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burdman30ott6
It is very clear that modern urban America hasn't got so much as a clue about what the living conditions were for rural America following the Great Depression. The average rural white/black/other family in most of the country was uneducated by requirement, not choice, because the family needed every able-bodied member to break their back on the fields. The average rural white/black/other family was poor, not because they wouldn't work to make money, but because they couldn't work away from their farms and still manage to keep the family fed. The average rural family, regardless of race, was so far below the standard of living of most modern welfare recipients today that it would be like comparing a third world country to the USA.
As the future of their show lies in doubt, the Duck Dynasty clan are still making millions thanks to their megabucks Walmart merchandising deal, MailOnline can today reveal.
The Robertson family has a merchandise empire that is estimated by Forbes to be worth about $400million - and their deal with Walmart makes up around half of this.
And today, as Walmart refused to comment on the future of their relationship with the TV family, just one glimpse at the chainstore's website shows fans are flocking to buy Duck Dynasty merchandise amid the furor over patriach Phil Robertson's homophobic comments.
Meanwhile, MailOnline can reveal a publicist from A&E DID accompany Phil to his interview with GQ magazine -but was NOT there when he made his incendiary comments.
Walmart SELLS OUT of show merchandise
I agree. At first, I figured he was just misrepresented, then I thought he was bigot, but now, I'm starting to think that Phil is just out-of-touch at this point. I mean, just look at the rest of the interview.
Bisman
i see no reason to believe hes racist or anything. nothing is implied by what he said.
but it is revealing, hes unknowingly sharing his ignorance of the greater world of politics and society around him as he grew up. dont know if thats something to be ashamed of or not. maybe it couldnt be helped if he grew up with hardships and distractions and had peer black people of the same situation.
maybe its a blessing thats all he saw lol
Give the "Persecuted Christian White Males In America" garbage a rest already. It's an insult to groups who face actual persecution. It's also an insult to the intelligence of everyone on this site that you expect them to believe this drivel. Being misrepresented (and overreacted to) by the media isn't persecution, it's just yellow journalism. Your comment is just wrong on so many levels.
WWJFKD
reply to post by AshleyD
He's White, He's Christian and He's straight therefore He's Wrong.
Sit down shut up and mind your own business your time is over.
Did I get that about right?
BTW Ashley - long time no see
And yes there is sarcasm oozing out of the above statement which is in no way my actual viewpoint. Geez did I really have to point that out?edit on 20-12-2013 by WWJFKD because: (no reason given)
WWJFKD
And yes there is sarcasm oozing out of the above statement which is in no way my actual viewpoint. Geez did I really have to point that out?
It's a ridiculous viewpoint, but that doesn't mean that there aren't people who don't hold that viewpoint. Those people exist, some are even on this site. I didn't read the edit. I should probably start reading the edits.
WWJFKD
WWJFKD
And yes there is sarcasm oozing out of the above statement which is in no way my actual viewpoint. Geez did I really have to point that out?
Why do I even bother
iRoyalty
burdman30ott6
It is very clear that modern urban America hasn't got so much as a clue about what the living conditions were for rural America following the Great Depression. The average rural white/black/other family in most of the country was uneducated by requirement, not choice, because the family needed every able-bodied member to break their back on the fields. The average rural white/black/other family was poor, not because they wouldn't work to make money, but because they couldn't work away from their farms and still manage to keep the family fed. The average rural family, regardless of race, was so far below the standard of living of most modern welfare recipients today that it would be like comparing a third world country to the USA.
That's all fair but at the end of the day, who slept in the barn and who slept in the 'Big House', I couldn't see all those African American workers sitting at the dinner table with the White folk... (Correct me if I'm wrong, I'm just making an educated guess)
calstorm
reply to post by Khaleesi
But as an educated man who is now a multimillionaire Surely he is aware now. Surely he knows what he witnesses was not representative of the entire country.
It would be interesting to read the entire unedited interview.
Aleister
He didn't say it, he just said he never saw mistreatment of blacks. He must have thought they didn't want to eat in the restaurants he ate in, or that they all wanted to sit in the balcony of the movie theaters, or that they might not have wanted to attend the schools he did. On this one, at least, he should apologize, because he could not have grown up in the Deep South of the U.S. and not known that segregation was a fact and a way of life.
calstorm
Given the fact that he is talking about the era of Jim Crow laws, I think it is pretty clear.
Robertson continued, "Pre-entitlement, pre-welfare, you say: Were they happy?
Aleister
Wrabbit2000
reply to post by Aleister
Dirt poor or not, white people went to lunch counters and movies at least a few times a year, but they wouldn't have seen any blacks there.
Really? You wouldn't have anything contemporary for material or references to support that would you?
It seems a little extreme to suggest there weren't any truly poor people compared to black poor people. As if a special welfare existed for white people born into bad circumstance or grinding poverty?
You misunderstood. Economically they were in the same boat, but actual laws said they couldn't eat in white restaurants, and blacks had to sit in the balconies of the theater and not on the main floor. That's what I meant.
Bisman
i see no reason to believe hes racist or anything. nothing is implied by what he said.
but it is revealing, hes unknowingly sharing his ignorance of the greater world of politics and society around him as he grew up. dont know if thats something to be ashamed of or not. maybe it couldnt be helped if he grew up with hardships and distractions and had peer black people of the same situation.
maybe its a blessing thats all he saw lol
WilsonWilson
Basically he's your typical old man.
Old people tend to look back on there pasts with rose tinted glasses.
They block out the racism, homophobia, the mysogyny.
He;'s a white straight man, it never effected him, so in his head it never effected anybody else.
The more and more of what he said comes out, the more is painfully obvious he was gonna get sacked!