Chokey said:
"they spend almost all their time collecting food, and are at the mercy of the weather, migration patterns of animals etc
-they have only the most rudimentary medical care
-infant mortalality rate is incredibly high
-They are often in a constant state of low-level warfare with other groups
-Their societies often are quite violent- what we would call domestic violence is often ingrained, as is rape
-Their culture often contains morally incorrect principles (Some Australian Aboriginal tribes practiced infanticide (twins were considered 'evil sprits' and so were killed at birth'. Women who observed secret male initiation ceremonies were gang raped then killed) "
When I read your points about warfare and the no medical insurance, thought you were talking about the US for a minute there.
Hunter gatherer societies aren't all sweetness and light, you're very accurate here. They operate on a more primary and immediate level. The bushmen of the Kalahari seem to have achieved something close to a peaceful Utopia, but other cultures I've read about make me cringe, like the violent Yamomamo of South America. A Yamomamo woman is considered "ignored" if she isn't beaten by her husband.
In colonial dominating cultures, like our own, there are usually several degrees of separation between the average Joe and the ongoing human rights abuses that keep his society in the dominant position. That's where his moral values can be held up to scorn.
And, you're also correct that, within our own large society, that has more centralized control and developed legal systems, there is much less tolerance for the extremes of behaviour and limited liklihood of tribal warfare, with the exception of the Krips and the Bloods and other gangs.
What more primary societies do offer is a richer, more connected life, in all of it's beauty and ugliness. Our own society is suffering from tight centralized control but weak interpersonal relationships, and a disconnect with the natural world. That's produced this curious void that has people engaged in an orgy of trying to generate real beauty and meaning by purchasing consumer products, many of them essentially useless.
Perhaps, the future will offer a new form of balance, where we can borrow some of the immediacy and beauty of being connected to our environment and each other (through the forming of intentional communities, perhaps?), while ditching the void of consumer capitalism, and the tribal warfare of primitive culture?