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Opinion: Yale Must Change Its Name
New Haven Independent ^ | June 26, 2020 | Sean O'Brien

Posted on 06/29/2020 5:56:18 AM PDT by C19fan

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To: C19fan

I’m enjoying watching the cannibalism. If they change the name, the school will tank.


41 posted on 06/29/2020 7:57:01 AM PDT by bethelgrad
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To: Red Badger

Wossamotta U!


42 posted on 06/29/2020 8:01:41 AM PDT by mewzilla (Break out the mustard seeds.)
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To: mewzilla

How about Nat Turner University or John Brown University?


43 posted on 06/29/2020 8:11:07 AM PDT by xxqqzz
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To: xxqqzz

Patrice Lumumba University, is available since the Russians renamed it to something else years ago.


44 posted on 06/29/2020 8:12:45 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: C19fan

As I suggested earlier, go with generic names for all universities.

People’s Education Combine No. 1, 2, 3, 4...


45 posted on 06/29/2020 8:14:04 AM PDT by Moltke (Reasoning with a liberal is like watering a rock in the hope to grow a building.)
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To: C19fan

Vanderbilt University as well.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, founder of Vanderbilt University, also owned slaves.


46 posted on 06/29/2020 8:16:20 AM PDT by Teotwawki (For a person to get a thing without paying for it, another must pay for it without getting it.)
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To: aquila48

They’ve already tried it...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Republican_calendar


47 posted on 06/29/2020 11:19:57 AM PDT by GreenLanternCorps (Hi! I'm the Dread Pirate Roberts! (TM) Atsk about franchise opportunities in your area.)
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To: GreenLanternCorps

I know. That’s what I was alluding to.

We’re not that far from it.


48 posted on 06/29/2020 12:05:12 PM PDT by aquila48 (Do not let them make you care! Guilting you is how they control you.)
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To: C19fan

Harvard, too.

After all, John Harvard was alive during the era of slavery, his years being 1607 to 1638.

Did he stop slavery? NO! Did he speak out against it? NO!

UNPERSON HIM!


49 posted on 06/29/2020 12:09:18 PM PDT by Lazamataz ("Black Lives Matter" becomes "Terse TV Blackmail"..... #AnagramsNeverLie)
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To: FewsOrange
Rhode Island's Ivy League Brown University's namesake actually commissioned a slave ship where a total of 109 captured slaves died!

From the Brown University Slavery and Justice: report of the Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice:

Like other members of their class, the Browns were slaveowners. There are records of Captain James Brown, the brothers’ father, purchasing slaves as early as 1728, and he left four slaves in his estate upon his death in 1739. By the early 1770s, the brothers owned at least fourteen slaves, several of them in common. Moses, who in 1773 became the first of the brothers to renounce slaveholding, seems to have held the largest number, owning six slaves outright, as well as a quarter interest in several others.

...

In 1759, the family returned to the African trade, when Obadiah, Nicholas, and John, along with a handful of smaller investors, dispatched a rumladen schooner, the Wheel of Fortune, to Africa. With war raging between Britain and France, it was a risky venture and it ended in failure. The ship arrived safely on the African coast, but it was subsequently captured by a French privateer. While Obadiah had taken the precaution of insuring the voyage, the loss of the ship still represented a substantial financial setback for the family. For the enslaved Africans on board, the capture of the ship likely made no difference, as they would simply have been carried to the French West Indies and sold there.

With the restoration of peace in 1763, the Browns decided to return to the African trade. (Obadiah had died the year before, leaving the family business in the hands of the four brothers, trading under the name Nicholas Brown and Company.) The North American economy was in the doldrums, and the brothers needed capital to buy supplies for their candle works, as well as for their newest venture, an iron furnace. With slave labor in high demand throughout the Americas, an African voyage promised a quick and substantial profit. The brothers initially planned a joint venture with Carter Braxton, a Virginia merchant and later signer of the Declaration of Independence, but in the end they elected to proceed by themselves. The result was the voyage of the Sally.

The Slave Ship Sally, 1764-65

The Sally sailed from Providence in 1764, the year of Brown’s founding. The ship carried the standard African cargo, including spermaceti candles, tobacco, onions, and 17,274 gallons of New England rum. It also carried an assortment of chains, shackles, swivel guns, and small arms to control the human cargo to come. In their letter of instructions, the Brown brothers ordered the ship’s master, Esek Hopkins, to make his passage to the Windward Coast of Africa, to exchange his goods for slaves, and to sell those slaves to best advantage in the West Indies. They also asked him to bring “four likely young slaves,” boys of fifteen years or younger, back to Providence for the family’s own use.

The voyage was a disaster in every conceivable sense. Many other merchants had the same idea as the Browns, and Hopkins found the West African coast crowded with slavers, including more than two-dozen ships from Rhode Island. The market for rum was glutted and captives were scarce and expensive. Hopkins eventually acquired a cargo of 196 Africans, but it took him more than nine months to do so, an exceptionally long time for a slave ship to remain on the African coast, especially for those confined below decks. By the time the Sally set sail for the West Indies, nineteen Africans had already died, including several children and one woman who “hanged her Self between Decks.” A twentieth captive, also a woman, was left for dead on the day the ship sailed.

The toll continued to mount on the return journey. Four more Africans – one woman and three children – died in the first week at sea. On the eighth day out, the captives rose in rebellion, a fact noted in a terse entry in the ship’s account book: “Slaves Rose on us was obliged fire on them and Destroyed Eight and Several more wounded badly 1 Thye and ones Ribs broke.” In the weeks that followed, death was an almost daily occurrence; according to Hopkins, the captives became “so Despireted” after the failed insurrection “that Some Drowned themselves Some Starved and others Sickened & Dyed.” In all, sixty-eight Africans perished during the crossing, each loss carefully recorded in the account book. Another twenty Africans died in the days after the ship reached the West Indies, bringing the total death toll to 108. (A 109th captive, one of the four “likely lads” requested by the Brown brothers, died en route to Providence.) The survivors, auctioned in Antigua, were so sickly and emaciated that they commanded prices as low as £5 apiece, scarcely one-tenth of the prevailing price for a “prime” slave. The poor returns on the voyage prompted an apologetic letter from the merchant who handled some of the sales. “I am truly Sorry for the Bad Voyage you [had],” he wrote. “[H]ad the negroes been young + Healthy I should have been able to sell them pretty well. I make no doubt if you was to try this market again with Good Slaves I Should be able to give you Satisfaction.”


-PJ

50 posted on 06/29/2020 12:16:46 PM PDT by Political Junkie Too (Freedom of the press is the People's right to publish, not CNN's right to the 1st question.)
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To: Political Junkie Too

Nicholas Jr was an abolitionist.


51 posted on 06/29/2020 12:26:20 PM PDT by FewsOrange
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To: C19fan

And they brought it on themselves. They supported removing Southern statues and destroying our heritage, but now it has circled back on them with a vengeance. This is going to end up devouring all of them in the end.


52 posted on 06/29/2020 12:38:22 PM PDT by packrat35 (Pelosi is only on loan to the world from Satan. Hopefully he will soon want his baby killer back)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...
Note: this topic is from 06/29/2020. Thanks C19fan.

53 posted on 07/08/2020 11:17:18 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...
Note: this topic is from 06/29/2020. Thanks C19fan.
Brown University needs to be targeted too. The Brown referred to was a slave trader too.

54 posted on 07/08/2020 11:20:17 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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