Hmm So the sacred Uluru rock of indigenous Australians is a cliche. People need to be more sensitive. To understand the Australian countryside you need to understand the many tribes that inhabit it, their many languages. Their isolation is what has helped a civilization that is arguably one of the oldest in the world to survive for more than 60,000 years. It is vital that it stays that way. In a desperate attempt to shift focus from an imploding Netherlands, trying to encroach on land elsewhere by Comparing two highly differing and complex contexts based on tangible statistical evidence seems fairly naive. He says there are no cows left in the Dutch countryside, it shouldn't come as a surprise if there won't be any of the 'Aboriginals' left on their land.
I agree, Koolhas has a very annoying way of using the word "Cliche". I think he tries to say "common place" as a phyisical or symbolic territory, shared by many. Maybe that doesnt make those places better, but it definitely doesnt make them worse. Being focused on hunting stereotypes and challenging topics, he sometimes forgets that maybe traditions are good. He does that anyway in every conference, wherever he goes, he never praises the local architecture.
He's a dumb privilege white man- koolhaus
Hmm So the sacred Uluru rock of indigenous Australians is a cliche. People need to be more sensitive. To understand the Australian countryside you need to understand the many tribes that inhabit it, their many languages. Their isolation is what has helped a civilization that is arguably one of the oldest in the world to survive for more than 60,000 years. It is vital that it stays that way. In a desperate attempt to shift focus from an imploding Netherlands, trying to encroach on land elsewhere by Comparing two highly differing and complex contexts based on tangible statistical evidence seems fairly naive. He says there are no cows left in the Dutch countryside, it shouldn't come as a surprise if there won't be any of the 'Aboriginals' left on their land.
I agree, Koolhas has a very annoying way of using the word "Cliche". I think he tries to say "common place" as a phyisical or symbolic territory, shared by many. Maybe that doesnt make those places better, but it definitely doesnt make them worse. Being focused on hunting stereotypes and challenging topics, he sometimes forgets that maybe traditions are good. He does that anyway in every conference, wherever he goes, he never praises the local architecture.