Mark Whybird
- 0 Posts
- 8 Comments
@Zagorath Your comment on the other post made me look in further depth… I haven’t really found much on the north/south divide yet, which supports your thoughts there, but I did find this report on the boundary streets so thought I’d add it here: https://nit.com.au/01-01-2025/15602/the-boundary-streets-of-brisbane-a-history-of-division
(Though the report does seem to mention several Southside places and I think only Spring Hill on the Northside?)
@Zagorath p.s. if you are interested in another remnant of Brisbane’s racist past, the reason that there are so many “Boundary Roads” in Brisbane (esp. south side) is that those were the boundaries that the Aboriginals were not allowed to cross without a permit. I kid you not.
@Zagorath Historically, it’s racism. I literally heard a Northsider say that “ewww”, the Southside is “where all the Aboriginals live”*. That person was elderly already then, and it was decades ago, but I do think that’s where the inertia comes from.
* (Conversely, Northside might have been perceived as where all the racist, or at least snooty, people live.)
Mark Whybird@aus.socialto Australia@aussie.zone•Australians will soon need their age checked to log into online search tools – here’s why3·2 months ago@brisk I thought the same, though also I presume you’d have to be logged in to turn safe search off.
Mark Whybird@aus.socialto Science News@lemmy.today•Do Inuit languages really have many words for snow? The most interesting finds from our study of 616 languages3·5 months ago@DonaldJMusk Direct link to the intended phys.org story with that title: https://phys.org/news/2025-04-inuit-languages-words.html
Mark Whybird@aus.socialto Science News@lemmy.today•Do Inuit languages really have many words for snow? The most interesting finds from our study of 616 languages2·5 months ago@DonaldJMusk Lemmy link is to a different article?
@maniacalmanicmania TL;DR
;)