"The Territorial Imperative: A Personal Inquiry Into the Animal Origins of Property and Nations"
(Robert Ardrey's Nature of Man #2) by Robert Ardrey, Irven Devore (Introduction)
Get the book.
The Story of Us with Morgan Freeman as host and narrator tells us about man's inhumanity to his/her fellow humans. Of course it is 90% men killing humans. Men are typically the more aggressive humans.
"The Story of Us With Morgan Freeman The Power of Us "
http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/the-story-of-us-with-morgan-freeman/
See "Wind River" and understand part of how very sick humans are, unless they control their inhumanity to their sisters and brothers.
"The Moody, Mixed Messages of Wind River"
Taylor Sheridan has crafted an uneven, but potent, vengeance film rooted in the death of a young Native American woman.
Fred Hayes / The Weinstein Company Aug 11, 2017
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/08/the-mixed-messages-of-wind-river/536448/
"At the end of Wind River, the major-film directorial debut of Taylor Sheridan, we are informed that no records are kept of how many Native American women go missing each year. It is an odd political note on which to conclude. Because while Wind River revolves around the disappearance and death of a young Native American woman, she is largely missing from the film herself, appearing alive only in one brief flashback."
America murdered, slaughtered native Americans, yet we do not seem to really care or try to compensate native Americans fairly. Americans do not care and I think it is because Americans are at our root murders. We control our murderous instinct, but only for the most part. Many of us do not or cannot control our murderous instinct. We murdered people!
The Tweety form of nationalism will fail in time.
Maybe the purpose of religion and spirituality is to help us control our deep rooted aggressions toward each other as we take territory.
The Territorial Imperative
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Territorial_Imperative
"The Territorial Imperative: A Personal Inquiry Into the Animal Origins of Property and Nations, usually referred to as The Territorial Imperative, is a 1966 nonfiction work by Robert Ardrey. It describes the evolutionarily determined instinct among humans toward territoriality and the implications of this territoriality in human meta-phenomena such as property ownership and nation building .[1] The Territorial Imperative extended Ardrey's groundbreaking anthropological work, contributed to the development of the science of ethology, and encouraged an increasing public interest in human origins.
The Territorial Imperative is the second book in Robert Ardrey's Nature of Man Series. It is preceded by African Genesis and followed by The Social Contract, and The Hunting Hypothesis. It was illustrated by Ardrey's wife, the South African actress and illustrator Berdine Ardrey (née Grunewald). Ardrey dedicated The Territorial Imperative to Henry Eliot Howard, who was noted for being one of the first to describe in detail the territoriality behaviors in birds."