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Bush: Slavery one of history's greatest crimes
Mercury News ^ | 7/8/03 | Tom Raum - AP

Posted on 07/08/2003 2:31:19 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

Edited on 04/13/2004 3:31:32 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

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To: stylin19a
not quite Jesse, but it looks like it happened 15 minutes before my post.http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/942555/posts
41 posted on 07/08/2003 5:36:18 PM PDT by stylin19a (is it vietnam yet ?)
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To: 7DayRepo
Why is America singled out to apologize?

...because America has money. Lots of it.

42 posted on 07/08/2003 5:52:21 PM PDT by He Rides A White Horse (For or against us.........)
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To: TalBlack
American slavery was one of histoys greatest crime?

Not for nothing: but why is that? What makes slavery in America a WORSE crime than the THOUSANDS of years of slavery that preceded it, or for that matter the slavery that has been practiced in other countries since american abolition and to this very day?

Simple: because America, unlike any country before us, was dedicated to the idea of freeedom. To those whom much is given, much is required. We were and are the greatest country in the history of the world - not because we're the richest (which came from freedom), and not because we're the most powerful - but because we're the free-est! We knew all along that liberty was more precious than safety or comfort. Many knew at the time that slavery would need to be ended, but they lacked the political power to end it in the 1700s. It took another 80 years and the deaths of a heck of a lot of white men to bring freedom to all - and I'm extremely proud that America was willing to pay the price.

Bush's 'apology' isn't a sign of weakness - it is an admission that the road to freedom is difficult, slowed by human error and painful to travel - but infinitely worthwhile! It is a sign Bush understands how wonderful the goal of 'liberty for all' is. I'm proud of him and his statement.

43 posted on 07/08/2003 5:53:06 PM PDT by Mr Rogers
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To: Mr Rogers
Well spoken.
44 posted on 07/08/2003 6:04:39 PM PDT by Ganymede
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To: Mr Rogers
As was pointed out above, it was Western Civ that finally outlawed slavery. Europe & the US ended it definitively in the 19th Century.

It is still being practised in much of the world........notably in the Middle East, parts of Asia & especially Africa.

WE are the ones who first addressed the problem.

45 posted on 07/08/2003 6:16:23 PM PDT by Republic If You Can Keep It
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To: cyborg
Eff the past, what about the present?

If everyone cares so much about slavery, why aren't they doing whatever it takes to end it now?

Bush aside, where is Jackson, and other great 'civil' rights activists?
46 posted on 07/08/2003 6:50:01 PM PDT by LaraCroft ('Bout time)
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To: NormsRevenge
So.. is Dubya now using Clinton's old speechwriters?
47 posted on 07/08/2003 9:11:50 PM PDT by Pelham
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To: 7DayRepo
Bush would do a lot more to address the horrible Slavery
going on TODAY in SUDAN and other places which
is even more horrible than American slavery.
48 posted on 07/08/2003 9:44:52 PM PDT by Princeliberty
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To: LaraCroft
I do not think ignoring the past completely is healthy. To dwell on it too much is even worse. The real civil rights activists are dead, if I may be so blunt. They did the job that needed to be done, they lived a life (if they were not killed by anyone) then they died. What you have in Jackson is a hasbeen who needs to keep his job. Whereas the real christians and the real REVERENDS are christian missionaries going to Africa, going to the Sudan to care for the spiritual and physical needs of slaves,etc.
49 posted on 07/08/2003 10:06:18 PM PDT by cyborg (I'm a mutt-american)
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To: 7DayRepo
Ancient Rome too, both white and black!
50 posted on 07/09/2003 12:13:47 AM PDT by dsutah
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To: cyborg
You can say it was American businessmen in the South (and the North too).

Slavery of Africans was far from an American monopoly. I think less than 25% of the slaves who crossed the Atlantic wound up in present day America. Most went to plantations in Brazil, the Caribbean etc where diseases killed a far higher number, requiring more frequent replacement.

51 posted on 07/09/2003 12:18:49 AM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Mr Rogers
Yes, and this free country set up a system which led in time to the freeing of the slaves. Long before Brazil, the middle east etc I might add.

Nobody ever claimed all was perfect after 1776. Just that we would strive to better ourselves, and we did.

52 posted on 07/09/2003 12:21:05 AM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: Pelham
So.. is Dubya now using Clinton's old speechwriters?

My thoughts too......

53 posted on 07/09/2003 12:29:28 AM PDT by Joe Hadenuf (RECALL DAVIS, position his smoking chair over a trapdoor, a memo for the next governor.)
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To: NormsRevenge

Sex Slavery: International Steps are Needed
to Curb What Has Become A Global Scourge

David Perlmutter

Gazette,Montreal
July 10, 2001
A friend of mine was walking back to his hotel in Budapest, Hungary, when he entered what locals call "the prostitutes' UN."

It was a street where young women from most of eastern Europe and parts of Asia plied the sex trade. Models of international diplomacy, they proffered services in many languages. All they had in common was, as my friend put it, looks of combined "misery and cruelty."

The triumph of global capitalism has increased the demand for young women (and sometimes young men) as sex workers. They come from all over. But the term "sex workers" is misleading. The sex industry has little patience for fair wages, voluntary service and safe working conditions. Many Third World prostitutes are slaves or indentured servants.

A report on forced labour and slavery just issued by the International Labour Organization focuses much of its attention on the global sex trade. As many as 50,000 women and children are smuggled into the United States, most to be inducted into the sex trade or domestic work, the report says.

Sex trafficking is a global epidemic. Approximately 2,000 women from Kazakhstan work in South Korea's sex industry, Kazakh commercial television reported recently. Asian women have their own neighbourhood in the red-light district of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. Roughly 200,000 girls in Thailand - the world capital of the underage sex industry - are pressed to cater to professional sex tours that operate openly for Americans, Europeans and Japanese, according to the International Organization for Migration.

Young girls are coerced into or sold for sex work from Nepal and Bangladesh to India, from Bangladesh and Burma to Pakistan and from Pakistan and India to the Middle East. Japan's Social Security Research Foundation estimates that 120,000 Asian, eastern European and Latin American women are imported each year for sex work. (Spending on prostitution in Japan is about equal to the nation's defence budget.) From China and the Philippines, girls are delivered to prison-like brothels in the United States and Europe.

The organizers of the trade are varied, as well: it's a strange alliance of the Japanese Yakuza, Chinese Triad, Russian and Italian Mafia, eastern European gangsters, Albanian kingpins, Latin American cartels, Nigerian warlords, Asian businessmen and American financiers and subcontractors.

Embarrassing to the idea of human moral progress, the present global sex trade is reminiscent of the first global trade in flesh - that for African slaves.

Today, we need another abolitionist movement, this one against sex slavery. The ILO report calls for a co-ordinated global response to tackle the worldwide sex trade and other forms of forced labour.

International conventions - such as the 1949 UN convention against the trafficking of women and children - exist, but they lack enforcement powers. The same is the case for the UN's optional protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography, which was approved last year and has been signed by almost every country in the world. We need a globally responsive institution - a combined Interpol and High Court - with the power to fight this scourge.

And we need to redefine recruiting for, managing or using international sexual slavery as an international offence.

The previous scourge of global slavery was suppressed only through laws enforced by gunboats and bayonets. Solutions to the greatest modern outrage of the global economy cannot be found locally.

http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/inequal/0710sexslavery.htm


54 posted on 07/09/2003 12:54:09 AM PDT by wolficatZ
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To: cyborg
Agreed. Jackson doesn't care about civil liberties anyway, he cares about black issues. That's the sign of a racist. A true civil libertarian would want all peoples to be free and prosperous, like Dr. King.
55 posted on 07/09/2003 1:08:58 PM PDT by LaraCroft ('Bout time)
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