Posted on 05/30/2016 7:31:30 PM PDT by ConservativeStatement
The remake of Roots has gained widespread critical acclaim but not from Snoop Dogg, who posted a short video on Instagram on Monday criticising the show, and suggesting that African Americans should not watch it.
In the video, the rapper said that he was fed up with watching films and TV shows that depicted the abuse of black Americans. 12 Years a Slave, Roots, Underground, I cant watch none of that shit, Snoop Dogg said, also taking aim at the Steve McQueen-directed Oscar-winning film and the WGN TV series about slaves in Georgia escaping via an underground railroad, which was recently renewed for a second season.
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
If it is true that slaves from Africa were illegally imported up until the Civil War, then I can see the possibility that an African born slave was still alive in 1930.
That would be hard to prove. Slaves were certainly imported illegally after the ban - it's one of the businesses Jean Lafitte was in - but I'd want to see solid, documentary evidence of slave importation in the 1850s.
The LEGAL slave trade exists today in parts of Africa and the Middle East. Where are the hashtags for that? Why doesn't the Snoop go and protest that? I guess there's no money or glory in that.
Emancipation was accomplished in several ways and incrementalism was one very successful strategy. E. g., Pennsylvania, allowing slavery, despite its Quaker roots, eliminated slavery gradually de jure by recognizing the inalienable right to liberty to all residents born in PA. All descendants of slaves born in PA were born free. After a generation there were no more slaves in PA since importation of more slaves was banned as well.
The Civil War was about slavery, economics and political power, not states rights, provably so. Always go to the primary sources when researching history. Read the CSA Constitution. It’s online. It refused admittance to any free soil state and disassociated any CSA state which changed to a free soil state. Where is the “states’ rights” in that?!
What does any of that have to do with the factual question of whether slaves were illegally imported into the United States in the 1850s?
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