Posted on 10/31/2008 11:20:59 AM PDT by drzz
"Audio clip of State Senator Barack Obama in a 2001 radio interview in which he talks about the Supreme Courts reluctance to redistribute wealth to correct inequality, and he says it's one of the tragedies of the Civil Rights movement that it focused too much on the courts and not enough on organizing communities to push for legislation to bring about redistributive change.
Yes, white America was guilty of enslaving blacks and redistributing wealth will certainly right a wrong.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iivL4c_3pck
Listen to the end and be proud to be liberal. David Rutstein,
The Liberal Forum's Proud Owner"
Get in line; I understand the Indians want a peace of your ass.
Who doesn’t?.....:))
“And blacks sold other blacks to the slavers. So what?”
There were also black slave owners in America, more than they would like to admit. When I see any of these whiners actually address the slavery going on NOW all over the world, I might be impressed.
Oh boy, you stepped in it now!
Prove the disenfranchised slaveowners who often lost everything they had during the war and Reconstruction gained anything before you go taking it away, first.
Then prove their descendants gained as a result.
Then prove the descendents of slaves were, in fact, descendents, and then prove they suffered a loss as a result of what happened to their ancestors, due to the actions/gain of the former owners.
Good luck.
(cue mission impossible theme)
this post will self destruct in 30 seconds...
Or you could do like Zimbabwe and just strip whites of their landholdings and give it away.
That's working out real well (/sarc)
Have we finally reached the point where the people with their hand out for a handout can vote away the hard-esrned prosperity of the productive people?
If so, the nation is done.
Maybe we should have stuck with '21 and a property owner', anyway, (although I would add "or active duty military or veteran" to that.)
My kinfolks hit the Appalachians and stopped moving west.
We were the people you see in “Life” magazine, the scruffy but hard working dirt farmers.
Nobody in my family’s history ever got jack-squat from the “gummint” nor did they want it.
In spite of a long history of dying in coal mines, toiling for pitiful harvests and making do with precious little, they all still consider themselves “blessed” to be who they are.
Maybe that’s the difference; they still had pride when they had nothing else.
Correct. The Irish had the most dangerous jobs, including stevedore, longshoreman, and teamster, precisely because there was no monetary investment in them. Pay the poor widow a week's pay if you were generous and hire another.
A slave, on the other hand cost money to own, and would represent a capital loss if damaged or killed.
Which flies in the face of the concept of rampant abuse. Who'd buy a new tractor and take a sledgehammer to it?
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" was a novel, after all.
Still, that does not excuse a human being owning another.
The Irish probably did more to free slaves than any other group, as they spoke something akin to English right off the boat, they worked without a base capital investment, and seriously undercut the economics of the idea of having to be responsible for the housing and upkeep of slaves.
Ironic that the same people calling for yet another handout because their ancestors were slaves, just want to be fed, clothed, doctored, and housed by the rest of society--slavery without the job.
You hit the nail on the head, so to speak. My family ended up in Georgia in the penal colony. Never had anything until my grandfather and father worked hard enough to buy a small farm. And because of my mothers illness my dad has had to sell most of it to take care of her. Of course they could get no gov’t cheese and did not want it.
A lot of people did.
Anyone else trying to take my money away to give to someone who says they were a slave are lying and will be treated like any other thief.
I wish I could get it through their heads that they’re -still- “slaves” on the Democrat plantation.
The only difference now is that they pick candidates instead of cotton.
FWIW, hubby and I actually stand to gain from Zero’s alleged “tax cuts” yet we will be defiantly voting for McCain.
Why?
Because we don’t want -anything- that we didn’t earn or that comes at the expense of anyone else’s hard work.
We consider that “welfare” and don’t want any part of it.
I do not understand why some people happily accept something-for-nothing, just because they think they “earned” it by being born.
Coal mine deaths, black lung, kicked by the family plow horse and “bleeding out”, grandfather shot for running ‘shine when there were no jobs to be had and 3 mouths to feed.
A widowed gramma raising those 3 kids alone until she remarried.
A daughter who dropped dead of a heart defect at age 11.
Centuries of hard times and they never complained.
They grew what they could, ate what they killed and reused everything until it was all but gone.
Whew...I could type miles of my kinfolk’s sufferings but it would be too maudlin.
And my paternal grandmother [mentioned above] may have lacked money and possessions but she had more than enough love and happiness to share with 10 kids and all the grandkids.
They don’t make people like they used to.
I sure do miss her.
>>And blacks sold other blacks to the slavers. So what?<<
And the Mohammedans made all the money. The wars they started for their “religion” pitted tribe against tribe. The loser got sold; the winner got beads and trinkets and the Mohammedans pocketed the money.
BTW, what about people who can prove that no one at any time in their family ever owned slaves?
They dont make people like they used to.
Sounds as if your family had/has the goods to make it no matter what. It is a shame that quality has pretty much left this country.
Yes, it’s a shame.
Funny how things stick with you, though.
Right now I have a back yard lousy with black walnuts.
I got it in my head that I wanted to make walnut ink like DaVinci used in so many of his sketches.
So...I Google ‘making walnut ink’ and come up scads of pages of instructions.
[it’s very messy and involved and takes quite a bit of time]
Then I find out the local art and craft store *sells* the stuff ready-made for something like $6.
Now I face the ethical “hillbilly” question...do I *make* it or just go buy the stuff?
Part of me will enjoy the lack of aggravation and mess and the other part will fell guilty for paying for something I have here already, free.
What to do...what to do?....:))
[I may do both...what the heck]
do I *make* it or just go buy the stuff?
Well you have went to the trouble of making sure you have the walnuts why not make some and buy some. Help your economy and the stores bottom line.
I want retribution because people used to say about my great grandparents, “They’re Swedish but they’re nice.”
My grandparents any both my husband’s grandparents came to the Central Valley with the clothes on their backs. They stayed in tents for a short time after they got here during the Depression/WWII timeframe. They all worked hard and took care of their families. I’m sorry if others couldn’t do that, but it’s not our fault. I say the whiners have gotten enough handouts. Get to work and improve yourself!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.