kerenite wrote: ↑10 May 2024, 15:22
union wrote: ↑10 May 2024, 14:14
Historians agree about these 8 parts of civilizations (1) cities, (2) well-organized central governments, (3) com- plex religions, (4) job specialization, (5) social classes, (6) arts and architecture, (7) public works, and (8) writing,
(9) Militery power, (10) history
Ethiopia exceeded in most of them!!
To begin with, my comment below may offend some Ethiopians here but I believe in calling a spade a spade and not a niggger.
Dude! Give us a break of this lala 3000 years debtera history ala the fake kibrenegest doctrine.
You people have become a scum or a burden to the white people who are feeding you since decades.
Give yourself a break from thinking that writing in English properly makes you a British. Only የአድዋ ቡችላ would say የጎንደር ደብተራ። Right? Just recently, I heard “የጎንደር ደብተራ” teach ታይታይ መዋቅር የነበረ ነዉ። ኣለ። Ethiopians from north to south and east to west have been teaching you about it. Only if you understood it.
What does food have to do with having a civil culture?
Forget about Ethiopia for a moment and answer this question that a “White” American man couldn’t answer.
He had visited India and said he saw poverty there. I asked him what kind of culture he observed in the people. He said they are a very nice people; the nice people that the British colonized for a long time.
My next question to him was if he has seen any homeless Indian in America. He answered no.
I continued and asked him if the Indians are new comers to America, you would imagine that they face harder challenges than the “White” Americans who have been living here.
He said that is a good question.
So, here is a case study for you to find the answer, if you can.
Before I visited San Francisco and the Golden Gate Bridge, somebody said it is a beautiful city.
On my way back after visiting the Golden Gate Bridge, stopped at a traffic light across from the City Hall, I saw a “White” man just next to my car. My first impression of the sight was if he was a robber because he was just at my car’s window. When I looked at him, I read a sigh that he was holding for help. My childhood impression of America took a 180 degree turn.
According to your definition, the city that is so “civilized” hosts so many homeless people who beg for food and shelter.
My worry about people like you is that you don’t fully understand the age old local culture that you break down its age old fabric willy nilly.
The family fabric came out of that age old culture to make homelessness absent in it, at least as much as I have known it.