- 02 Feb 11, 23:19#237359
Here's something that puts everything into perspective. The pictures of the tribe are over at Wired.
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/ ... 29&pid=957
Thackara and Watson want the public to write the Peruvian government, urging a halt of illegal logging in the Amazon. With logging, ranching and mining come foreign diseases and the destruction of forests on which tribes rely.
Some uncontacted people have fled from Peru into western Brazil, where this new group was spotted. Thackara emphasized that the tribes deserve protection not as living examples of Stone Age life, but as rare and distinct cultures.
"We're trying to encourage the view that these are evolving societies," she said. "They're not stuck in the Dark Ages. We want people to see them as something that can be part of our future."
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/ ... 29&pid=957
"I don't want to be part of a forum where everyone has differing opinions." Boom...