Hunter-gatherers—and presumably all our ancestors—lived as equals

Seek the richest family in a traditional camp of the Ju/'hoansi/!Kung 
people of the Kalahari Desert in Africa, and you will almost surely 
fail. There is no such thing. These hunter-gatherers traditionally moved 
periodically and had few possessions. What they had, they shared—food, 
weapons, property, even territory. The poorest looking hut in a camp 
likely belonged to the leader, explains anthropologist Richard Lee, a 
professor emeritus at the University of Toronto in Canada, because 
leaders try to avoid looking superior.

Many anthropologists think this egalitarian lifestyle was an essential 
feature of hunting and gathering societies. In contrast with both 
today's titans of Wall Street and the alpha males of the great apes, 
people in these societies “had an ethic of sharing that was central to 
their way of life,” Lee says. “No one takes precedence over anyone else.”

Our species has lived as hunter-gatherers for more than 90% of our 
history, Lee notes. Today's economic inequality goes back thousands of 
years (see main story, p. 822) but in evolutionary time it is relatively 
recent. Although some of our great ape cousins and arguably our ape 
ancestors lived in sometimes brutal hierarchies, humans adopted an 
egalitarian way of life for all but the last 10,000 years.

full: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/344/6186/824.full
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