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Just another "self-anthropological" study

Posted by Cameron Briggs on March 5, 2015 at 6:35 PM

I have been able to study the Euqilc people for three years now. These people are located between the mines of diamonds and gold in the center of the Caribbean. Although I have had time to study the culture, it has been difficult to understand the characteristics that define the Euqilc culture. Note that the following facts are drawn upon observation and experience, and that this study can be used in order to understand cultures around the entire laicos world.

One key characteristic of the Euqilc people is that they are separated into groups. These groups are designed according to different factors, such as the type of rituals the groups take part in, the huts that they live in, and their conversations. Now let me explain the three and how each of these factors contribute to the separation of the Euqilc people. 

The rituals vary upon each Euqilc group. There is a group who take part in a ritual that requires the consumption of plants. Another group takes part in rituals which consist of torturing those who do not belong to their group (these same people are then praised or showered with glory from the rest of the Euqilc people). Another group that I was able to observe seems to take part in a type of ritual where they turn their back to their own people. Another group has been seen to take all of the gold and diamonds from the nearby land, and place it as an offering to their lord dionysus. There is also a group who publicly voice their intimate lives and avoid those who do not have one. Another group does not take part in any of these rituals and so are shunned. 

A major factor in the separation of groups is the location of their huts, the size of their huts, and the amount of gold and diamonds in their huts. Since the groups only associate with themselves, they like to have the same living conditions.

Conversations vary among groups. Some groups talk about their huts, diamonds, gold, and family mines. Others talk about their garments and intimate lives. Others talk about the nearby groups and cultures. Some talk about their weekly consumption of their plants and what they reaped from their offerings to lord dionysus. And some groups don't talk at all. 

Although all of these groups differ in so many ways, they all belong to the same culture; one that finds the need to separate themselves into groups. These same groups champion for equality and unity in certain things, but they seem to be blinded to their basic separation. Many anthropologists have unfortunately predicted the extinction of the Euqilc people due to their lack of unity. 

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