Posted on 12/19/2023 11:47:20 AM PST by DFG
I guess the blood of 600k+ men and women was not enough................
Yes. NY. That bastion of slaver. “ bend down turn around pick a bale of cotton…”. ( yes I know there was some slaves.)
That sounds logical. They have plenty of cash.
Why? New York was a free state.
Money for the illegals, money for the blacks. Ain’t New York somethin’?
Somethin’ headed for nuttin’, or more likely headed for a bailout from the rest of us.
“Why? New York was a free state.”
New York was one of the original 13 slave states. Made a lot of money off of it too.
Albany doesn’t mean it.
Talk is cheap.
It will give out as much money as California’s commission did.
“It’s not a beautiful story, but indeed it is the truth.”
NOTHING she ever says is true, rather, it’s her warped version of the truth. She’s pitiful, and now she has her writers using words like “indeed” in a desperate attempt to make her show her gravitas?
Just as it was an “immigrant sanctuary state”
Writing checks it has no money to cover
No money though.
We didn’t have slavery in NY so what is she talking about?
We’ll all be better off if today’s Dims quit feeling guilty about the Dims two centuries ago being the party of slavery and trail of tears.
After looking it up I guess I was wrong.
“We didn’t have slavery in NY so what is she talking about?”
Then what were they selling at the corner of Wall and Water streets?
https://untappedcities.com/2015/08/21/the-top-ten-secrets-of-nyc-former-slave-market-wall-street/
There is still slavery in Asia and Africa. There are no slaves or former slaves here.
“New York state will create a commission tasked with considering reparations . . .”
This may start a debate about the merits of voluntary reparations and voluntary repatriations.
Exactly!
“We didn’t have slavery in NY so what is she talking about?”
You did have slavery in New York.
It was not until March 31, 1817 that the New York legislature ended two centuries of slavery within its borders, setting July 4, 1827 as the date of final emancipation and making New York the first state to pass a law for the total abolition of legal slavery. When Emancipation Day finally arrived, the number of slaves freed was roughly 4,600 men, women and children or about 11% of the black population living in New York.
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