It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by CSIfan
JM,
Well, we better start lining them up and get the "backpacks full of cash" ready, because Master's children have found another way to have a slave. There are millions of slaves here, they are paid a token salary and they live in poverty and fear.
Originally posted by truthseeka
You have NO IDEA how...foolish it sounds that I hate white people more than slaves who had this stuff done to them. That slaves subjected to this treatment were HAPPY about it is even MORE foolish.
Originally posted by truthseeka
JohnMike...
Were you being sarcastic with the "pay a living slave a billion dollars?" Because the slaves we're talking about here don't fit the bill.
Originally posted by Johnmike
Originally posted by truthseeka
JohnMike...
Were you being sarcastic with the "pay a living slave a billion dollars?" Because the slaves we're talking about here don't fit the bill.
There are no living survivors of legal slavery in America. So... I say that anyone legally born into slavery or sold by African slave traders should be paid a billion dollars each.
Basically, there's no one alive to pay!
Brown Eye/Blue Eye Experiment
In the wake of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., Elliot developed a simple exercise that explored the nature of racism and prejudice.
Elliott's method for exploring racism in the context of an all-white classroom consisted of dividing her students into two groups on the basis of eye color, blue or brown (those with other eye colors were assigned to the group that most closely matched their own.)
On the first day, Elliott told her students that possessing blue eyes indicated superiority in intelligence and conferred extra classroom privileges while having brown eyes indicated inferiority. Quickly, the students of the "superior" color began to oppress those of the "inferior" color, while those of the "inferior" color exhibited negative feelings of self-loathing and fear.
The next day, Elliott reversed the exercise, telling the students that her statements the previous day were untrue, and that the reverse situation now prevailed. The same children who had been oppressed the day before quickly took on the oppressing role, and vice versa.
en.wikipedia.org...
Originally posted by ceci2006
I have been quietly reading the last few pages of the thread. And, I have to shake my head on this one. I wonder how those who disrespected the past ancestors of Black people would feel if the tables were turned? I bet it wouldn't feel good to have a mob of people in the midst of a pogrom spewing out a lack of empathy at every turn--especially if it denigrated their ancestors and their contributions to American society.
I always say, you'll never lived until you've had a group of posters denigrate everything about your heritage. And then to top it off, say that they don't care. :shk:
Oh yes, it is very relevant. Because as a Black person, a discussion of slavery intimately connects me with my ancestors, what they went through and how they survived the treachery of the American government and the citizens who supported the institution of human trafficking.
And supported it they did: through laws, ettiquette, social customs and norms, values and culture. Not only did some citizens of the United States--from all classes made money off the backs of African labor, they reveled in it and were quite insensitive as some posters are today in this thread. And this insensitivity continues to be perpetuated by word and deed in the same manner.
...And that is a pity. It says a lot of about the mindset of not only the citizens of America, but a portion of society who would rather go through life without feeling anything for their fellow citizens of the United States. The glibness communicated about slavery only conveys a lack of character and conscience.
And it gets celebrated by the very people who don't give a damn. They pat those with indifference on their backs and give them a ticker tape parade!?!
I'm glad that CSIfan has defied those who "don't care" and "cannot see" with their cynical and derogatory talk that still cuts to the bone.
All I can say is that I know that those who denigrate my ancestors will not feel shame or guilt for what they say because they don't want to feel guilt.
Instead, they would rather wallow in their self-centeredness and their indifference to those who have suffered. And because of that indifference, they continue to perpetuate injustice to the point of harshly ignoring the past and further adding detriment to the future.
If you are that indifferent, don't react when someone denigrates your ancestors and their contributions. Don't say one word. Do not complain. And take responsibility for it. Because with such talk, you've encouraged it. :shk:
Originally quoted by Tea
Frankly, we're sick of the snivelling. It's boring and you're playing to an audience of one, yourselves. The rest of us stopped giving a crap years ago. The boy who cried wolf knows why, and so does the nagging housewife.
Originally quoted by nextguyinline
Your [sic] really need some rest.
Originally posted by ceci2006
You're frustrated. You're sick and tired of people of color who actually can speak for themselves and defend their heritage instead of lying down and taking it.
I'm sorry you still have a phobia about black people. I surely hope that you find some peace to quell your concerns because you're sounding a bit defensive there. Maybe some racial sensitivity training might help.
Originally posted by nextguyinline
Just sick and tired of one. I applaud one's ability to defend their heritage. Your intent at it's heart, is just, it's the delusional wrappings that you present it with, that I take issue with.
Pretty sure I don't have any 'Black people' phobias, but I'm all ears, since I read these threads for personal growth.
I'll attend those sensitivity classes with you. I'll even share my notes.
Originally posted by chissler
A Class Divided