Yep. Those slaves came over here with a dream that their sons and daughters could pursue prosperity and happiness.WASHINGTON ― Ben Carson made his debut as secretary of Housing and Urban Development Monday by telling agency employees about the virtues of the “can-do” American society. Carson said this value system was best exemplified by slaves, whom he characterized as immigrants who came to the United States with very little and worked very hard.
“That’s what America is about,” Carson said. “A land of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less. But they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughters, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandsons, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.”
Ben Carson
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
Ben Carson
Still Ben Carson.
Re: Ben Carson
I forget who it was, but he said he was glad his great-GrandDad survived the trip. Not everyone is a Pollyana and thank goodness not everyone is a Mikey.
"It''s not dark yet--but it's getting there". -- Bob Dylan
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Re: Ben Carson
You're absolutely right. If everybody was as good looking as I am there'd be no one as ugly as you to compare to.Wolfman wrote:I forget who it was, but he said he was glad his great-GrandDad survived the trip. Not everyone is a Pollyana and thank goodness not everyone is a Mikey.
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Re: Ben Carson
Well, duh. Of course he's glad his great-GrandDad survived the trip. Otherwise great-grand-child wouldn't be here today.Wolfman wrote:I forget who it was, but he said he was glad his great-GrandDad survived the trip.
Check this out:
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/patt ... aves-.html
Joe in PB wrote: Yeah I'm the dumbass
schmick, speaking about Larry Nassar's pubescent and prepubescent victims wrote: They couldn't even kick that doctors ass
Seems they rather just lay there, get fucked and play victim
Re: Ben Carson
Surviving?88 wrote: If not, what is it that you think they were dreaming about?
Or more likely, having nightmares about any number of things that might be happening to them.
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Re: Ben Carson
I seriously doubt anyone wearing these was dreaming about prosperity...88 wrote:Mikey wrote:what is it that you think they were dreaming about?
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Re: Ben Carson
If blond......the plantation owners daughter?88 wrote:what is it that you think they were dreaming about?
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Re: Ben Carson
Pikkle's ancestors.88 wrote:what is it that you think they were dreaming about?
When I die, I want my ashes pressed into a record album. That is my vinyl request.
Re: Ben Carson
So if you were in a bad situation or circumstances you'd lose all hope? I feel sorry for you that your world is so brittle that some unforeseen calamity will leave you in unending despair.Mikey wrote:Still Ben Carson.
Yep. Those slaves came over here with a dream that their sons and daughters could pursue prosperity and happiness.WASHINGTON ― Ben Carson made his debut as secretary of Housing and Urban Development Monday by telling agency employees about the virtues of the “can-do” American society. Carson said this value system was best exemplified by slaves, whom he characterized as immigrants who came to the United States with very little and worked very hard.
“That’s what America is about,” Carson said. “A land of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less. But they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughters, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandsons, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.”
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
You're a fucking idiot. If you were kidnapped as a young man, chained, and thrown into the hold of a ship by strangers who you couldn't understand, can you honestly say you'd be thinking about the hopes and dreams of your future children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren in a wonderful land of freedom and opportunity?Rooster wrote:So if you were in a bad situation or circumstances you'd lose all hope? I feel sorry for you that your world is so brittle that some unforeseen calamity will leave you in unending despair.Mikey wrote:Still Ben Carson.
Yep. Those slaves came over here with a dream that their sons and daughters could pursue prosperity and happiness.WASHINGTON ― Ben Carson made his debut as secretary of Housing and Urban Development Monday by telling agency employees about the virtues of the “can-do” American society. Carson said this value system was best exemplified by slaves, whom he characterized as immigrants who came to the United States with very little and worked very hard.
“That’s what America is about,” Carson said. “A land of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less. But they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughters, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandsons, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.”
Give me a fucking break. Your biggest hope at that point would be to survive.
Re: Ben Carson
im·mi·grant
ˈiməɡrənt/
noun
noun: immigrant; plural noun: immigrants
a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country.
synonyms: newcomer, settler, migrant, emigrant; nonnative, foreigner, alien, outsider;
expatriate;
informalexpat
"they will convene to discuss the civil liberties of immigrants"
antonyms: native
Look that up in your Funk & Wagnalls. I don't see any reference as to the method by which one becomes an "immigrant" to another country. Picky, picky, picky.
ˈiməɡrənt/
noun
noun: immigrant; plural noun: immigrants
a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country.
synonyms: newcomer, settler, migrant, emigrant; nonnative, foreigner, alien, outsider;
expatriate;
informalexpat
"they will convene to discuss the civil liberties of immigrants"
antonyms: native
Look that up in your Funk & Wagnalls. I don't see any reference as to the method by which one becomes an "immigrant" to another country. Picky, picky, picky.
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Re: Ben Carson
According to Ben Carson & Wolftard, this is an African cruise ship:
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Re: Ben Carson
Actually, Mickey, I have done a tremendous amount of thinking on this topic since, as every serviceman who goes into war does, the prospect of becoming a POW is very real. What you suggest is that someone like John McCain and his fellow prisoners had no reason for hope and perhaps should have looked for opportunities to commit suicide?
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Re: Ben Carson
It's hard to believe that someone who served would actually compare being a POW to being a slave. Epcot stupidity.Rooster wrote:Actually, Mickey, I have done a tremendous amount of thinking on this topic since, as every serviceman who goes into war does, the prospect of becoming a POW is very real. What you suggest is that someone like John McCain and his fellow prisoners had no reason for hope and perhaps should have looked for opportunities to commit suicide?
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Re: Ben Carson
And you are displaying your ignorance of the realities of war and the very real possibility of becoming for all purposes a slave-- or worse.
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
Yes, your immediate concern would be survival. But once you arrived to wherever it is that your captors had taken you, be that South America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, or North America, time would pass and you'd stop focusing on your day-to-day life expectancy and begin thinking of what comes next-- after all, your captors and now your owners didn't outright kill you. Indeed, they have clothed you, fed you, sheltered you, maybe even given you a wife/husband/companion. And to what end? Obviously to work and perhaps to some extent to produce more slaves like yourself.
All of this points to a logical conclusion: They don't want to kill you.
This is what I mean by there being worse fates. As a prisoner of war whose only value is information or trade, torture is most likely your lot in life until such time as you can escape, be traded away, or killed. This doesn't diminish the horror of what slaves experienced, but should place into perspective the idea that Mickey has that being a slave is the worst possible existence out there, when in my opinion it's not.
All of this points to a logical conclusion: They don't want to kill you.
This is what I mean by there being worse fates. As a prisoner of war whose only value is information or trade, torture is most likely your lot in life until such time as you can escape, be traded away, or killed. This doesn't diminish the horror of what slaves experienced, but should place into perspective the idea that Mickey has that being a slave is the worst possible existence out there, when in my opinion it's not.
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
I'd also point out that the definitive idea of a slave is a sub-Saharan who was somehow captured by evil white slavers and sent in the bowels of a crowded boat and made to work on a white Southerner's plantation unto the point of death.
This is the picture that our present education system has painted of the life of a slave in pre-Civil War America.
The truth? One of the biggest slave owners was a black man who was a former slave himself, who incidentally was far crueler and vicious than nearly every white slave owner. All that aside, it didn't pay to mistreat your slaves because they cost you money to acquire them, feed, clothe, shelter, and keep them healthy enough to work at an efficient rate to offset the overhead costs of owning them.
The people capturing these now-slaves were Arabs or sub-Saharan Africans, only from a different tribe, generally of the Hutu and Tutsi tribes still seen in Africa today. There is no genetic difference between them, they just come from different extended families. Slavery was common in Africa, only more cruel. The captured slaves were put to work and then killed when their usefulness was gone. Why? Because there were plenty more where those came from-- and not too far away either. It was a lucrative business for people.
Furthermore, the idea that there were enormous numbers of slaves in the United States is false. Today, as we speak, there are more slaves around the world at any given moment than there were in aggregate during the entire time there were slaves in the New World. And the conditions these modern day slaves live in are far worse because the only value they have is what they produce to a specific owner, not to a society based on cheap labor in general.
The issue here is that the vast majority of people have been taught that life as a slave in the United States was the end-all to a bad existence, yet have no clue as to what life in Africa even today is like. As someone who has spent years living and working there, I can tell you that while your idea of being a slave is the very worst that you can imagine, for most Africans, it doesn't come close to what they would consider to be an awful life. Why? Because their values aren't your values and what they hold dear isn't what you hold dear.
Case in point: I was flying a woman around whose job it was to go out and inspect the local countryside for damage that may have been caused by some of the companies that operated out there in West Africa. After a few months of working together, she one day asked me if I would like to go fly over her home and see it? I was very interested in viewing her place since she was far more educated than your typical African and was curious as to what kind of home someone like her might own.
It became quickly apparent that my assumptions about her, her home, and life in general were completely wrong. When we arrived over her "house" it was a clearing in the jungle which consisted of her tent, a pile of sand, a foundation trench for the mud bricks she would eventually place there, and a dirt path that eventually led back to town several miles away. I asked her where she was living right then, and she pointed to the tent which consisted of several tarps hung from the trees. I was flabbergasted at the conditions she lived in, but tried to hide my surprise, but she noticed my dismay. She said she was very proud because it had taken her three years to get the government to give her a 99 year lease of the land and that she had worked the system so well because normally it took much longer than that to get a lease.
She explained that eventually her house would have a single room with a window and a "door" which would be a curtain over the portal. There'd be a metal roof of some kind, but no floor other than dirt. No bathroom, no kitchen, no separate bedroom, just a single room with no electricity or plumbing. She would walk into town in the morning for work and upon her return at night would bring back a five gallon (or the metric equivalent) jug of water on her head to wash, cook, and drink. For cooking she would purchase little 2 gallon propane tanks that were refillable and she'd go to the bathroom out in the bush.
I asked her in a roundabout way if this was satisfying for her, since just the previous hitch I'd seen the president's entourage at the airport getting ready to leave for his villa in Brazil, where he spends 8 of the 12 months of the year along with his motorcade of luxury Benz's, brand new business jet, and personal guard. After all, she was, in my mind, condemned to a life out in the toolies walking everywhere and living in a mud hut with dirt for a floor while her governmental leader lived a grand life off of her and everyone else's work.
To paraphrase her explanation, she said, "Oh no, our president, he is like the chief, the head of our village. His glory is our glory. It brings me joy that he is far grander than the leader of Country X next door, because it reflects well upon us." In other words, to live in abject poverty was fine because her tribal chief was "beating" the next door rival tribal chief in the African version of keeping up with the Joneses.
Astounding.
After many other conversations over the next months, I came to recognize that our values here in the United States are not universal, nor are the standards of living, health, prosperity. Political power is very much a relative thing. Personal freedoms is highly malleable. Slavery-- or the equivalent of it --is in the eye of the beholder. So, yeah, our history books say that slaves from Africa brought here to the United States had it worse than anybody else at any other time in the history of man, but, sorry, that just isn't close to the truth.
This is the picture that our present education system has painted of the life of a slave in pre-Civil War America.
The truth? One of the biggest slave owners was a black man who was a former slave himself, who incidentally was far crueler and vicious than nearly every white slave owner. All that aside, it didn't pay to mistreat your slaves because they cost you money to acquire them, feed, clothe, shelter, and keep them healthy enough to work at an efficient rate to offset the overhead costs of owning them.
The people capturing these now-slaves were Arabs or sub-Saharan Africans, only from a different tribe, generally of the Hutu and Tutsi tribes still seen in Africa today. There is no genetic difference between them, they just come from different extended families. Slavery was common in Africa, only more cruel. The captured slaves were put to work and then killed when their usefulness was gone. Why? Because there were plenty more where those came from-- and not too far away either. It was a lucrative business for people.
Furthermore, the idea that there were enormous numbers of slaves in the United States is false. Today, as we speak, there are more slaves around the world at any given moment than there were in aggregate during the entire time there were slaves in the New World. And the conditions these modern day slaves live in are far worse because the only value they have is what they produce to a specific owner, not to a society based on cheap labor in general.
The issue here is that the vast majority of people have been taught that life as a slave in the United States was the end-all to a bad existence, yet have no clue as to what life in Africa even today is like. As someone who has spent years living and working there, I can tell you that while your idea of being a slave is the very worst that you can imagine, for most Africans, it doesn't come close to what they would consider to be an awful life. Why? Because their values aren't your values and what they hold dear isn't what you hold dear.
Case in point: I was flying a woman around whose job it was to go out and inspect the local countryside for damage that may have been caused by some of the companies that operated out there in West Africa. After a few months of working together, she one day asked me if I would like to go fly over her home and see it? I was very interested in viewing her place since she was far more educated than your typical African and was curious as to what kind of home someone like her might own.
It became quickly apparent that my assumptions about her, her home, and life in general were completely wrong. When we arrived over her "house" it was a clearing in the jungle which consisted of her tent, a pile of sand, a foundation trench for the mud bricks she would eventually place there, and a dirt path that eventually led back to town several miles away. I asked her where she was living right then, and she pointed to the tent which consisted of several tarps hung from the trees. I was flabbergasted at the conditions she lived in, but tried to hide my surprise, but she noticed my dismay. She said she was very proud because it had taken her three years to get the government to give her a 99 year lease of the land and that she had worked the system so well because normally it took much longer than that to get a lease.
She explained that eventually her house would have a single room with a window and a "door" which would be a curtain over the portal. There'd be a metal roof of some kind, but no floor other than dirt. No bathroom, no kitchen, no separate bedroom, just a single room with no electricity or plumbing. She would walk into town in the morning for work and upon her return at night would bring back a five gallon (or the metric equivalent) jug of water on her head to wash, cook, and drink. For cooking she would purchase little 2 gallon propane tanks that were refillable and she'd go to the bathroom out in the bush.
I asked her in a roundabout way if this was satisfying for her, since just the previous hitch I'd seen the president's entourage at the airport getting ready to leave for his villa in Brazil, where he spends 8 of the 12 months of the year along with his motorcade of luxury Benz's, brand new business jet, and personal guard. After all, she was, in my mind, condemned to a life out in the toolies walking everywhere and living in a mud hut with dirt for a floor while her governmental leader lived a grand life off of her and everyone else's work.
To paraphrase her explanation, she said, "Oh no, our president, he is like the chief, the head of our village. His glory is our glory. It brings me joy that he is far grander than the leader of Country X next door, because it reflects well upon us." In other words, to live in abject poverty was fine because her tribal chief was "beating" the next door rival tribal chief in the African version of keeping up with the Joneses.
Astounding.
After many other conversations over the next months, I came to recognize that our values here in the United States are not universal, nor are the standards of living, health, prosperity. Political power is very much a relative thing. Personal freedoms is highly malleable. Slavery-- or the equivalent of it --is in the eye of the beholder. So, yeah, our history books say that slaves from Africa brought here to the United States had it worse than anybody else at any other time in the history of man, but, sorry, that just isn't close to the truth.
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
The funny thing is that over in Africa they don't look at themselves and you or me and think, "Hmm, I'm black and he is white." Instead, they look at you and think, "Rich." And, in all truth, I suppose compared to them, we are. To be sure, they are aware of the skin pigmentation differences, but for them it's not colonial imperialism or racial privilege at play, but simply wealth. We are by nature of being from elsewhere other than Africa, wealthy. However, I ran across people a number of times who, because I am white, also attributed intelligence and innate talent to me based on just appearance alone. Yeah, yeah, Moving Sale, let me preempt your dumb incoming post by saying obviously they don't know me. Fine. Whatever.
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
I understand that you have a strong opinion regarding slavery in America, that contrary to what all the liberal history books claim it was actually a "good" thing on balance, for both the slaves and their masters. Sorry, let's change that to "immigrants" and "hosts" - "slave" and "master" just has so many negative connotations that don't credit the beneficent relationships that actually dominated in the pre-Civil War South. After all, without slavery we wouldn't have had Willie Mays, John Coltrane, Oprah Winfrey or Barak Obama (sorry I got carried away there). Everybody's entitled to their own opinion, even if it exposes them as a demented racist sociopath. I'll cut you some slack, though, in recognition of your heroic service and PTSD.
But that's not what this thread was about. It was about the notion that young Africans, kidnapped and taken against their will, packed into the hold of slave ships and shipped off to some unknown place were probably not thinking, at the time, about the future of their children, grandchildren, etc., in the promised land, but probably were more worried about their own immediate survival.
This led you to making several comments along this line:
But that's not what this thread was about. It was about the notion that young Africans, kidnapped and taken against their will, packed into the hold of slave ships and shipped off to some unknown place were probably not thinking, at the time, about the future of their children, grandchildren, etc., in the promised land, but probably were more worried about their own immediate survival.
This led you to making several comments along this line:
I don't think anybody, including myself, has ever seriously made that claim. That still doesn't excuse the practice of slavery, which you seem to think is actually an OK thing.Rooster wrote: our history books say that slaves from Africa brought here to the United States had it worse than anybody else at any other time in the history of man,
Last edited by Mikey on Wed Mar 08, 2017 4:57 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Ben Carson
That certainly excuses the practice.Papa Willie wrote:How did black people ever allow themselves to be put in positions to where they could have been sold by their own people?
Re: Ben Carson
This thread was started to denounce Ben Carson who seems like a decent man. But Mikey doesn't like him anyway.
Re: Ben Carson
Actually the main reason was to give you and Rooster a chance to display your ignorance and stupidity.
Succeeding spectacularly so far.
Succeeding spectacularly so far.
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Re: Ben Carson
The gubmint took away all the guns.Papa Willie wrote:How did black people ever allow themselves to be put in positions to where they could have been sold by their own people?
Sin,
NRA
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Re: Ben Carson
They stole his eyes too, but at least they gave him some cool Star Trek stuff.
Re: Ben Carson
It's OK if Obama does it.
You are all dumb shits.
-Mikey
You are all dumb shits.
-Mikey
Re: Ben Carson
So what?Sudden Sam wrote:Ahem...Mikey wrote:Actually the main reason was to give you and Rooster a chance to display your ignorance and stupidity.
Succeeding spectacularly so far.
Obama also referred to slaves as 'immigrants'
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/poli ... /98875122/
Much different context anyway.
You trying to join Rooster and Trev now in the ignorance and stupidity pool?
Last edited by Mikey on Wed Mar 08, 2017 7:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Ben Carson
Way to go Trev. You really got me there.trev wrote:It's OK if Obama does it.
You are all dumb shits.
-Mikey
Have you ever come up with anything relevant on your own, or do you just hang out and go "yeah me too" when somebody else posts something that sounds good to you?
BTW...
If the shoe fits...You are all dumb shits.
Re: Ben Carson
You mean like preceding it with "Trump tweeted at 4:00 a.m."?Papa Willie wrote:
Perhaps you should start using context with a lot of what Trump says?
Yeah, I'm sure that would help.
Re: Ben Carson
Mikey, take a lap, make yourself a nice glass of wine and relax. After you make me a sammich.
Re: Ben Carson
Apparently Obama misspoke eleven different times when he favorably compared slaves to immigrants.
http://thefederalist.com/2017/03/07/11- ... mmigrants/
http://thefederalist.com/2017/03/07/11- ... mmigrants/
Cock o' the walk, baby!
Re: Ben Carson
Or maybe, just maybe, Carson and Obama are on to something. Slavery isn't the permanently despair inducing condition that Miley thinks it is. Maybe, just maybe, people are more resilient than the psychologically and emotionally fragile Mikey and are able to you know, make lemonade from lemons. Crazy huh?
Cock o' the walk, baby!
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Re: Ben Carson
Question for mikey.
Let's say you are a modern day balck man in America. you have the ability to go back in time, track down the slave trader who is about to sell your great, great X 1000 grandaddy to papa willie's forebearer who will take him on an all expenses paid trip to Georgia. Do you make that trip and shoot that fukker in the head so your folks never make the trip and you are now a typical African?
I'll bet you wouldn't.
For as horrible an experience as being an American slave was, their progeny hit the fukking lotto compared to the fukker living in a hut (if he's lucky enough to have a hut) in modern day Congo.
And your attempt at explaining away Obama's statement as having a different context to Carson's is pathetic.
Let's say you are a modern day balck man in America. you have the ability to go back in time, track down the slave trader who is about to sell your great, great X 1000 grandaddy to papa willie's forebearer who will take him on an all expenses paid trip to Georgia. Do you make that trip and shoot that fukker in the head so your folks never make the trip and you are now a typical African?
I'll bet you wouldn't.
For as horrible an experience as being an American slave was, their progeny hit the fukking lotto compared to the fukker living in a hut (if he's lucky enough to have a hut) in modern day Congo.
And your attempt at explaining away Obama's statement as having a different context to Carson's is pathetic.
mvscal wrote:The only precious metals in a SHTF scenario are lead and brass.
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Re: Ben Carson
The value you place on the concept of freedom is quite low.smackaholic wrote: For as horrible an experience as being an American slave was, their progeny hit the fukking lotto compared to the fukker living in a hut (if he's lucky enough to have a hut) in modern day Congo.
Did you join the navy just to shower with other dudes?
rock rock to the planet rock ... don't stop
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
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Re: Ben Carson
No, that was just a fringe benefit. I am just pointing out that as sucky as being an American slave was, it was lightyears better than being an African slave, or for that matter, a free African.Shlomart Ben Yisrael wrote:The value you place on the concept of freedom is quite low.smackaholic wrote: For as horrible an experience as being an American slave was, their progeny hit the fukking lotto compared to the fukker living in a hut (if he's lucky enough to have a hut) in modern day Congo.
Did you join the navy just to shower with other dudes?
mvscal wrote:The only precious metals in a SHTF scenario are lead and brass.
Re: Ben Carson
OMG you are so stupid. That was literally one of the two options I proposed.Rooster wrote:Or maybe, just maybe
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Re: Ben Carson
That's one of the more stupid things I've ever read.smackaholic wrote:I am just pointing out that as sucky as being an American slave was, it was lightyears better than being an African slave, or for that matter, a free African.
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
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Re: Ben Carson
smackaholic wrote:I am just pointing out that as sucky as being an American slave was, it was lightyears better than being an African slave, or for that matter, a free African.
You could just as well argue that being an African American slave was better than being a Catholic priest in Cromwell's England, you big dummy.
Hey, you know what was better than being a slave? Riding coach on the Titanic.
rock rock to the planet rock ... don't stop
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
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Re: Ben Carson
I will concede that the fate an African slave was by far better than being AP...no contest.
rock rock to the planet rock ... don't stop
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote: Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
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Re: Ben Carson
Which part of it do you disagree with?Diego in Seattle wrote:That's one of the more stupid things I've ever read.smackaholic wrote:I am just pointing out that as sucky as being an American slave was, it was lightyears better than being an African slave, or for that matter, a free African.
Coming to America as a slave was certainly no picnic, but it did one thing for those fukkers, it made their descendants American citizens. If you think that isn't infinitely better than being a citizen of a third world African shithole, you are one dumb fukk.
mvscal wrote:The only precious metals in a SHTF scenario are lead and brass.