren wrote on Dec 9
th, 2013 at 8:59pm:
|dev|null wrote on Dec 9
th, 2013 at 3:04pm:
And those values made modern Australia. Not the Aboriginal values that prevailed here for tens of thousands of years.
Did they? If they did, then they did so by mixing, by creating a mongrel from their interaction. White Australians have adopted many Indigenous cultural aspects. You just have to listen to the way white Australian farmers talk about "country" and their connection to it. Then we have the belief in "walkabout" and how it affects society.
Quote:SO obviously there are drastically different values - one set can create a modern society from scratch, the other cannot tell the difference between 1000 and 10,000 years ago.
But they are not distinct, Australian society is a reflection of the cosmopolitan nature of it's society which has allowed intermixing and interaction through all those cultural values as they have arrived through migration.
Quote:Similarly, Thais, for example, have never been colonised and they have created a society quite different from Australia.
but we have Thais who have migrated to Australia so they have had some input into Australian cultural values. There aren't many Australians who have migrated to Thailand so the Australian input there has been negligible.
Quote:If you look at societies derived from Western European on the one hand, and those derived from Arab Muslim culture on the other, you can see that even neighbouring cultures give rise to starkly different societies.
Yes but where those societies have intermixed, you have a hybrid culture created. Anglo-Indian and Anglo-Bangladeshi and Anglo-Pakistani are three examples in point.
Quote:It is so obvious. There would be no tourism industry if all cultures were roughly the same.
That is not what is being claimed. In their native context they are different but when intermixed and intermingled in a cosmopolitan hybridised society like Australia, that hybridisation must be drawn from somewhere and it's obviously not, as you note, very much from the Indigenous Australian one, now is it?