I wouldn't eat a Clown ...........they taste funny .
And I'm outta here !
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I wouldn't eat a Clown ...........they taste funny .
And I'm outta here !
When very young, perhaps 6 or 7, and with my father in NZ, he asked a very old maori woman who had tattooing chiseled into he chin, if she'd eaten human flesh. She said 'Pakeha (white man) very salty'.
Don.
When I was in the Southern Highlands of PNG nearly fifty years ago, living in the Bosavi area, I was told that according to the government the last case of cannibalism was about 'ten years ago', but the resident anthropologist told us it was "four months ago".
In this area it was considered part of normal funerary customs.
Cannibalism, in my considered view, is uncommon, for two major reasons. The first one is social - people who habitually eat their neighbours make bad neighbours, and tend to get eliminated eventually. The second is a public health one - eating humans tends to spread disease (the example of Kuru is given above) but other diseases are more easily spread even if not exclusive to cannibalism, especially if the food is not well cooked.
John
Simple answer - we all have names.
Didn't the Maoris eat several English ships'crews?
I remember visiting the former Thai capital Ayutthaya which was besieged by a huge Burmese army in about 1767. After a long period the city residents ran out of food and some reports say they began eating each other.
The thing with humans is, it doesn't matter what colour the outside is, it's all still white meat.:Rolling::Rolling::Rolling::Rolling:
Their was a Rugby team that ate some their teammates once.
The starving Japanese in New Guinea ate the flesh of dead Aussie soldiers, and what is not well known is that the survivors of the ship the book Mobi Dick was based on, having set off to South America in two small ships boats, actually voted to draw straws to determine who would be on the menu.