No, they aren't.
Dreads appeared in many cultures including ancient egyptians, celtic & germanic tribes and vikings. They aren't the preserve of any culture, neither is tattooing which is also often hijacked in the old cultural appropriation twaddle.
( , Fri 18 Aug 2017, 22:30, Share, Reply)
Dreads appeared in many cultures including ancient egyptians, celtic & germanic tribes and vikings. They aren't the preserve of any culture, neither is tattooing which is also often hijacked in the old cultural appropriation twaddle.
( , Fri 18 Aug 2017, 22:30, Share, Reply)
Making excuses for Vikings
That's classic Drac.
Edit: I also hate tats. It's not culture, it's wearing the same fading t-shirt for the rest of your life.
( , Fri 18 Aug 2017, 22:43, Share, Reply)
That's classic Drac.
Edit: I also hate tats. It's not culture, it's wearing the same fading t-shirt for the rest of your life.
( , Fri 18 Aug 2017, 22:43, Share, Reply)
I am absolutely a viking apologist.
After Charlemagne spread that jebus nonsense at the point of a sword, I think the vikings were right to seek reparations from the evil monks in their abbeys where they bummed little boys.
Some tats are pretty cool, especially the ones that mean something. I had a half maori housemate that had a tattoo that told the story of her mum's tribe, it was definitely culture :)
( , Sat 19 Aug 2017, 20:40, Share, Reply)
After Charlemagne spread that jebus nonsense at the point of a sword, I think the vikings were right to seek reparations from the evil monks in their abbeys where they bummed little boys.
Some tats are pretty cool, especially the ones that mean something. I had a half maori housemate that had a tattoo that told the story of her mum's tribe, it was definitely culture :)
( , Sat 19 Aug 2017, 20:40, Share, Reply)