Probably similar reasons to why I moved from California to Pittsburgh several years ago. There were resources here (a house, a job for Mr. Neville) that we could get more easily than we could get the same resources in California. The resources might have been different for our Stone Age ancestors, but they probably made similar calculations.
If you didn’t have to go outside and battle the freeway system on a winter’s day, how bad would it be?
What if you had stacked all your firewood, had all your vegetables stored, and had enough livestock to last the winter?
What if you didn’t need to do anything but perhaps clear the snow for the livestock, and provide a path for the weekly trip to church and the general store.
Sounds a lot more relaxing than my life right now!
Our lives are ultimately more complex than our ancestors, who could just huddle inside and take care of their immediate needs.
well if you read African history you will find that the Chief’s of tribes in Africa are the ones who got bribed and had the TOUGH, STRONG Men/women taken out of Africa. But these people did not know NOTHING about what it is like to be in America/Europe. It’s like a typical ghetto african kid who thinks america/europe is like heaven, where you work for an hour and get paid usd 50! So the movement was not someone’s decision.
Talk of heat, well … believe me when i am in New York in summers i sweat even more than when i am home (in africa) so it actually depends on a country. Sometimes there is snow in South Africa!:eek:
I’ve always thought it odd that, with the whole legendary first winter that the Pilgrims experienced and all those deaths, why they didn’t load up their ships and sail south for another couple hundred miles or so at the first opportunity. I mean, who the hell wants to live in freaking Massachusetts during the winter??
I still wonder about that, every time I read a post complaining about snow and blizzards. God, I must be weak or something, but I could not live in such a place. Ice on the road? Dying if you get trapped in your car on a rural ditch? Heart attacks while shoveling snow off your sidewalk? No thanks!