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originally posted by: LastFirst
originally posted by: asabuvsobelow
a reply to: JimmyNeutr0n
The Left is unbelievably inescapably whole heartily 100% Racist .
But America as a whole no.
You have your opinion and no facts to back it up..
Affirmative Action, the specific operating method of the government is BASED ON RACE.
clearly the dictionary would make a great addition to your life
originally posted by: Smigg
a reply to: JimmyNeutr0n
Yes America is racist against whites and it's disgustingly vile.
originally posted by: Alien Abduct
originally posted by: Smigg
a reply to: JimmyNeutr0n
Yes America is racist against whites and it's disgustingly vile.
Facts!
I don't want to hear "well, they were racist logos!", you tell Aunt Jemima that when she need to feed her 20 kids.
The Aunt Jemima name and character, appropriated from a vaudeville blackface character by Chris L. Rutt and Charles G. Underwood for their ready-made pancake flour mix at the Pearl Milling Company, is generally considered to be based on the enslaved "Mammy" archetype.[4][5] The use of the brand name became an important precedent in U.S. trademark law in a 1915 case between the pancake mix company and an unrelated seller of pancake syrup. The brand has been owned by the Quaker Oats Company (now part of PepsiCo) since 1926.[2]
Nancy Green portrayed the Aunt Jemima character at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, one of the first Black corporate models in the United States.[1] Subsequent advertising agencies hired dozens of actors to perform the role as the first organized sales promotion campaign.
Nancy Green (March 4, 1834 – August 30, 1923) was an American formerly enslaved person, nanny, cook, activist, and the first of many African-American models and performers hired to promote a corporate trademark as "Aunt Jemima". The famous Aunt Jemima recipe was not her recipe, but she became the advertising world's first living trademark.
Nancy Hayes (or Hughes) was born enslaved on March 4, 1834.[2] Montgomery County Historical Society oral history places her birth at a farm on Somerset Creek, six miles outside Mount Sterling in Montgomery County, Kentucky. She had at least two and as many as four children (one of whom was born in 1862) with George Green. Local farmers from that area named Green raised tobacco, hay, cattle, and hogs. There were no birth certificates or marriage licenses for enslaved people.
...
Green has been variously described as a servant, nurse, nanny, housekeeper, and cook for Charles Morehead Walker and his wife Amanda.[6][2][4][5][7] She also served the family's next generation, again as a nanny and a cook. Walker's two sons later became well known as Chicago Circuit Judge Charles M. Walker, Jr., and Dr. Samuel J. Walker.[6][5][7]
By the end of the American Civil War, Green had already lost her husband and children. She lived in a wood frame shack (still standing as of 2014) behind a grand home on Main Street in Covington, Kentucky.[2][4] She moved with the Walkers from Kentucky to Chicago in the early 1870s, before the birth of Samuel's youngest child in 1872.[7] The Walker family initially settled in a swank residential district near Ashland Avenue and Washington Boulevard called the "Kentucky Colony", then home to many transplanted Kentuckians.