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A real history of Aboriginal Australians, the first agriculturalists | Bruce Pascoe | TEDxSydney

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  • Опубліковано 23 лип 2018
  • Indigenous writer and anthologist Bruce Pascoe draws on first-hand accounts from colonial journals to dispel the myth that Aboriginal people were hunters and gatherers and "did nothing with the land that resembled agriculture". In this powerful talk, Pascoe demonstrates a radically different view of Australian history that we all need to know - one that has the potential to change the course of Australians' relationship with the land. Bruce Pascoe's career has spanned teaching, farming, bartending, writing, working on an archaeological site, and researching Aboriginal languages. A Bunurong, Tasmanian and Yuin man born in Melbourne, he grew up on a remote island in the Bass Strait. Bruce has written more than 20 books.
    His non-fiction book, Dark Emu (2014), won the Book of the Year and Indigenous Writers' Prize in the 2016 NSW Premier's Literary Awards. He says, "Aboriginal people have always had a story to tell. We have always been storytellers and artists and singers and dancers and we've just brought this into the general Australian culture. Non-Aboriginal Australians enjoy it and are starting to embrace it". This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2 тис.

  • @lilyrose1233
    @lilyrose1233 5 років тому +235

    I have visited some very progressive museums in this country that have large aboriginal sections and none of them have discussed the practice of sowing and harvesting crops.

    • @kiesha4804
      @kiesha4804 4 роки тому +65

      @REDFOX393 SMITH because we KNOW its not true? I doesn't make sense in our culture, it doesn't match our morals and beliefs? colonisers also said we weren't human and the land was empty. Maybe not everything they say is true and maybe a lot of it is just based in racism.

    • @flud3989
      @flud3989 4 роки тому +18

      kiesha The Lang was called empty for its lack of infrastructure or established society.

    • @kiesha4804
      @kiesha4804 4 роки тому +65

      ​@@flud3989 the land was ILLEGALLY declared as "Terra Nullius" even though there was proof of infrastructure and an established society. We are the oldest living culture IN THE WORLD. A society is "the aggregate of people living together in a more or less ordered community." Our communities are extremely complex governing and family systems that range over 300 individual nations throughout Australia and have done so for the past 60000 years.

    • @kiesha4804
      @kiesha4804 4 роки тому +31

      @Connor Broderick yeah, read the book, because you very obviously don't know what Indigenous Agriculture is, you also don't seem to know anything about Aboriginal culture and skin groups.

    • @druid3744
      @druid3744 4 роки тому +6

      Lily Rose we r not taught 4 a reason but Truth sets us ALL free!!!!

  • @helgavierich4762
    @helgavierich4762 Рік тому +8

    It is a common misconception that "hunter-gatherers" just live off the "natural" landscape, like other fauna. But they do not. They manage vast landscapes. All people, from the very beginning, have been ecological engineers. Indigenous people use fire ecology and replanting of favoured food plants to shape their entire landscape into massive gardens and food forests. This does not mean they were "agriculturalists", because agriculture is almost always associated with private land tenure and early city-states.
    There is a common notion, not just in Australia, but all over the Americas and Africa, that European style "farming" is better and more admirable than mere "hunting and gathering". But this is a false idea. And the finest soils are to be found in regions where the foraging people encourage a vast mosaic of varying stages of secondary growth. This is due to the many species of colonizing plants in such successions fix nitrogen through bacteria that live in their root nodules. Imposing European land use and crops on the landscape of Australia is detrimental to soils because it replaces these beneficial fire-stick practices with ploughing that exposes the soil to wind and water erosion. Imposing laws that prevent the hunter-gatherer "fire-stick farming" - which, by the way is common to hunter-gatherer and horticultural economies wherever they are still found, on every continent - are equally misguided, as these practices not only create these productive wild "food-scapes", they also prevent disastrous wildfires.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 Рік тому +5

      Modern agriculture feeds literally billions of people.
      Without it there would be a mass extinction as the majority would starve.
      Pre colonial Australia supported a population estimated at less than a million people.
      A people who lived a precarious existence on the edge of survival.
      They manipulated their environment through the use of fire but this was not particularly good for the land either.
      The remnants of native flora and fauna are the survivors.
      Only those species which were able to adapt to regular fire events survived the onslaught of aboriginal colonisation.
      The original rainforest that covered the continent and the mega fauna that lived here were wiped out driven to extinction by the first Australians.
      Modern Australian farming feeds a population of over 30 million.
      We are also one of the world major food exporters.
      Hunter gatherer populations are only able to maintain small populations.
      They remain at the mercy of nature.
      Agriculture is a stepping stone to other technologies.
      Once people become sedentary they are able to spend more time on other pursuits.
      The food security enables people to explore other industries.
      Metal work pottery art music architecture boat building and trade are able to flourish because people are no longer tied to the endless struggle to survive.
      The modern delusion that hunter gatherer societies live in some kind of utopian harmony with nature is simply not true.
      It is a hard and uncertain existence.
      Requires a relentless and constant search for food firewood and shelter.
      Provides a limited seasonal diet sometimes unpalatable.
      It is not a lifestyle that any sane person would choose over our comfortable agricultural based society.

  • @MrRealgiovanni
    @MrRealgiovanni 3 роки тому +64

    Any one that thinks Bruce's claim about the writings or journals should get hold of these journals, and try to find the passages Bruce claims as his proof.
    He has trouble getting academics to believe it is code for "the publication failed peer review".
    Most of the claims are extreme extrapolations at best. And Bruce's indigenous background is a recently acquired Monica, with his actual Ancestory now having been shown to be 100% British

    • @alanc6781
      @alanc6781 2 місяці тому

      He is a fake as most of their recently discovered dreamtime stories and dot paintings. And, apparently, their smoking ceremonies. We read that they are all false. And Ernie Dingo had a hand in making up some of them.

  • @jamo5468
    @jamo5468 2 роки тому +4

    Funny how a White European Australian becomes an expert on all things Aboriginal

  • @havanadaurcy1321
    @havanadaurcy1321 3 роки тому +22

    Could elders tell the young people kicking elders out of their home is abuse?

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Рік тому +2

      Sadly no one will listen to the elders not the land councils not the people stealing money from the kids no one. They should be an immediate enquiry into this

  • @kateredhead7334
    @kateredhead7334 Рік тому +25

    I believe they were also leaders in the exploration of Space. They did, after all, look at stars.

    • @wayneevans8286
      @wayneevans8286 4 місяці тому +1

      yep,and that is what capt james cook was doing mapping the travel of venus,not looking to colonise australia,a bit of truth telling there.

    • @nicktrueman224
      @nicktrueman224 4 місяці тому +2

      They probably invented hydroponics too

  • @JohnNy-ni9np
    @JohnNy-ni9np Рік тому +66

    Interesting, however, I've never heard about farming in Dream time stories.

    • @RodneyWilliams-to8jc
      @RodneyWilliams-to8jc Рік тому +34

      That's because it didn't happen.

    • @Dingoroaming
      @Dingoroaming 7 місяців тому +13

      Hmmm then MAYBE you should do some real looking, Its in many nations from the Eel farmers down south to the grain growers in my mob etc Cleaerly you have no idae.

    • @Dingoroaming
      @Dingoroaming 7 місяців тому

      @@RodneyWilliams-to8jc lol Another coward racsist , It very well did happen and is recorded in many nations Dream Time stores, From Murray Cod famring Cray Fish farming, making dams and our Sky father filling them so we can stock them from rivers miles away. The Ell famring in Vic that built permanant structures in the vulcanic rock, trapped smoked eels then traded them all over. OPEN YOUR EYES EARS stop the racism fear. Dream stime stories of the Rainbow serpant giving the Northern mobs native geese Yams, water bulbs etc etc

    • @Without_Lies_Media_Dies
      @Without_Lies_Media_Dies 6 місяців тому

      @@Dingoroaming 😂😂😂😂 yeah sure. You lot done nothing for thousands of years, Couldn't even make clothes or a cooking pot.

    • @TheLincolnrailsplitt
      @TheLincolnrailsplitt 4 місяці тому +1

      Because it is nonsense. Zero evidence.

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy 3 роки тому +73

    This has been absolutely, totally debunked as fiction. He’s not an author, he’s a fraud.

    • @Ozgipsy
      @Ozgipsy 3 роки тому +19

      @Rodney McDonald pay attention mate. Idiots like you are how these lies become curriculum.

    • @SHADOWSofSODOM
      @SHADOWSofSODOM 3 роки тому +8

      @Rodney McDonald read the news, mate.

    • @crispy3359
      @crispy3359 3 роки тому +1

      @@Ozgipsy yeah seriously, I learnt about the book in school lmao.

    • @Pies.
      @Pies. 3 роки тому

      Alright i'll take it but I have my own beliefs

    • @2partiesnotpreferred226
      @2partiesnotpreferred226 3 роки тому +4

      So you are saying all of the white explorers and earlier settlers were lying about what they had witnessed? The colonists were brainwashed into believing they were superior, so that gave them the right to the land. By that theory, I guess if china invaded us today, it would be ok because they are more powerful, so they have every right to this land. It's pretty easy to make the aboriginals look primitive when you destroy there homes and crops. It's the oldest play when it comes to war. Why are you scared of the truth. Is it because it goes against what you have been told to believe?

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 2 роки тому +40

    I know just one gem of Aboriginal Australia. It is the Bunya Nut tree. In south east Queensland for thousands of years that common food was traded amongst tribes for hundreds of kilometers away. Just one thing, with profound meaning.

    • @whoisdylanjames5973
      @whoisdylanjames5973 Рік тому

      @@totalwater9431 brother written history is only about 5200 years old and we’ve been in Australia for over 80,000 years. There’s a whole bunch of history you probably believe that was written down but was passed on from generation to generation. Remember writ the end of the day we are just really smart animals, every aspect of modern life including documenting history is 100% unnatural

    • @Jlewismedia
      @Jlewismedia Рік тому +4

      @@totalwater9431 You make a very good point, we can find relics and use anecdotal evidence from multiple sources to make an educated guess at the truth (the more sources the more likely it is to be true). Aboriginals have historically used stories and pictures to depict so unfortunately with the atrocities of the British colonisation a lot of Aboriginal history is lost to wonder. We do have accounts however of British explorers as mentioned in this video who documented what they saw the Aboriginies doing, we can assume that the Aboriginies hadn't just learnt to grow tubers that day, but in fact learnt it over the years. But yeah not everything in history is verifiable. Just like any science we take the most factual information and replace it with any new discoveries that make more sense, in regard to history this ends up being a ton of anecdotal information and educated guesses based on leftover tools/writings/etc. discovered. Aboriginals used to trade in the north with islanders and lower Asian countries too well into modern history which indicates a bit more than just hunter-gather.

    • @Jlewismedia
      @Jlewismedia Рік тому +1

      @@totalwater9431 mate I'm not here to argue you're bringing a lot of opinion into objective facts. You can't tell me what the British did is not as bad as it was, I'm grateful for the country we have but not proud of how it became colonised. Aboriginal people got along more often than they fought, and even then it was often family feuds in a sense.
      Aboriginals were been documented trading in the north with islanders what do you mean not really lol?

    • @reedbender1179
      @reedbender1179 Рік тому +2

      @@Jlewismedia "Aboriginal people got along more often than they fought" Not necessarily so and how do we know?🦘 Maori tribes fought each other,American Indian tribes fought each other,African tribes fought each other , European tribes same and the evidence is clear that Aboriginals did also. Jardine at Cape York observed the actual extermination of one tribe by it's hostile different clan neighbours. That was no average family feud or skirmish....tragically.

    • @Jlewismedia
      @Jlewismedia Рік тому

      @@reedbender1179 bruh you know some early settlers actually watched documented the Aboriginals. You give me "I know nothing about history beyond year 5 education and believe everything my parents tell me" vibes.
      Didn't say they were some good time hippies but they were absolutely not monkeys throwing sticks at each other all the time, they had trade networks, ceremonies between tribes, etc.

  • @dalewoodland2930
    @dalewoodland2930 6 місяців тому +6

    Well well well its all out now . MR CONARTIST

  • @sahulianhooligan7046
    @sahulianhooligan7046 3 роки тому +21

    7:48 That is an eastern Torres Strait hut, not Australian Aboriginal

    • @rjw421
      @rjw421 3 роки тому +15

      Yes your correct, but remember Bruce 'white fella' Pascoe is never one to let facts get in the way of a good yarn.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 3 роки тому +9

      That is just one of many lies told by Pascoe

    • @cobar5342
      @cobar5342 Рік тому +3

      The dude has an aboriginal agenda - pretty funny for a grubba

  • @jasonbates2977
    @jasonbates2977 Рік тому +24

    I think there is something quite beautiful about being hunter gatherers. He doesn’t seem very proud of Aboriginal Australians if they were just that.

    • @ellaeadig263
      @ellaeadig263 10 місяців тому +2

      Agreed, I'm not sure why it would be a negative thing to be a hunter gatherer.

    • @isobelgeorgeson
      @isobelgeorgeson 2 місяці тому +1

      I'm assuming he's disappointed that they are sometimes only seen as hunter/gatherers, and not as agriculturalists and inventors.

    • @jasonbates2977
      @jasonbates2977 2 місяці тому +2

      Absolutely, what they are, are survivors….they are the result of the many who tried their best and only the best carried on. Surviving one of the harshest lands on earth, something to be pretty proud about I think…

  • @daviesfamily998
    @daviesfamily998 Рік тому +9

    Hasn't this guy been exposed as a fraud? Why is this misinformation still up? Isn't misinformation the biggest problem facing society today?

  • @svensshed1564
    @svensshed1564 Рік тому +30

    So we know now that this bloke was making stuff up. So my question would be why has he still got a TED talk up?

    • @Dingoroaming
      @Dingoroaming 7 місяців тому

      Hmmm no actualy he made Nothing up. Its all well proven. It very well did happen and is recorded in many nations Dream Time stores, From Murray Cod famring Cray Fish farming, making dams and our Sky father filling them so we can stock them from rivers miles away. The Ell famring in Vic that built permanant structures in the vulcanic rock, trapped smoked eels then traded them all over. OPEN YOUR EYES EARS stop the racism fear. Dream stime stories of the Rainbow serpant giving the Northern mobs native geese Yams, water bulbs etc etc Clearly you lot so Afraid...why?

  • @athenatatnell1333
    @athenatatnell1333 3 роки тому +61

    I'm confused about why people are saying his claims are false? I thought it was well known that the first Australian's had wheat belts, regularly harvested local food sources and often travelled throughout different seasons to trade with other tribes? It wasn't luck they thrived in Australia for as long as they have.

    • @Grimloxz
      @Grimloxz 3 роки тому +7

      But yes, I agree - humans didn’t survive in Australia for 80,000+ years by mere luck…

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 3 роки тому +36

      No one is saying they didn't survive.
      They were an amazing culture capable of surviving in a harsh environment.
      This has always been acknowledged.
      They were a nomadic hunter gatherer society with a complex social structure.
      Gathering the native grains harvesting the wild plants and animals.
      Truly a remarkably resilient people.
      But not farmers or settled people.
      The evidence has shown that they lived as nomadic hunters unchanged for millennia.
      Bruce is saying that this isn't good enough they must be made more like Europeans.
      He ignores the ingenuity of their ancient culture.
      Unable to respect them unless he turns them into a recognisably European agricultural people.

    • @zac2636
      @zac2636 2 роки тому +9

      @@warwicklewis8735 Perfectly put. He puts forth a very Eurocentric idea that agriculture is the result of progress from hunter-gathering, which implicates that farming is better than a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому +4

      @@zac2636 ??
      Farming is a progression from hunter gathering.
      The advantages of stable food sources and permanent settlement shouldn't be underestimated.
      Farming was developed independently in at least four separate places.
      From these early agricultural societies it was soon adopted by every other culture that had contact with the idea.
      Though the process of adapting to farming takes many generations it eventually replaces hunter gatherer communities once they are exposed to and in competition with agricultural people.
      Being free from the endless struggle of nomadic movements and the unpredictable resources of nature allows men to put their effort into other pursuits.
      In agricultural societies we see an increase in the production of high quality craft and manufacture, buildings become more sophisticated, art and music flourish.
      In general the number and quality of available goods grows exponentially.
      It is the nature of people to want luxury and material goods (the morality of this is another question but one I will leave for the philosophical pundits to argue).
      Todays aboriginal people live on the fruit of agricultural success.
      Although they still indulge in some hunting, fishing or foraging it is no longer carried on in the pursuit of survival but rather as a representation of cultural identity and recreation.
      Generally carried out with the aid of modern vehicles and guns or boats and fishing lines.
      Relying entirely on modern western cultural traditions for food, shelter, transport and healthcare.
      People did not give up hunting and gathering at the point of a gun.
      Rather at the point of a knife and fork.

    • @zac2636
      @zac2636 2 роки тому +2

      @@warwicklewis8735 I get where you're coming from, but I simply think you can't say with certainty that farming is a progression from hunter-gathering. It depends on various factors, including environmental factors.
      For example, in "Guns, Germs and Steel", Jared Diamond talks about how Indigenous Australians in the Torres Strait islands/North Queensland traded with communities in New Guinea who had established agricultural practices. When introduced to domestic pigs, Indigenous Australians did not adopt a sedentary lifestyle and begin farming, because there was simply no need for it; hunter-gathering as a way of life was most convenient and suited their environment, and despite being introduced to domestic pigs, they did not feel a need to part from their lifestyle. This also brings into question your point about how agriculture was "soon adopted by every other culture that had contact with the idea". But my primary point is that environment has a lot to do with it, and this is why farming began in the fertile crescent; conditions were perfect with easily domesticatable plants and animals, and a favourable climate. Not everywhere is suited to a sedentary lifestyle, like in Australia where there are few places with perfect soil, few animal species favourable for domestication, and the climate in some areas is not ideal which means there may be a worse quality of life, and the advancements you have talked about may be further out of reach.
      Another good example to illustrate this is in the book "Van Diemen's Land" when newly arrived Brits in Australia ended up adopting a semi-nomadic lifestyle over time, because that was better suited to the environment and presumably because it guaranteed a better quality of life.
      It should also be noted that there is no inherent value to a farming or hunter-gathering way of life; they are both complex and don't belong on some sort of evolutionary hierachy. There are advantages to adopting a sedentary lifestyle, but there are also disadvantages and limitations.

  • @shelleyk401
    @shelleyk401 2 роки тому +3

    If Aboriginal people farmed then cool, if they did not then cool!
    One major part of this country is that Aboriginal people are still not treated equally. This nation that claims to be so great still holds so much disregard for our people. So whatever our people done whether good or not, won't fully be acknowledged. And that's fine because we do not have to prove anything to anybody 😄 we do not have to tell people about our stories and history and back it up with white people's literature. We do not have to communicate back & forth with people that continue to disregard our people. They do it to each other then they do it to other cultures and they just don't expand their horizons or look to gain other perspectives. It's their problem not ours!

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому

      Aboriginals recieve more handouts than any other people on earth and still demand more.
      Your stories are well documented but they are just stories fairytales and entertainment for children.
      How much regard do you hold for other people ??
      Respect is earned not demanded.

    • @shelleyk401
      @shelleyk401 2 роки тому

      @@warwicklewis8735 Aboriginal people do not physically receive handouts. We do not go lining up to centrelink or parliament house asking for money so yeah sorry your argument is invalid baby cakes. And your saying respect is earned, okay so Aboriginal people haven't earned the right to be respected??

  • @MrVjmojo
    @MrVjmojo Рік тому +8

    Aboriginals complain about the high death rate of their people in police custody. But don't ask why there is a high rate of Aborigines in Police custody.

    • @Hesnotoneofus
      @Hesnotoneofus 13 днів тому

      They know more than you do, its that most it is out of their control. Access to education, healthcare, work opportunities, stable families and homes (due to stolen generations etc), and systemic racism all enhancing these harms. Criminals are made by society and its failures... wake up.

  • @frankkaiser55
    @frankkaiser55 Рік тому +16

    The Explorers came across very few first ones. They never found crops and to survive they killed what ever walked of flew. I read most journeys. Where did he find this

    • @Dingoroaming
      @Dingoroaming 7 місяців тому

      Clearly did not read many, Uni tafe all have many records copies from original. It very well did happen and is recorded in many nations Dream Time stores, From Murray Cod famring Cray Fish farming, making dams and our Sky father filling them so we can stock them from rivers miles away. The Ell famring in Vic that built permanant structures in the vulcanic rock, trapped smoked eels then traded them all over. OPEN YOUR EYES EARS stop the racism fear. Dream stime stories of the Rainbow serpant giving the Northern mobs native geese Yams, water bulbs etc etc

    • @josephinelin5525
      @josephinelin5525 4 місяці тому

      take their land, destroy their crops as wild bushs, force them into deserts where there's far less water than their original homes. Where else do they get food but to hunt and gather?

    • @yt.personal.identification
      @yt.personal.identification 2 місяці тому +1

      Would they even recognise native yams?

  • @jononolan946
    @jononolan946 3 роки тому +65

    There was an article today in the herald with 2 experts in Aboriginal history debunking alot of his claims.

    • @Akolgo_islam
      @Akolgo_islam 3 роки тому +1

      Expert.....ex (a has been) spurt (a drip under pressure)

    • @mspdu5536
      @mspdu5536 3 роки тому

      This version doesn't back up the ancient Tartairian architecture of the early 1800's

    • @sahulianhooligan7046
      @sahulianhooligan7046 3 роки тому +1

      Jacinta and Warren Mundine?

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 3 роки тому

      @@sahulianhooligan7046 no Sutton and Walshe.
      Sutton is an anthropologist who has been the leading academic for several successful land rights claims.
      Walshe is an archaeologist who has spend her life studying pre colonial relics.
      Jacinta and Warren were just using common sense and experience they never claimed to be experts or academics.

    • @jrtaylor1275
      @jrtaylor1275 2 роки тому

      Yes, an expert.

  • @jerrywiese
    @jerrywiese 5 років тому +168

    Many hunter-gatherer based societies practiced some manner of agriculture
    just as many agricultural based societies practiced some hunter-gather supplementation .
    Many of us in the current modern technological societies
    still practice some form of agricultural and/or hunter-gatherer behavior .
    The Australian aborigines survived for many thousands of years
    and should be proud of their ancestry and heritage .

    • @ddshocktrooper5604
      @ddshocktrooper5604 5 років тому +7

      I don't get what you're trying to say. Is it that deliberately leaving out anything that suggests agriculture from history books wasn't wrong?

    • @jerrywiese
      @jerrywiese 5 років тому +13

      This video was a great presentation .
      I just stated my further opinion that the value of societies
      should not be judged on which survival strategies they practiced .
      It is the general state of satisfaction of the society which should matter most .
      History should be based on facts , though often it is not .
      Regardless it is not correct to evaluate a society by classifying it
      based on supposed societal progression .
      - hunter-gather as primitive
      - agriculture as civilized
      - industrial as advanced
      Most societies did and do , and probably shall , include aspects of all of these .
      I live in Canada which is considered to be a developed country .
      We are an industrialized nation ,
      but also an agricultural nation , with many farms and gardens ,
      and many of us go hunting and fishing and gathering wild produce .

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +14

      @@jerrywiese are you saying that breaking a stone and using it as an axe is as advanced as casting your tools in copper.
      And that the addition of the correct amount of tin to create a bronze alloy is no more advanced.
      That replacing cast bronze with steel does not equate to a further advancement ??
      These innovations and technical advances made life easier and gave the user an advantage over his competitors.
      This same progressive dynamic applies to agriculture, cultivating your food supplies gives stability and reliability that can not be obtained through hunting and gathering.
      Freed from the eternal nomadic search for sustenance people were able to raise more children and to provide them with a diet that did not depend on the whims of nature.
      They had more time to build better tools, housing and experiment with new ideas.
      Farming allowed them to dedicate more time to recreational pursuits and arts.
      The increasing population density led to cultural innovations in governance and laws that protected both people and property.
      No one would ever chose to go back to living the hard uncertain life of a stone age hunter.
      To compare the epic struggle for survival of our ancestors to a pleasant weekend hunting and fishing is laughable at best.
      The current SJW propaganda that primitive tribal life was some kind of Neolithic utopian paradise is nothing but lies.
      The world was not civilized at the point of a gun, but at the point of a knife and fork.

    • @eoinociarain7986
      @eoinociarain7986 5 років тому +6

      @@warwicklewis8735 To read your comment I feel the need to slant my head to the left a bit.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +9

      @@eoinociarain7986 it was written in order to address some left leaning nonsense😁

  • @mattgoddard3009
    @mattgoddard3009 3 місяці тому +3

    All four of his Grandparents were from England....

  • @Productions-gv9rn
    @Productions-gv9rn 5 років тому +124

    This is crazy, I'm from Vanuatu right next to Australia and we have been farming since our ancestors arrived on the islands, they even brought pigs with them. It makes absolutely no sense that they didn't know how to farm, people started farming 10,000 years ago. OFCOURSE they were farming!

    • @coreluminous
      @coreluminous 5 років тому +10

      people have always gardened the wild, and if one wants to call that farming, then fine.... that's what all creatures do...
      Agriculture as an Economic Hierarchy is another matter...

    • @MrAnperm
      @MrAnperm 5 років тому +6

      Yes, in New Guinea where I was born it’s the same story. Bananas and cane sugar were first cultivated there. Among many other crops.

    • @freudianslippers6567
      @freudianslippers6567 5 років тому +18

      ​@@coreluminous Seems you are quite desperate to shift the goal posts for convenience.

    • @MrAnperm
      @MrAnperm 5 років тому +13

      coreluminous Europe is one of the regions that did not develop agriculture on its on. The knowledge was transferred from the Middle East.

    • @mattrogerson5663
      @mattrogerson5663 5 років тому +4

      @@coreluminous perhaps what he is referring to is increasing the amount of a natural occurring plant in its natural environment. This is the same as what is beginning to emerge from the amazon where they are finding large areas of orchards previously believed to be natural. It depends on what consider agriculture, but if spreading seeds and eradicating other plant life to create a natural orchard is agriculture in its simplest form, then it is not necessarily a great leap to believe it was occurring.

  • @kathleenhull6259
    @kathleenhull6259 10 місяців тому +13

    This man is off his tree!

  • @tuathadesidhe1530
    @tuathadesidhe1530 3 роки тому +28

    The politically correct word for this man's "work" is - fraudulent, the everyday word is is that his a straight up - Liar.

    • @zekedaley8665
      @zekedaley8665 2 роки тому

      where's the lie? tell me, be exact

    • @hankshill71
      @hankshill71 Рік тому

      @@zekedaley8665 literally all of it,

  • @imogenlenore
    @imogenlenore 4 роки тому +79

    What he says about the need to start growing Australian crop is very true! There has been a growing focus in recent years on 'locally-sourcing' foodstuffs, to reduce the carbon footprint of our foods since they do not need to be transported across oceans, which is fantastic! However, if there could be a large movement towards growing crops that are actually local to a place, that would be incredible.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 3 роки тому +11

      Pascoe and others have been trying to grow native crops for over ten years now.
      They still haven't been able to produce anything that is economically viable.
      Australian farmers have always been at the forefront of crop development.
      Do you think they would not have been growing native crops if they were viable ??
      How insulting that a political activist can come along and claim to know more about agriculture.
      Only the gullible and deluded would believe such outrageous nonsense.
      The only native food crop that has been successful is macadamia nuts.
      Recognised by European settlers as a productive food source and very quickly turned into a valuable commodity.

    • @betula2137
      @betula2137 2 роки тому

      @@warwicklewis8735 What about native millet?
      And the countless plants which haven't been fully cultivated (as the Eurasian plants were over centuries through artificial selection), but show great potential in production and nutrition?

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому +3

      @@betula2137 that is a good question.
      Why aren't we growing native millet or yam daisies or whatever ??
      I think you may have mentioned the answer already.
      The food crops we eat today have been developed over time through generations of selective breeding.
      Selection for productivity, flavour and quality has changed these plants.
      Giving us high yields of good quality produce.
      To start this process from scratch would require planting unproductive wild plants carefully selecting the higher yield/better flavour individuals for propagation.
      Then planting another poorly producing crop and doing it again and again thousands of times over.
      The value of the grain would not cover the cost of producing it.
      A farmer would have to run a program of selective development at his own loss.
      And in the end what would you have ??..could native millet ever compete with wheat, corn and rice ??..or would it be nothing but a novelty crop for hobby farmers.

    • @betula2137
      @betula2137 2 роки тому

      @@warwicklewis8735 Native millet has actually already passed the economic-viability marker.
      It is already more nutritious compared to old-world crops, and can be industrially farmed at high return. European settlers also used it to make damper.
      All it needs is federal funding and establishment with conventional farms in order to compete with the status-quo system of growing traditional staple crops, which is hard to change.
      That's why we don't grow many native plants industrially for crops, because there is a lack of political will to go through the effort of changing a thoroughly-established existing system.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому +2

      @@betula2137 I call bs on that.
      There is a huge demand for native crops.
      A market is the only incentive needed to encourage farmers to plant any crop that will produce returns especially something that will produce on marginal land that is usually fallow.
      If it isn't on the market it is not through lack of government funding, any indigenous business start up is able to access millions of taxpayer dollars with no accountability.
      Australian farmers have always been at the forefront of crop development, drought resistant wheat merino sheep, granny smith apples and plenty of other varieties of high yield agricultural produce adapted to Australian conditions.

  • @lynettekomidar
    @lynettekomidar 4 роки тому +45

    So much ignorance on here. Have you all read the journals he speaks of?

    • @jimmyb4982
      @jimmyb4982 4 роки тому +7

      It's the Internet, where too many average Joes or Janes can spread their ignorance all too easily.

    • @jimmyb4982
      @jimmyb4982 4 роки тому +3

      @Hunsa Picton I doubt you could go toe-to-toe with him in a debate.

    • @jimmyb4982
      @jimmyb4982 4 роки тому +11

      @Hunsa Picton Pure fiction? Statements like that don't build a convincing or compelling case for your competence. But I'm mindful that we're chatting on UA-cam, where many people claim to be an expert and know-it-all.

    • @wattsy4468
      @wattsy4468 4 роки тому +7

      Jimmy B yea his claims and heritage have been exposed as fraudulent. Nice try mate 👍

    • @ex_leper222
      @ex_leper222 4 роки тому +2

      Rich W the heritage claims that the AFP have rejected, yep debunked alright.

  • @user-vn7rh3yz7c
    @user-vn7rh3yz7c 11 місяців тому +2

    When particular foodstuffs were in great abundance local tribes would sometimes invite neighbouring people to come and get some too. This meant very large, if not huge temporary gatherings. Bruce embroiders these events a bit to strengthen his arguments about agriculture and settled dwellings. It's not entirely accurate. One thing he gets completely wrong is when he claims the First Australians were the "most peaceful people on Earth". This is simply not true, so you might question where else is he departing from reality? Unfortunately, all cultures have blood on their hands. One tribe Bruce identifies with is the Bunurong. A neighbouring tribe, the Gurnai, tried to wipe out the entire Bunurong tribe in 1834. The main Bunurong camps were attacked at Brighton, Dromana and Koo Wee Rup. Half of all the Bunurong people were killed. It was genocide. The tribes saw each other as different humans, so it was also a race war. The two tribes had been at war for hundreds, possibly thousands of years. Previous to this the Gurnai tribe invaded the region of Wilsons Promontory and had wiped out the Bunurong 'Yowengerre' clan there. The Gurnai took ownership of this conquered territory. Conflicts like these appear nowhere in Bruce's narratives or 'truth-telling'.

  • @jomac2046
    @jomac2046 4 роки тому +29

    The truth is Pascoe embellishes what he reads, noting more complicated than that. As for indigenous heritage, a very suspect connection, both sides of his ancestry seem to originate from the UK.That includes the Grandmother (Sarah Mathews) he claimed in 1993 was born in Dudley, South Australia where in reality she was born in Dudley, United Kingdom.

  • @Sean-me4fv
    @Sean-me4fv Рік тому +11

    The way a society treats their women and children is how they should be judged as human beings.

    • @maggiemorgan8337
      @maggiemorgan8337 Рік тому +1

      Well then.
      In mainstream Australia and Britain, police and medicos are called out because
      1.5 women EACH WEEK are killed by a partner.
      What does that tell us?

    • @Sean-me4fv
      @Sean-me4fv Рік тому +3

      @@maggiemorgan8337 it tells me we have a huge domestic violence problem in Australia.

    • @Dingoroaming
      @Dingoroaming 7 місяців тому

      Yes and before white man came, Woman and children where treated as Royalty. Any male stepped out of place All woman and men from all around "Educated " him. Hurt a kid.....never did it again.

  • @ghostlyshadowly
    @ghostlyshadowly 2 роки тому +32

    I've just learnt more in 12 1/2 minutes about the history of Australia than in all my decades of living here. Thank you. I dare say my life is changed, and I am delighted to have my life changed. The possibilities of understanding the world differently! I'm in awe

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому +3

      How does this change your life ??
      Besides it being a complete fabrication.
      How could it possibly change your life to find out something that happened 200 years ago ??

    • @Afflictamine
      @Afflictamine 2 роки тому +8

      I bet you are thrilled to hear things that you wish to believe

    • @howabout8611
      @howabout8611 2 роки тому +6

      Gullible?

    • @katehenderson8194
      @katehenderson8194 2 роки тому +5

      It’s all bull

    • @andrewholliday251
      @andrewholliday251 Рік тому +2

      Hi Wendy, you gotta love those open-minded replies from the flat earth society....

  • @scharftalicous
    @scharftalicous 3 роки тому +2

    Aboriginals were not farmers, that would be derogatory to suggest that. They were land managers that lived with nature, farming is only concerned with profiting from nature.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 3 роки тому +2

      "Lived with nature" you mean lived at the mercy of nature.
      Lived like all primitive people by hunting gathering and moving on when resources become depleted.
      In drought they went thirsty in flood they drowned.
      In years of plenty they feasted.
      Famine in the dry years brought hunger and starvation.
      You romanticize this life but the reality of paleolithic society is that it was a harsh existence a constant struggle for survival against an unforgiving environment.

    • @peteranthony9535
      @peteranthony9535 3 роки тому +1

      @@warwicklewis8735 Well said. It is called survival bias. Those that did not cope with the environment died. They can't tell their story.
      Charles Sturt when he went through the Macquarie Marshes fed the aborigines as they had eaten all the food. He was quit scathing of them eating everything and leaving nothing.
      The other thing no one seems to mention is that the tribal wars and blood feuds would have stopped aborigines moving to areas where there was food.
      As someone has pointed out 500 languages is clear proof they did not get along.

  • @jangaroo777
    @jangaroo777 Рік тому +2

    I you do your homework Bruce is NOT ABORIGIONAL ! PROVEN & ADMITTED BY THE wanna-be ABORIGIONAL. His DNA 🧬 proves he is British,,!

  • @happyolddude
    @happyolddude 4 роки тому +81

    Hasn't this bloke been exposed as a fraud? Just asking.

    • @samdavis7370
      @samdavis7370 4 роки тому +14

      I believe he has but it will take a while before we know for sure. It's frightening how easily he has convinced so many with so little evidence

    • @happyolddude
      @happyolddude 4 роки тому +8

      @@samdavis7370 Thank you, I was watching a TV show the other night which also said his grandparents and great grandparents were English? He has the fooled so many people. I believe he is the subject of a two part documentary on the ABC next week! Not surprising the ABC will not declare this or will they? I am aware that two highly qualified Family Researchers have been hired to search his claims out and all is not looking good for him. Why do people do things like this. There is also a book out shortly which exposes him as the fraud they claim he is.

    • @djsega4289
      @djsega4289 4 роки тому +2

      Yes

    • @jackoutback1605
      @jackoutback1605 4 роки тому +14

      Yes fraudster.... again embraced by the Left.

    • @McHobotheBobo
      @McHobotheBobo 4 роки тому +10

      After a but of digging I'd say there us some controversy but to call him a fraud would be disingenuous. Really just a few articles in the Sun saying some dubious claims. As though Ernest and Christopher Giles may not have been siblings they were definitely brothers-in-arms and worked together extensively if nothing else. Horticulture would probably be a better term for the old Aboriginal plant-raising practices but to say fraud just ain't right. It is fair to say his detractors can well publish anything they want without verifying as well...... anyone can say anything after all

  • @jasonh.8754
    @jasonh.8754 4 роки тому +53

    Bruce Pascoe makes some pretty wild claims, taken from original sources that are prone to bias. Indigenous Australians were not just farmers as they also hunted kangaroo and other animals. I believe they utilised the land around them in the best way possible to supply their food: harvesting, foraging, hunting, fishing, & burning.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 4 роки тому +18

      Then why are they all completely dependant on welfare hand outs now ??
      Why are they not using these remarkable food resources to produce commercial interests ??
      There is huge global demand for sustainable food technology could they please share these secrets with us ??
      Or is it just a feel good fantasy with no actual substance ???!!??

    • @jasonh.8754
      @jasonh.8754 4 роки тому +15

      @@warwicklewis8735 , your other response to my other post is your answer. Whilst Aboriginals made the most of their food resource, our food was vastly better - tastier, with more energy density, and many Aboriginal foods were poisonous if not prepared correctly. The reason humanity changed to rely on farming was for these reasons too. Native food gathering cannot support local consumption as well as excess for sale. Many Aboriginals in more remote areas of Australia do harvest native food to eat. It's a bit hard for Aboriginies in built up areas to do likewise, of course. I think Bruce Pascoes idea of endless native food resources is a fantasy, their population was not very large, and accounts I've read talk of some Indigenous starving in lean years.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 4 роки тому +16

      @@jasonh.8754 The reason our foods are more nutrient dense is because we have selectively bred them that way....it is the result of generations of farming.
      You don't see this kind of genetic selection in any native foods.
      This is further proof that Pascoe is not "truth telling"

    • @isupportchef
      @isupportchef 4 роки тому +21

      @@warwicklewis8735 Do you sincerely believe that our vegetables are selectively bread for nutrient density? That has to be so far from the truth. Crops are built for yield, profit, climate advantage(drought resistance), appearance and sellability(value). Please explain why you think this? What about the fertilisers? If they are so good, why so many fertilisers? Are we talking, biodynamic, organic, or common farming? There is a big distinction.
      And you first response about "welfare handouts' is atrocious. Practically the entire population of Indigenous Australians were colonised, divided, removed, land taken away, jailed or killed. You have to admit that it's pretty hard to continue normal societal organisation when you've just been invaded. I have an idea, considering you are asking to... "please share these secrets?" (you said). Why not investigate a bit more? Why not travel out west, into predominantly indigenous populated areas and ask the question. teach them, See if the land is still worthy, valuable. Why do you think universities encourage Indigenous population to come to uni. Spoiler: so they can get educated and contribute to opportunities like you mentioned. I'm curious. Genuine interested what perspective of education you are coming from? Qualifications, career vocation?

    • @yuuka926
      @yuuka926 3 роки тому +12

      @@isupportchef have you ever eaten a wild carrot or wild onion? They are barely eatable. They are also tiny. You would need to eat 30 just be nourished

  • @fergspan5727
    @fergspan5727 Рік тому +28

    He is not aboriginals and aborigines didn’t farm, they hunted and gathered

    • @Bananamations
      @Bananamations Рік тому +6

      He is literally reading journals from Australian explorers journals that say otherwise. How thick are you??

    • @NoTaboos
      @NoTaboos 6 місяців тому +2

      ​@@BananamationsHe twisted the journals content.

  • @wolf_ifritah
    @wolf_ifritah 5 років тому +101

    This should be made part of the school curriculum, we have so much to learn ..

    • @MrAnperm
      @MrAnperm 5 років тому +3

      Mehrunes Dagon What can we learn from you?

    • @freudianslippers6567
      @freudianslippers6567 5 років тому +8

      @@MrAnperm That no amount of education can fix bogan?

    • @captaink4416
      @captaink4416 5 років тому +2

      It is part of the curriculum! I'm teaching year stage 6 agriculture and they have to learn how Aboriginal Australians farmed the land pre colonisation and how their knowledge can assist current Australian Agriculture

    • @rizzrizz4841
      @rizzrizz4841 5 років тому +3

      @paul w the future generations will learn about first nation people. That will change Australia for the better

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 5 років тому +4

      Aboriginals really didn't achieve very much. No written language, no great cities. no wheel, no copper, no bronze, no iron, no sailing ships to explore the lands off South East Asia, Asia etc. This was simply basic agriculture. Even the advanced tools were absent.

  • @aussiefarmer4955
    @aussiefarmer4955 2 роки тому +11

    Native Australians also practiced Nuclear fusion ,were able to split the Atom and had a space program before 10,000 BC.

    • @cyandamadlala9610
      @cyandamadlala9610 2 роки тому

      Do you have sources of this??

    • @aussiefarmer4955
      @aussiefarmer4955 2 роки тому +2

      @@cyandamadlala9610 Yes, It's in his book along with the other fairytales.

    • @cyandamadlala9610
      @cyandamadlala9610 2 роки тому

      @@aussiefarmer4955 fairytales you say??🤔

    • @aussiefarmer4955
      @aussiefarmer4955 2 роки тому +3

      @@cyandamadlala9610 Yes, like Mr Pascoe, just fairytales

    • @shelleyk401
      @shelleyk401 2 роки тому

      How does it make you feel to constantly belittle Aboriginal people? Like why are you so hurt by us? You're so emotional!

  • @RachQLD
    @RachQLD 6 років тому +122

    Thank you Bruce for all of your research and spreading the word of Australia's real history. I would recommend anyone watching this to check out some of Bruce's other videos. Incredible information.

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 5 років тому +5

      Mr Pascoe’s cites for information on the aboriginal grain agriculture, the researcher Harry Allen, who has three separate works cited in Dark Emu including, “The Bagundji of the Darling Basin: Cereal Gatherers in an Uncertain Environment” (1974). From the same, beloved explorers' accounts* that Mr Pascoe used for evidence in Dark Emu, as well as other historical records, Harry Allen was able to build up a model of Bagundji subsistence activities, but came to completely the opposite conclusion as Mr Pascoe with regard to the possible presence of pre-colonial aboriginal agriculture. Harry Allen summarises his peer-reviewed findings in the abstract summary as follows:
      “The Bagundji economy was primarily riverine in character based on the collection of aquatic foods and wild cereals. Seasonal variations in their subsistence activities can be related to seasonal variations in the productivity of their habitat. Despite a long period of association with wild cereals, the Bagundji remained hunters and gatherers and apparently made no attempt to cultivate these cereals. Possible reasons for this are examined. No simple explanation can be put forward to explain either the specific problem of the absence of agriculture from the Darling River Basin or the general problem of the absence of agriculture from Aboriginal Australia as a whole."

    • @wilhobbs207
      @wilhobbs207 4 роки тому +5

      Charlatan

    • @Rand0mManic
      @Rand0mManic 4 роки тому +2

      @Paul French
      Some Aboirigine tribes induct oursiders into their tribes and they have been doing it for 1000s of years. Its part of their culture. his genes are aborigine now not to be questioned by the Commonwealth.

    • @steveboy7302
      @steveboy7302 4 роки тому

      @Paul French typical white fragility

    • @serverlan763
      @serverlan763 3 роки тому +9

      Why are you thanking him for publishing lies?

  • @annadrozdzynski529
    @annadrozdzynski529 4 роки тому +93

    We are meant to rest paddocks after using them, rest them then grow on it again.
    People that live on the land understand the land. Respect the Aboriginal culture they have been on this land for a very long time. We all must learn from one another to make this world a better place, a healthy place with good food that is nutritious and so it can nourish us. Peace.

    • @orkadian4173
      @orkadian4173 4 роки тому +17

      'The truths' he tells are complete fabrications, however. There are many sources using real facts that actually debunk his claims. He is a charlatan.. Sorry. Do some due diligence..

    • @shaddowwxy3307
      @shaddowwxy3307 4 роки тому +15

      @@orkadian4173 so sad that historical accuracy or study is beneath your engendered hatred of all people who aren't white enough for your sensibility. Evidence that he is lying or sources that prove the opposite please....

    • @druid3744
      @druid3744 4 роки тому +1

      Anna Drozdzynski YES Mate!!!

    • @NoTaboos
      @NoTaboos 4 роки тому +2

      Trite drivel.

    • @elizabethblackwell6242
      @elizabethblackwell6242 4 роки тому +12

      Except that indigenous Australians didn't grow crops or spell paddocks.

  • @opalfishsparklequasar8663
    @opalfishsparklequasar8663 2 роки тому +5

    Has he done his DNA?

  • @billygrey8087
    @billygrey8087 4 роки тому +6

    Isn’t this guy like Elizabeth Warren? Basically claiming to be aboriginal for financial benefit? Just asking

    • @TracyBartram
      @TracyBartram 4 роки тому +1

      Billy Grey you can’t be serious. Have you read Dark Emu?

    • @billygrey8087
      @billygrey8087 4 роки тому +1

      Tracy Bartram I’ve read the comparisons between what dark emu was supposed to be quoting versus the actual literature that was written by explorers - it’s highly exaggerated and twists the facts. Yes nomadic people can harvest grain etc however it’s wrong where it was saying they were planting crops like farmers. Have you actually read the literature of the explorers that Pascoe claims to be quoting and compared it with his quotes? Provably naht.

    • @freewheeler8924
      @freewheeler8924 4 роки тому +1

      Good point! I don't believe Pascoe is an authentic aboriginal. American Indian? Perhaps....

  • @MrAnperm
    @MrAnperm 5 років тому +66

    The continent is large and diverse. People used different methods depending on which part they were from. What they all have in common though is more balanced approach compared to introduced methods.
    When white settlers moved in they took all the best, most productive land.

    • @joebowden4065
      @joebowden4065 4 роки тому +6

      Luke E did you watch the video?

    • @matthewlane
      @matthewlane 4 роки тому +18

      They've never heard full blooded aboriginals talk about farming for the same reason they've never heard full blooded aboriginals talk about colonising mars.... Because it never happened.

    • @billygrey8087
      @billygrey8087 4 роки тому +15

      Eh Bruce Pascoe has made up his ancestry so we could get the indigenous writers award lol

    • @NoTaboos
      @NoTaboos 4 роки тому +15

      Balanced? They destroyed half the continent's forest by fire and caused the extinction of the megafauna.

    • @steveboy7302
      @steveboy7302 4 роки тому

      @Solitary confirmed Shitzophrenic haha free country how was aboriginal not free

  • @steinanderson9849
    @steinanderson9849 6 місяців тому +1

    Pascoe claimed to be indigenous through his mothers side of the family, turns out she was born in England. Now he claims to be indigenous through his fathers side. What a joke. Dark Emu is full of errors.

  • @mattjohnson2525
    @mattjohnson2525 Місяць тому +1

    This bloke's work was debunked by anthropologist Peter Sutton and archaeologist Keryn Walsh. "Littered with errors and unsourced material.." His claim to aboriginality is also disputed by many - including some of his own family.
    Treat this with appropriate skepticism.

  • @honkytonk25
    @honkytonk25 Рік тому +8

    I’d say you’ve been to far too many “smoking ceremonies’ Bruce !

  • @JordanPAT
    @JordanPAT 4 роки тому +24

    There's nothing wrong with being a hunter/gatherer. There are many cultures around the world that live this way.

    • @fredriko.zachrisson9711
      @fredriko.zachrisson9711 4 роки тому +5

      Just what i thought. Why are he doing this? It is almost like he thinks aboriginal people are lesser then.
      What he say is false, but he feels the need to fabricate an extraordinary tale in order to raise aboriginal peoples status.
      This is a big thing in America, where african american history revisionists jump through hoops in order to claim that they ruled the world, invented everything, and "civilized" the world, and it is sad really.
      Just imagine the shock of those kids that are taught to believe this when they find out that this isnt true. 😐

    • @Ocker3
      @Ocker3 4 роки тому +5

      He's not making a value judgement about different cultures, he's just saying that the history books are currently incomplete.

    • @kira2hot4you37
      @kira2hot4you37 4 роки тому +5

      U dnt get it! White Europeans claim Aborigines were hunter & gatherers & had no tie to the land of Australia so they can use it against Aborigines by lying to the world that these people did not need their land.

    • @kiesha4804
      @kiesha4804 4 роки тому +5

      In Australia the aboriginal culture and sciences are incredibly misunderstood, yes there's nothing wrong with being a hunter gather society but we weren't. Rather we has mass systems of complex information, astronomy, genetics, agriculture, the environment, we had dams, complete control over the environment and animals that was beneficial for both parties. If you look into it is beyond impressive. But in the manner of colonisation none of it is written in our books, were only 53 years human to them.
      that's why its important to actually educate people about our culture and what we can do for the environment, maybe then Australia wouldn't have been on fire for months on end or wouldn't be the leading country in extinction.

    • @paulhealy5245
      @paulhealy5245 4 роки тому +2

      @@kiesha4804 sounds like you are in serious need of an education.

  • @mike-sy7cm
    @mike-sy7cm 2 роки тому +2

    Guy that writes book tells you that your understanding of history is wrong and his books will fill in the gaps. You should trust him because he has a liniage in a culture that only passes down information in story format. !! For the first time this guy is selling a book that... ***

  • @Lex-cg3ee
    @Lex-cg3ee 6 місяців тому +2

    |This man has been proved to be a fraud and his book is a fiction. He is a total fraud.

  • @africanqueen1655
    @africanqueen1655 3 роки тому +3

    God’s Truth and Justice is coming for Indigenous People of the earth, We will Reclaim Our Humanity, Dignity, & Land that God Blessed US with for growing Food, Shelter, Medicine and Community-MOT to be hoarded by the Greedy & Gluttonous creating Man-Made Poverty! You will know the TRUTH, the TRUTH will set you FREE.” -Jesus Christ 🙏🏿

  • @waynegrosvenor9699
    @waynegrosvenor9699 3 місяці тому +16

    .Pascoe is not Aboriginal

    • @tanyamead8027
      @tanyamead8027 Місяць тому +1

      How you know?

    • @ep2934
      @ep2934 14 днів тому +2

      And you know for sure because? 😊 ..

    • @jeremyx1431
      @jeremyx1431 4 дні тому

      I’m sick of white people claiming to be aboriginal. If you’re skin is white u are not aboriginal

  • @whatevs1700
    @whatevs1700 9 місяців тому +2

    I agree with growing local crops if there are such viable plants. But this guy is a known fraud cherry picking a small number of quotes, misrepresenting them and then adding his imagination. The big whole in his argument is that if the large fields of crop were true, the Europeans would have been keen to have such crops continue. Food is food after all and in those early days of European settlement, life was tough and food scarce. Another hole is that surely a culture with a strong history of oral story, the indigenous people of these areas themselves would have stories and passed this knowledge down. Where are these stories. I also understand Pascoe to be fully white on all sides of his ancestry, so really he is just a man with a fantasy. Look, I am open minded that there may have been some form of farming, but I wouldn’t trust this dude.

  • @haydenwalton2766
    @haydenwalton2766 11 місяців тому +6

    hilarious. the australian media outlets put this stuff by pascoe on youtube, but they turn the comments off so the public can't put facts in the story

  • @mellarius188
    @mellarius188 6 років тому +45

    The Yarra Plenty Regional Libraries currently have 6 copies of Dark Emu. There are 33 holds. People are interested. YES WE ARE. Bruce, thank you for this talk.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +10

      Are they kept in the fiction section ??

    • @AmandaKaymusic
      @AmandaKaymusic 5 років тому +8

      @@warwicklewis8735 Of course not. That's where they should move the lessons I was taught at school about the indigenous to though.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +1

      @@AmandaKaymusic really what is it you were taught ???
      I see a lot of people make these kind of broad comments but never back it up with an actual example.

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +2

      @@AmandaKaymusic I see you weren't paying much attention in your English lessons.
      Maybe that is why you failed to remember the Australian history class too.

    • @eoinociarain7986
      @eoinociarain7986 5 років тому +2

      Its $15 why dont they just buy it instead of waiting to borrow it?

  • @Brokenlama2024
    @Brokenlama2024 Місяць тому +1

    Shouldn’t this be taken down for misinformation?

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 28 днів тому

      Except that the government has approved this particular lie
      It is no longer misinformation instead it has become propaganda

  • @biancajones2337
    @biancajones2337 2 місяці тому +1

    This man continues to identify as Aboriginal, but is not recognised or accepted as such by the First Nations peoples he claims to come from.

  • @westbeach8097
    @westbeach8097 Рік тому +15

    It is amazing what can be achieved with some flint and sticks. No plough or beasts of burden. Maybe they used kangaroos?

  • @MrGidupngo
    @MrGidupngo 11 місяців тому +13

    Guess who's been thoroughly discredited by anthropologists? For further information, read Farmers Or Hunter Gatherers by Sutton and Walshe.

    • @brettdavis4903
      @brettdavis4903 10 місяців тому

      To save me the time, in a nut shell, did Aboriginal Australians farm?
      Its a big country, it is possible that some communities did establish semi-permanent sites that they farmed seasonally.

    • @MrGidupngo
      @MrGidupngo 10 місяців тому

      Yes, Possible. Aso may have driven around in home made diesel cars. Just because there's no evidence doesnt mean it aint so! , @@brettdavis4903

    • @MrGidupngo
      @MrGidupngo 10 місяців тому +1

      @@brettdavis4903 Sure, and they may have built Nuclear Power Plants. Who Knows?

  • @TheLookingGlassAU
    @TheLookingGlassAU Рік тому +1

    That would be an anachronism. Nobody cares though do they? Coz you can't challenge anything about theories regarding Aboriginals.
    This isn't evidence based it's speculating.

  • @fergspan5727
    @fergspan5727 Рік тому +10

    The celts were the first farmers

  • @dplant8961
    @dplant8961 Рік тому +6

    Hi, Folks.
    Let me see ANY SCIENTIFIC proof of ANY of this MIS-information and I will apologize for this comment.
    I have wandered around Western Australia from South to North and I have seen some of the rock art in this country. I have also seen just how little the Aboriginal people changed the country and how little indication of their occupancy of said country they left behind.
    I have seen tidal fish traps constructed of rocks that let tidal water filter in through the rocks and fish swim over the top as the tide rose high enough, only to leave some of the fish stranded on the 'wrong' side of the rock wall as the tide receded.
    I have seen some of their midden heaps of shellfish shells that indicate a LONG history of collecting and eating these food sources
    I have seen the etched rock art that can be found in various places in the Pilbara in Western Australia and elsewhere, some of which had great significance for Aboriginal survival by indicating the direction and distance to water
    NOWHERE have I EVER seen ANY signs of any 'cities' of dwellings or of ANY 'cultivation' or 'farming' of the land beyond the burning off of areas of land before they moved on to follow seasonal changes in the availability of various food sources.
    What's more, I have NEVER heard any aboriginals even speak of any of the things that Pascoe claims were part of their history. Not ONCE. Not EVER.
    Just my 0.02.
    You all have a wonderful day. Best wishes. Deas Plant.

    • @peterdoran8443
      @peterdoran8443 Рік тому +1

      Hi Deas,
      I have just received my copy of Peter O'Brien's book 'Bitter Harvest' this book debunks Mr. Pasco's thesis covering his book DARK EMU and what he embellishes by deception.

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Рік тому +1

      @@peterdoran8443 I didn't need to buy a book to know that lol

  • @sebastianomusmarra
    @sebastianomusmarra 7 місяців тому +1

    Bruce Pascoe is what is known as a trans Australian Aboriginal .

  • @Uncommon_Cents71
    @Uncommon_Cents71 6 місяців тому +1

    Is this lots of conjecture based on very spurious assumptions? If it was it would be like someone claiming indigenous ancestory, when they know it's not true.

  • @michaelrobertson543
    @michaelrobertson543 4 роки тому +4

    Bruce Pascoe is lying and it is highlighted in the little synopsis above by Tedx Talks. He claims to have been born in Melbourne, which would make him a part of the Wurundjeri tribe, yet claims to be a member of the Bunurong tribe from the Mornington Peninsula area, as well as Yuin. The Yuin people actually encompass the area on the south coast of NSW, plus claims to be a Tasmanian Aboriginal, this would make him a part of four different tribes according to him, yet claims to have only one Aboriginal ancestor, does not add up. Especially, considering it is well known that Aboriginal tribes often fail to get along. Even worse why is he not using his fame to protect sacred sites in the Yuin area from development by terrible white people. Many Aboriginal Middens have been built on recently in the Yuin area, such as at Dolphin Point, Shoalhaven Heads and Manyana soon more will be covered up for residential development. Why is he not fighting for their protection? For those unaware, a Midden is an ancient Aboriginal occupation site where the remains of meals eaten by ancient Aboriginals remain. They contain the remains of birds, mammals and shellfish. Maybe he has no interest as Middens disprove his claims, they are not found surrounded by huts or stone houses, land that was cleared and used for farming, there are no pens as Pascoe claims for keeping animals. Instead, they display the Aboriginal people were nomadic, moving from place to place depending on the availability of food and water.
    In the end, this guy will do more harm than good to the Aboriginal people, as many will question claims made by Aboriginal people in the future.

  • @Rand0mManic
    @Rand0mManic 4 роки тому +35

    Australia can have Hemp too. Its good for this permaculture. Uses much less water fertilizer and pesticide than every other crop. Its one of those amazing plants that can restore drought striken lands to fertile weed free land for agriculture using using zero herbicide.

    • @RomeshSenewiratne-Alagaratnam
      @RomeshSenewiratne-Alagaratnam Рік тому +1

      Aboriginal people have been smoking hemp for thousands of years. This is evidenced by the Aboriginal word for cannabis - Yarndi. This may be the origin of the word 'yarn'. In addition, there is evidence that the word corroborate is from the Aboriginal word corroboree. However this man, Bruce Pascoe, is a fraud - he's a whiteman pretending to be Aboriginal to sell his books, (inter alia).

  • @sophrapsune
    @sophrapsune 3 місяці тому +1

    There was such a vast agricultural industry that there were no food storage or bulk transport systems. Pascoe’s propaganda has long been debunked but that’s never been a problem for TED.

    • @tanyamead8027
      @tanyamead8027 Місяць тому

      We only take or use what we need….we don’t store as such….🙄

    • @sophrapsune
      @sophrapsune Місяць тому

      @@tanyamead8027 If that’s the case, there would be no motive for mass agricultural production as Pascoe claims existed. Mass agricultural production requires storage and transport logistics if the food isn’t to rot in the field. Furthermore, any given food supply is only available for a few weeks at a time. If they “only use what we need” that means a nomadic, seasonal subsistence lifestyle and not agriculture. Agriculture produces seasonal gluts of produce and must manage them.

    • @tanyamead8027
      @tanyamead8027 Місяць тому

      @@sophrapsuneand this is where we are at today…what is indigenous farming??
      we do things differently, seasonal, live off the earth etc. we are not the colonial non indigenous farmer, who sprays and cuts everything they can so much that the soil is now sooo sh3t, that they have to use chemicals for everything to grow anything
      Live off the earth, go off the grid ….simple! If you don’t look after the land, the land can’t look after you!!

  • @oldtimers6460
    @oldtimers6460 7 місяців тому +1

    Pascoe is not even Aboriginal and a fantasy writer. He has no idea what it takes to Farm and is just pulling peoples chain for a cushy job. My family worked the land for over 100 years and it took them years just to clear the land to farm. As to the grains he talks about ,all were introduced by colonization. His talk about flowing fields in the heart of Australia is BS as there is not enough water to supply such crops and they did not have the means to transport water over long distance. They had no work animals to even work the land so vast fields is BS again. Pascoe is a lair and fraud, no even recognized by the Aboriginal people.

  • @El-sm9gr
    @El-sm9gr 5 років тому +10

    The point about carbon sequestration is an interesting one, Allan Savory talks about the same thing using something much more common: grass. My only question is that with Agriculture surplus food leads to specialization and a higher population. Were these also noted by early explorers?

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 5 років тому +5

      Agriculture requires specialized tools, none have ever been found here.
      Have a look (laugh) at the pathetic attempt to pass pointy rocks off as tools.
      Described as weighing "more than can be lifted above the waist" a weight that makes it far to heavy to be of any practical use as a tool.
      He claims to have seen "thousands" and yet the best example has no handle and no sign of having had one.
      This is conclusive proof that Bruce has never done an honest days work but that is all it proves.

    • @ericrussell5861
      @ericrussell5861 5 років тому +1

      Yes hence the genocide

    • @NCRonrad
      @NCRonrad 2 роки тому +1

      @@warwicklewis8735 you don’t think biodegradable (eg wood and bone) would be harder to find? And you sound awfully dismissive of genocide..

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 роки тому +3

      @@NCRonrad we are not talking about thousands of years.
      Only 200 years has past since colonisation.
      This is not long enough for wood and bone to completely deteriorate.
      As is evidenced by the wooden hunting and gathering tools that are still found.
      The definition of genocide does not include providing free education and health care.
      Or sustained efforts to protect and preserve cultural traditions.
      It's not that I dismiss genocide....it's more a case of I dismiss political propaganda.

    • @saimoncole
      @saimoncole Рік тому +2

      That's what I was wondering... Specialization also led to civilization - civil = cities. Aborigines invented bread and society?? That was invented independently in many places around the world. Pity he politicizes this. Keep to the facts.

  • @jdheryos4910
    @jdheryos4910 3 роки тому +5

    His work now proved to be false, made up and full of false hoods.
    Shame on you TED.

    • @NimoClancy
      @NimoClancy 2 роки тому

      may you please elaborate, id like to hear what you're saying

  • @fredbear-sf9st
    @fredbear-sf9st Рік тому +1

    This guy is a teller of fairy tales. The natives in Australia never had a written language until Europeans started a translation into English using the Latin alphabet. They never had metal tools and didn’t even have knowledge of the wheel.

  • @Chris-ei5fz
    @Chris-ei5fz 11 місяців тому +1

    This guy is living in a Dreamtime. Farming is p,anting and caring for a crop through to its eventual harvest. Collecting naturally occurring grain and using it is called GATHERING. Hunting is using the naturally occurring fauna for substance whereas farming is domesticating and herding animals which was not achieved.
    It’s clear that what this individual called farming are the activities of hunter gatherers. In one breath he uses the word crops and continues to state how they found the seeds and fruits they wanted to use. FINDING is not FARMING if they hard had farmed those seeds and fruits there would be no need to FIND THEM.

    • @ceanetowers9216
      @ceanetowers9216 3 місяці тому

      Do you realize how you sound. This type of ignorance is why there was a need for Pascoe to retell these deliberately forgotten stories. Hunter and Gather inclines we were almost walking around aimlessly not knowing what we'd find. We intentionally grew, re grew yams, grains etc. that takes intelligence to do. Also, if you want to talk of meat, how do you figure catching meat that was not in fences? I can tell you now our First people knew the patterns of the meat and would do cool burns to be sure that vegetations regrew, and the meat would come, then my people caught them. Thats way smarter than farming anyhow, but it's still farming, its farming without fences. Managed fields. If you knew the insignificant of the words used 'hunter and gather' against us, you'd understand. Hand turned.

  • @topgurl9313
    @topgurl9313 5 років тому +15

    So nice to see people like him who just take the time to learn. Relying on prejudice is weak-minded.

    • @druid3744
      @druid3744 4 роки тому

      Princess Jauregui-Hansen Yep! Yep! Yep!

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Рік тому +7

      You don't know this guys are fake do you

    • @AndyJarman
      @AndyJarman 11 місяців тому +7

      Pascoe's two parents were English, he's Aboriginal alright, but he's native to a country he's never visited. That's why he tries so hard - he's lost his own truth.

    • @davidschier9762
      @davidschier9762 5 місяців тому

      Pascoe is a fraud

    • @wayneevans8286
      @wayneevans8286 4 місяці тому +1

      this man is nothing more than a liar,look into it,very shaky individual,making a living off lies.

  • @danieldowling4993
    @danieldowling4993 3 роки тому +12

    My ancestors managed the land but didn't farm it. Country provided everything we needed as long as we looked after the land and animals.

    • @henryjanicky4978
      @henryjanicky4978 2 місяці тому

      What was the method you used to look after land- fire?

  • @rapoela7137
    @rapoela7137 3 місяці тому

    Not being curious or astonished that the ancestors of Aboriginal Australians were the earliest pioneers of our migrational human ancestors to get to this continent before our other ancestors reach many parts of Asia, Europe or the Americas from our collective place of origin in Africa is very sad. We all form an amazingly diverse tapestry originating from the same human gene pool that has found creative ways to live in all corners of the planet and found amazingly creative ways to manage the landscape to prosper and survive. Our human ancestors that were skillful enough to reach this continent at least 600000 years ago is the most overlooked achievement of our species and the amount of destruction and disrespect for the incredible civilization that the diverse cultures of Aboriginal Australia were able to achieve by being the most sustainable custodians of a continent should make all Australians (and all humans) deeply respectful and proud as a nation and as human beings. They were forced ( in the most brutal way) in only 200 years to lose almost 90% of this culturally technological knowledge and deep understanding of the land to all of our detriment. The fact that some still survives within Aboriginal communities today is incredible and should be protected and understood to help redress the destructive non sustainable tendency of the dominant cultural practices we see causing havoc to human society everywhere today. We are all human with the same patterns of understanding and ancestral interconnection with each other. Now more than ever in our history we have the opportunity to use the collective knowledge we have acquired since the great ancient migrations to shed the negative and emphasise the amazing achievements such as those our Australian Aboriginal brothers and sisters have managed to retain despite the genocidal attempt to eradicate them and their culture (indirectly it is also all of us and our shared cultural history). Forget linear historical propaganda which when have been brainwashed to believe (to justify the greedy imperial and materialistic aspects of our cultural nature) let us focus on the achievements as an incredibly diverse global species. Nuclear fusion and space programs are not necessarily indicative of a wise culture as we have seen from the unimaginable destruction and political fuckery that they have wrought in the hands of cultures who claim to be the most civilized but will do anything to suppress and deny wisdom and basic humanity in their own and other cultures in the process. Let us use the example of our Australian Aboriginal family and what they have been through in the past 10's of thousands of years and in the past 200 (when other branches of the human family arrived on the continent and formed the thing we now know as Australia), of our common humanity and that great wisdom that can help the world needs to be recognised and celebrated and that any human civilization is just as fragile as the next in our ability to lose what we ignorantly believe gives us cultural superiority over others when we are all related through deep time on this earth

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 2 місяці тому +1

      Do you have any examples of this wisdom and knowledge you speak of ??
      With all due respect I'm just curious what exactly it is that you think they knew
      All the evidence points to their arrival on this continent around 45 000 years ago
      Within 5-10 000 years they had caused the mass extinction of the mega fauna
      Destroyed the ancient rainforest environment and created a dry period that continues to this day
      The fire resistant drought hardy species that remain are the survivors of a rapid man made extinction event
      The 17th century was called the age of discovery
      Not just Europeans but all of mankind had reached a technological level of boat building and navigation that was expanding human horizons
      The existence of Australia was already known
      It was inevitable that someone was going to exploit the resources here
      In fact the English decided to establish a colony here as a strategic base specifically to keep other world powers from doing so
      We all live in the modern world today
      It doesn't matter iif you are African Indonesian Irish or aboriginal the calender still reads 2024
      The ancient knowledge of how to track a goanna across the dessert or grind a stone axe head is no longer valid
      The skills needed to survive in todays global economy are not found in bark huts or shady billabong
      The modern farmer feeds 30 million Australians and is a major exporter of food to the world
      Ancient Australia barely supplied the food requirements of less than 1 million malnourished individuals
      Yes we invented bombs and poison
      But we also invented hospitals charity medicine human rights democracy and air conditioners
      Our achievements should be celebrated
      Do you dwell on your personal failures and mistakes ?
      Or do you prefer to focus on the things you have done well and your best moments
      Wallowing in the misery of your lowest points is mentally destructive
      This applies also on a national scale
      We are not the sum of our mistakes
      Australia is built on our best efforts and our noblest actions

  • @user-je6ls2pd7j
    @user-je6ls2pd7j 5 місяців тому +1

    This man is totally discredited he is not Aboriginal and has no Aboriginal in his family at all. He is a liar, facts do not stand up to critical examination .
    Please review other examinations of his book.

  • @chrisyoung2511
    @chrisyoung2511 2 роки тому +5

    Mr Pascoe, would you please respond to the Aboriginal communities that deny your inclusion as a first country person - indeed that you are not of aboriginal origin. Is it true that your heritage is English? Moreover, how do you respond to the historians that reject all of your theories of early Australian people? As a person that is willing to speak publicly to extend your thoughts and theories, are you willing to defend the claims that you have misunderstood the history of this country? You have enjoyed the fruits of the Australian people's public purse, the academic acclaim, the academic position - the spotlight of a State Government seeding their schools with your material. If your studies and theories are sound in your own mind, they should be worth standing up to the test of public scrutiny. I ask that you come forward publically and explain your material on Andrew Bolt's program with the renowned Australian Historian Geoffrey Blainey. If you are indeed a first country person, who has carefully researched your thesis you would be well served to a polite academic debate with Mr Blainey.

    • @rjw421
      @rjw421 2 роки тому

      The bloke is just a fraud - enough said.

  • @morningmidnight9398
    @morningmidnight9398 5 років тому +6

    Nice try but we all know that Mesopotamia is The cradle of civilization where proper irrigated farms were started as opposed to rain dependent fields. That gives you a stable yield which begets wealth and a growing thriving settlement which leads to prosperity and advances in economy, inventions and politics. And to say that your crops are staple and don't need pesticides is simply moronic as a mere week change in weather can ruin an entire crop and make it susiptible to disease and pests. The oldest cities and villages on ersth are around Mesopotamia the oldest walled city in the world is Jericho 12000 years ago I repeat walled city that is how advanced they got.

    • @ddshocktrooper5604
      @ddshocktrooper5604 5 років тому +4

      You know multiple people can have the same idea without ever communicating, right?

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 5 років тому

      I'm sure the Aboriginals will soon claim that they were the cradle of modern civilization. Lol. No wheel, no written language, no cities, no copper, no bronze, no iron, What trade there was with others was where Aboriginals provided raw materials and others provided finished goods. Oh and Aboriginals weren't sailing around the region to trade with others or explore the world either.

  • @user-wy6iu6gw3s
    @user-wy6iu6gw3s 4 місяці тому +1

    Bruce Pascoe's a shockingly dishonest and divisive pseudo historian.
    Here's an example.
    Dark Emu p. 30: "The science of baking developed alongside the seed harvests. Richard Fullagar, at the Australian Museum, and Judith Field, at the University of New South Wales, found grindstones at Cuddie Springs, near Walgett, in western New South Wales, which had been used to grind more than 30,000 years ago. This makes the people the world's oldest bakers by almost 15,000 years, as the Egyptians, the next earliest, didn't bake until 17,000 BC."
    Leaving aside the fact that this "boast" mirrors similar boasts by white supremacists that "we" invented steam engines and the internet, Pascoe's summary of Fullagar and Field's discovery doesn't match their own descriptions of it. They found grindstones which COULD have been used to grind seed to a paste, or COULD have been used to make flour which may then have been put on hot rocks to cook out the starch, or COULD have been used for other purposes such as to grind ochres.
    Dark Emu p. 31: "The explorer Hamilton Hume, in frank conversation with Robinson, said that he had been on the exploration parties of Captain Charles Sturt (1795-1869), and that, 'on the Darling the Natives gather grain from the wild oats and grind it between two stones and make a paste and eat it, the same is done by the Natives to the northward'."
    First bakers or first tahini-makers?
    Bruce's agenda, from start to finish, is anti-white, with explicit accusations directed at reputable historians such as Charles Manning Clark, Geoffrey Blainey, Bain Atwood, Henry Reynolds, Lyndall Ryan and others too scrupulous to turn the discovery of grindstones into a "we understood the science of baking" claims.

  • @deelea2965
    @deelea2965 10 місяців тому +1

    Bruce takes basic facts and adds a load of nonsense to them. High on this list are two things. 1. He claims to have Indigenous ancestors but has been proven not to. And if he has made that up, what else should you question? 2. He claims Indigenous Australians were "the most peaceful people on earth" before colonisation. The reality is Indigenous Australians were just as violent as anyone else in the world if not more so, because their culture was vendetta based. Indigenous Australians believed that every single death of a man (except in old age) was caused by witchcraft and had to be avenged. This brought about thousands of years of endless payback killings, fighting and war. The term 'Makarrata' - at the core of The 'Voice' proposal - actually means 'payback'. In Melbourne itself, at the time Europeans arrived, the Kurnai tribe (Lidia Thorpe's people) were in a 'payback war' to exterminate the Bunurong tribe. Both these tribes were also cannibals, who ate their enemies. Like most First Australians did. Anyone who actually knows anything about history knows cannibalism was endemic in Australia. No surprise really because all neighbouring lands were cannibals too - New Zealand, Torres Strait Islands and New Guinea. To avoid the stigma associated with cannibalism, the powers that be (State, Church, etc) had preferred to hush this truth up. It's only raised here to show just how far Bruce veers from reality. Judging by many of the posts here, Bruce sure has misled a lot of people.

  • @j...bro.
    @j...bro. 9 місяців тому +6

    Tilled with what? Where are tools.

  • @havilahfarm1591
    @havilahfarm1591 5 років тому +23

    Love this. Thank you for your research and efforts Mr Pascoe. The aboriginal people of Australia I hope will live a renaissance when we have the intelligence and humility to look to them for many of the answers and great questions regarding humanity.

    • @mastertemple8369
      @mastertemple8369 4 роки тому +2

      Sorry which Tribe accepts him?

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 3 роки тому +5

      One of the greatest works of fiction today.

    • @MrRealgiovanni
      @MrRealgiovanni 3 роки тому +4

      He decided on a conclusion he wanted, and then went about extrapolating it inventing evidence to support it. Most of the claims he makes from Sturt and Mitchell's diaries cannot be found. And his indigenous heritage is a modern day association, with 20 indigenous groups rejecting him before his acceptance. It's been shown that his family history is 100% Descended from British born people
      *** edit ***
      The "Yuin Nation" which Bruce has claimed to now be a member of, has disavowed his claim as aboriginal.
      He now fails 2 of the 3 requirements of being indigenous in Australia. He can lay no claim or proof of ancestory, now is he accepted by any recognised indigenous group. And you could hardly call his multi million dollar farm as "living a traditional indigenous lifestyle"

    • @cobar5342
      @cobar5342 Рік тому

      'Research'.... what???
      Maybe he read 'How to Lie'

  • @ozoneswiftak
    @ozoneswiftak 9 місяців тому

    Alot of rude comments. Let me assure you all, were still learning about our history. Everything under the sun has already been done. Earth has many past civilizations.

  • @B23775
    @B23775 26 днів тому

    Why is it so hard to believe my people could be more than sticks and stones?

  • @riepie
    @riepie 4 роки тому +22

    There's a lot of racists in these comments...

    • @Patrick3183
      @Patrick3183 3 роки тому

      Oh shut up.

    • @capital_beaz4725
      @capital_beaz4725 3 роки тому +3

      @@Patrick3183 lol I found one of the racists

    • @MrRealgiovanni
      @MrRealgiovanni 3 роки тому

      Or maybe it's people who have read the original source documents and struggled to find the passages Bruce quotes verbatim.

  • @pebystroll
    @pebystroll 2 роки тому +5

    Maybe someone will be able to explain this to me but I don't understand how these claims can be true, the reason I say this is due to the fact that there is very little complicated buildings or any large amount of writing, while I realise one can exist without the other I dont see how the culture would have expanded more if there was more time freed up due to the farming and storing

    • @andrewholliday251
      @andrewholliday251 Рік тому +4

      Reading Pascoe's book itself will help here (Dark Emu) - as it much more detail (note: it is polemical), as will Bill Gammage's The Biggest Estate on Earth (if you're not familiar with this one - chase it down - it changes our understanding of Australia completely; and since its publication a decade ago has gone from 'controversial theory' to standard text book status) - and The Memory Code - Lynne Kelly - will explain why the lack of 'any large amount of writing' is of no consequence at all to these (and other) matters. You won't regret making the effort. But you will be surprise at just how much self-serving codswallop we were served up in the past that passed itself off as 'history' and 'fact'.

    • @pebystroll
      @pebystroll Рік тому

      @@andrewholliday251 thanks for your comment

    • @cobar5342
      @cobar5342 Рік тому +3

      It is all a lie

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Рік тому +8

      @@andrewholliday251 yes but everybody now knows it's bulshit so don't keep telling people to read it

    • @shaneDylan33
      @shaneDylan33 Рік тому +3

      It just does not make sense to farm something on a industrial-scale for communities/Mobs so small in population

  • @dennisthemenace57
    @dennisthemenace57 3 місяці тому +1

    This bloke is no longer taken seriously. His "work" has been debunkedcompletely

  • @ilikevines
    @ilikevines Рік тому

    Just do the math…if they’ve occupied this continent for 65,000 years and the highest estimate of their population per-1788 is one million there’s no way they could have been practicing extensive agriculture with such a low population.

  • @organoworm3146
    @organoworm3146 4 роки тому +8

    This should be taken down. He's 100% non-Aboriginal when he claimed to be. All of his writings are bogus.

    • @rjw421
      @rjw421 4 роки тому +4

      ... and yet people still support this CONMAN.

    • @elephanttrunk5372
      @elephanttrunk5372 4 роки тому +1

      Conservatives are Satan's puppets

    • @isupportchef
      @isupportchef 4 роки тому

      Evidential link?

  • @davidhill8520
    @davidhill8520 10 місяців тому +2

    A complete work of fiction. As the author is

  • @SyBa-SyKo
    @SyBa-SyKo Рік тому

    Most comments here are completely missing the point. Oblivious. Unable to see the forest for the trees.
    Some, on the other hand, provide nuggets of contemporary ecological wisdom. The lessons are there, but I find the course material unsettling.
    I see the forest just fine, but I'm not sure I want to. Is it just me? Am I too critical or judgemental? A naive idealist, governed by an outdated moral/ethical compass? Unrealistic expectations of what a forest should be?
    How do I adjust my thinking, my approach, and find peace in our degraded, exploited environment? How do I see past the forest and find beauty in the trees?

  • @paulrubie1965
    @paulrubie1965 5 років тому +36

    Yes Bruce you are a LEGEND!!!!!! Australia is in denial....

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 5 років тому +12

      Denial of what? They farmed but at a subsistence level. No written language, no great cities, no inventions of bronze, iron etc. Oh and they were defeated.

    • @BloodyMaori
      @BloodyMaori 5 років тому +10

      Ray 😂
      Triggered?

    • @Ray-wm8dz
      @Ray-wm8dz 4 роки тому +4

      @Liam Fact is any country which doesn't have the ability to defend itself against invaders is doomed.

    • @wally1166
      @wally1166 4 роки тому +2

      Your only defeated if you give up indigenous people fight to this day for there rights and land your very uneducated for a visitor on Australian soil

    • @JoeyDediashvili
      @JoeyDediashvili 4 роки тому +5

      Ray ... it’s funny. You are so predictable. Spreading disinformation. Did someone hire you or do you do this job for free? Hate or cash?

  • @rodpratt7718
    @rodpratt7718 4 роки тому +3

    Yet we also have so many more sources showing that hunting and gathering was the predominant means of subsistence. Could it be that sedentary horticulture was just starting to catch on? I doubt that the early Europeans transitioned from hunting to horticulture overnight.

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb Рік тому

      Yes but Europeans were isolated from the rest of the world for nearly 100000 years

  • @svensshed1564
    @svensshed1564 9 місяців тому +2

    We understand that this bloke has been proven an absolute fraud dont we?

  • @annprince5298
    @annprince5298 3 роки тому +2

    Many of aboriginal groups denied he was a Native Aborihins
    S have survived in the outback for thousands of years learned how to use the land knowvtheir way in the Desertr They are the land. ( pardon me Aboriginals sorry spellchecker)

  • @ariedebruyn5218
    @ariedebruyn5218 11 місяців тому +3

    The only problem with the wheat belt idea is that Jared Diamond states in his text that wheat and these type of things were not originally harvested. But instead the seeds were spread by humans and animals and that's how fruit, vegetables and other plant material first spread. Not through intentional agriculture. But through people travelling and spreading the seeds of agriculture unconsciously. It comes down to the definition of agriculture. What is intentional farming and what isn't?

  • @sariyahm
    @sariyahm 4 роки тому +24

    when i first watched this i thought an episode of westworld was about to start

  • @theoriginalwasa
    @theoriginalwasa 5 місяців тому

    This guy should get a deal with Netflix to make episodes for Ancient Aliens. Hahaha.

  • @rosshitchen-ij6en
    @rosshitchen-ij6en 2 місяці тому

    Isaac Batey is not typically known as the first farmer in Australia, but he is recognized as an important early settler and farmer in the Australian colonies. His life and work contribute to the understanding of early agricultural practices in Australia.
    Early Life and Background
    Birth: Isaac Batey was born on February 5, 1836, in Lancashire, England.
    Migration to Australia: He emigrated to Australia with his family as a child, settling in the Port Phillip District, which later became part of Victoria.
    Contributions to Farming in Australia
    Early Settlements:
    Family Settlement: The Batey family settled in the Sunbury area, north-west of Melbourne. Isaac's father, John Batey, was among the early settlers who established farms in this region.
    Pioneering Efforts: Isaac Batey continued his family's pioneering efforts, contributing to the development of agricultural practices in the area.
    Farming Practices:
    Sheep Farming: Like many early settlers, the Bateys engaged in sheep farming, which was a significant industry in colonial Australia. Sheep farming played a crucial role in the economy, providing wool for export.
    Crop Cultivation: In addition to livestock, early farmers like Batey cultivated crops suited to the Australian climate, experimenting with various grains and vegetables.
    Community Contributions:
    Local Historian: Isaac Batey is remembered for his contributions as a local historian. He documented the experiences of early settlers and Indigenous Australians, providing valuable insights into the early colonial period.
    Written Works: His writings include detailed accounts of daily life, farming practices, and interactions with the Aboriginal people. These records are valuable historical sources.
    Context of Early Australian Agriculture
    First Farmers: The title of the "first farmer in Australia" is more accurately attributed to early European settlers who established agricultural practices in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Figures like James Ruse are often credited with being among the first successful farmers. Ruse, a former convict, was granted land at Rose Hill (near modern-day Parramatta) and proved that European-style farming could be successful in the Australian environment.
    Indigenous Farming: It's important to note that Indigenous Australians practiced sophisticated forms of land management and farming long before European settlement. These included techniques such as fire-stick farming, yam cultivation, and fish trapping, as observed by explorers like Sir Thomas Mitchell and George Grey.
    Legacy
    Historical Significance: Isaac Batey's contributions as a settler and historian provide a window into the early agricultural development of Victoria. His records help historians understand the challenges and successes of early farming communities.
    Recognition: While not the "first farmer," Batey’s work is part of the broader narrative of pioneering agricultural efforts that shaped the Australian landscape and economy.
    Conclusion
    Isaac Batey was a significant early settler and farmer in colonial Australia, contributing to the agricultural development of the Sunbury area in Victoria. His work as a local historian provides valuable insights into the lives and practices of early settlers and their interactions with Indigenous Australians. While he may not hold the title of the first farmer in Australia, his contributions are an important part of the country's agricultural history.

  • @tonydenman9629
    @tonydenman9629 Рік тому +11

    Compulsive liar.

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo57 5 років тому +84

    I want to try that cake.

    • @ddshocktrooper5604
      @ddshocktrooper5604 5 років тому +4

      Last time I checked that grass is speculated to maybe be extinct because we were too slow to care. But well, white people speculations aren't exactly the pinnacle of accuracy so there's likely no less than 10 aboriginal communities making cake with it somewhere today, but nobody has bothered to check.

    • @AmandaKaymusic
      @AmandaKaymusic 5 років тому +2

      @@ddshocktrooper5604 I am looking forward to hearing how the harvest of local grains on the N.S.W. coast (mentioned in this clip) goes. The harvest time is Feb 2019. With all the mismanagement of our rivers I suspect the harvest will be more successful than the imported water hungry species, especially if you take into account the real cost of water and water mismanagement. Australia has a long written history (since 'colonisation') of drought ruining food supplies (with our more modern imported farming techniques) and serious starvation and depravation resulting from that. There are records showing how many 'settlers' were wiped out from famine. I think it is a pity so much knowledge has already been lost. I hope we start investing in learning some of the farming practices and food species from the knowledge keepers that are left.

    • @nevillelamberti
      @nevillelamberti 5 років тому +5

      It is completely fictitious. It never existed. What a load of SH1T.

    • @annao3212
      @annao3212 4 роки тому +2

      Neville Lamberti how do you know ?

    • @Patrick3183
      @Patrick3183 3 роки тому +3

      dD ShockTrooper I feel like You’re White yourself and trying to get SJW points

  • @barryford1482
    @barryford1482 Рік тому +1

    He can't tell the truth about his his own family wrongfully claiming he is Aboriginal so why would you believe anything he says