2019年12月6日 星期五

Today's Headlines: Pelosi Says House Will Draft Impeachment Charges Against Trump

General Strike in France Challenges Macron's Latest Ambition for Change
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Friday, December 6, 2019

Top News

Pelosi Says House Will Draft Impeachment Charges Against Trump

Pelosi Says House Will Draft Impeachment Charges Against Trump

By NICHOLAS FANDOS

The speaker said she was instructing House committee chairmen to move forward with articles of impeachment against President Trump; another hearing is scheduled for Monday.

General Strike in France Challenges Macron's Latest Ambition for Change

General Strike in France Challenges Macron's Latest Ambition for Change

By ADAM NOSSITER

The president wants to combine a complex of 42 different generous pension schemes into one state system. It scares fellow citizens. And his personal style grates on many.

When Pete Buttigieg Was One of McKinsey's 'Whiz Kids'

The Long Run

When Pete Buttigieg Was One of McKinsey's 'Whiz Kids'

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

The candidate, citing a nondisclosure agreement, has been largely mum about his stint at "the firm." Former McKinsey employees helped fill in the blanks.

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Editors' Picks

'The Amazon Is Completely Lawless': The Rainforest After Bolsonaro's First Year

World

'The Amazon Is Completely Lawless': The Rainforest After Bolsonaro's First Year

By VICTOR MORIYAMA and MATT SANDY

Deforestation in the world's largest rainforest, an important buffer against climate change, has soared under President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil.

Donald Trump Is a Clear and Present Danger to the 2020 Election

Opinion

Donald Trump Is a Clear and Present Danger to the 2020 Election

By ANNE MILGRAM

Who gets to pick the next president of the United States — President Trump, Russia or us?

Today's Videos

'The President Leaves Us No Choice,' Pelosi Says

VideoVideo: 'The President Leaves Us No Choice,' Pelosi Says

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Thursday that the House was ready to move forward with articles of impeachment, escalating a partisan confrontation that could lead to a vote by Christmas.

'You're a Damn Liar, Man,' Biden Tells Voter in Iowa

VideoVideo: 'You're a Damn Liar, Man,' Biden Tells Voter in Iowa

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had a tense exchange with a voter questioning Hunter Biden's overseas business dealings. Mr. Biden also challenged the man to do push-ups.

Who Is Michael Bloomberg? | 2020 Presidential Candidate

VideoVideo: Who Is Michael Bloomberg? | 2020 Presidential Candidate

By SARAH KERR, MAYA BLACKSTONE and DAVID BOTTI

The billionaire businessman and former mayor of New York is hoping he can forge a path to the Democratic nomination by positioning himself as a centrist who can take on President Trump.

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2019年12月5日 星期四

Australia Letter: Beer With Bella | Tyson Yunkaporta

How Indigenous thinking can save the world.

Letter 136

Beer With Bella: Tyson Yunkaporta

Melinda Josie
You can learn a lot about someone from an interview. But can you learn more over a drink? The Australia Letter introduces a new series, “Beer with Bella,” in which one reporter in the Sydney bureau who hates beer but loves chatting (an unfortunate combination) meets interesting Australians over a drink of their choice.
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________

First Impression

Tyson Yunkaporta and I did not know where to go and what to drink. For absolutely no reason, we settled on a pub with an outside courtyard in Newtown, a trendy part of Sydney.

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But when author of “Sand Talk: How Indigenous Thinking Can Save The World” showed up in black jeans and a leather jacket he fit right in. A member of the Apalech Clan and a carver of traditional tools and weapons, Tyson has an aesthetic that is more rocker than scholar. His book, a series of yarns, or conversations, that bring the reader into Indigenous ways of perceiving the world, is thought-provoking and unconventional.

Now, he’s ready to yarn with me this afternoon. Over a beer.

“I guess you could go with the Ancient Greek idea of the symposium, whether the person who is running the symposium decides how much water to put in the wine,” he said.

“Will we still be here at 11 o’clock at night? Is that what you’re saying?’ I said.

An hour later, we had gone from Indigenous Australian identity to questioning Western culture and, strangely, Vikings.

________

The Order

We decided to do as in Rome and went for a local Australian pale ale called the Newtowner.

________

The Chat

So I guess to start with: Why write this book?

The book represents 20 years of yarns, conversations, and then two years of carving those conversations and knowledge on traditional objects. The writing part — that’s the easy part. But the knowledge is hard and takes a long time, because of the complexity.

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I constantly have to explain the Indigenous point of view. But what if it was the other way? What if it was turning the Indigenous point of view on the world and describing what we see?

With Indigenous knowledge it’s always a dialogue. The knowledge changes depending on the relationship of the people who are sharing it. Fifty percent of what’s in the book is the reader’s knowledge because it’s what they’re bringing and what they’re thinking.

There’s no quantum computer that could do the same thing that 10 people sitting around the same sandy circle drawing with sticks could do.

What are the most important messages you want to send about how Indigenous thinking works in a Western world?

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You don’t need to learn about Indigenous knowledge to be in touch with this. You just have to remember your own. In the systems that we’re living in, there’s a very big collective memory loss. People don’t really remember who they are or what they’re supposed to be doing. A lot of people when I talk about Western this and that — people assert this idea that they don’t have a culture. No, other people have cultures. Everything outside of the West is a culture. But the West itself is neutral.

People say the West isn’t a culture to you?

People really assert it.

It’s funny. You’re somebody who’s living in the system and you don’t have a lot of choices in that system. And we need to be looking up rather than sideways and going: Victim — victim — oppressor — evil person — hero, classifying ourselves. What do we need to be able to do to free ourselves from this?

What lessons can we learn from Indigenous custodians of the land?

Take Indigenous astronomy: Did you know that Aboriginal people knew that meteorites form craters before Europeans did? It’s only a few decades ago that they discovered that in modern science. But we’ve got Dreaming stories about that. People record these things and then they write it as a paper. It’s just “Wow. Aboriginal people knew about this. So Aboriginal culture is a lot smarter than we thought.” And that’s it. O.K., what are we going to do? Astrophysicists need to be sitting down with those old fellas and going into detail in those stories. Tell us the properties of that asteroid.

Their knowledge is respected and even put up on a pedestal a little bit. So it’s not that — it’s this uncertainty of how to proceed.

In the book’s introduction, you say you don’t want to talk too much about your own story.

You have to tell your whole life story, not just yours but the traumatic story of all your recent ancestors. It’s like re-traumatizing yourself over and over and I just find it really interesting that’s the main Indigenous genre people want to see and it is just the same story over and over again. And it’s like, that’s all that people want to hear.

There’s a scholar called Martin Nakata who’s said, we need to resist the self narrative. He calls it “the ubiquitous Indigenous self narrative.” It’s killing our thought. It’s killing our scholarship.

I used to love it. You can wallow in that forever. I found it depressed me in the end, but it’s also easy. And everybody loves it.

You’re always performing Indigeneity. I try and sabotage myself all the time in that. I’ll just destroy it. You know I’m not building a brand. I’m trying to build a collective base of knowledge and relationships and conversations that might help try to stop the world from dying in the next few decades.

So what keeps you motivated?

It was just the culture and curiosity and just a passion for knowledge and learning. And just relationships mostly , really strong relationships with knowledgeable people. That’s what’s motivated me up to this point. At the moment my motivation is just trying to get enough money together to be able to survive this period. Survival is an issue.

I’m working on the next novel. I’m writing a Viking novel.

Are you? Tell me more. You can’t just throw that out.

It’s full of black Easter eggs. I love Vikings. You go anywhere, blackfellas love that show, Vikings.

________

The Drink Verdict

”Yummy,” according to Tyson.

“Cold, bitter, and oddly refreshing like every beer,” according to myself. We have more to say about the freewheeling conversation.

You’re on to something,” he said. “Free-range yarn. It’s a good format. See what falls out.”

________

Do you have an idea for who Bella should have a beer with? Send us your suggestions at nytaustralia@nytimes.com. And don’t forget to sign up and get the Australia Letter in your inbox.

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