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Friday, September 23, 2022

Mother Africa didn't want you

Don Lemon had a bad week. It began when a British scholar educated him live on his very own show on the true role of Britain in slavery. 

And now I am going to introduce him to the fact that had his ancestors not been sold and shipped to America, he would not be a millionaire today. He would be a second-class citizen.

Let's start with Lemon's first lesson on slavery.

His guest was Hillary Fordwich, an expert on British royalty who was brought in to talk about the queen and her funeral.

Lemon said, "England is facing rising costs of living, and you have those who are asking for reparations for colonialism ... and some people want to be paid back and members of the public are wondering, why are we suffering when you have all of this vast wealth? Those are legitimate concerns."

Fordwhich said, "Well I think you’re right about reparations in terms of — if people want it though, what they need to do is, you always need to go back to the beginning of the supply chain. Where was the beginning of the supply chain? That was in Africa."

She then lectured him on how African kings conquered and enslaved people. 

Fordwich said, "African kings were rounding up their own people, they had them in cages waiting on the beaches, no one was running into Africa to get them."

She also stunned him by pointing out slavery was ubiquitous in the world in the 19th century. She asked, "Which was the first nation in the world that abolished slavery? The British."

2,000 British sailors died intercepting slave ships in the 19th century.

And of course, 600,000 Americans died in a civil war to end slavery. 

Lee Habeeb wrote about abolition in Newsweek. He said, "Some nations would abolish slavery later than others: Cuba (1886), Brazil (1888), Korea (1894), Egypt (1895), Italy (1889), China (1906), Russia (1917), Afghanistan and Hong Kong (1923), Iraq and Turkey (1924), Persia (1929), Ethiopia (1935), Kuwait (1949), Niger (1960) and Saudi Arabia and North Yemen (1962). Legalized slavery, it turns out, endured the longest in Middle Eastern, African and Asian nations. Slavery persists today, with more than 40 million people enslaved—more than at any time in human history."

Which brings me to Sandra Greene, an African-American history scholar at Cornell. She studied at the University of Ghana -- in the nation that was the hub of African slave trade -- and is well-versed in the subject. African kings sold 12 million slaves to Europeans over 400 years, according to Greene.

Millions more were retained in Africa.

Greene said, "It’s not something that many West African countries talk about."

Slavery was different in Mother Africa.

She said, "They didn’t have racial slavery. The distinction was, and is, by kinship. People there are very clear about an individual’s background, and they retain oral records of who is who within a family. In some families slave origins still matter, even today."

To be fair to Mother Africa, Stepmother USA treated the descendants of slavery as second-class citizens for a century after abolition. But in the last 60 years, the USA has tried to make amends through affirmative action and the like. 

Mother Africa is a different story.

In her story on Professor Greene, Jackie Swift wrote, "Greene mentions a recent court case in Ghana that highlights the legacy of slavery in that country. A prominent chieftaincy was disputed within a very large family. Two branches of the family offered up possible candidates for the position. Then the branch descended from freeborn ancestors asserted that the other branch—descended from slaves—did not have the right to such an important position. The issue went all the way to the Ghana Supreme Court. “The court said, This is a family concern, so whatever the family thinks, is right,' says Greene. In essence, the court denied the right of the slave descendants to hold a position of power."

Dr. Ben Carson said, "I Already Won The Lottery, I Was born In America And Know The Lord."

Who am I to argue with a brain surgeon? He spoke for many of us. My ancestors came from England (on the Mayflower, no less), Switzerland and a couple of Eastern European shitholes. Mine was the Golden Card.

So was Don Lemon's. 

In his defense, he asked a legitimate question. That he got an answer he didn't expect is real journalism.

42 comments:

  1. The Greatest irony and best Revenge the enslaved African has on those who sold him into slavery is the fact that the descendants of those slave traders would kill for the American citizenship that the descendants of those they cruelly sold have

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    1. If we return these black individuals can we get our money back?

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    2. I'll make their revenge more sweet. One of those slave trader descendants can buy my citizenship. Or, depending, we can trade. This country is going off the rails and I don't pretend otherwise.

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  2. Slavery is not evil because it is racist, slavery is bad because it is slavery. Slavery is also ancient. Interracial slavery did not become commonplace until a leap in transportation technology in the 16th Century allowed slaves sold by Africans to be transported to the Americas to provide sustainable renewable energy for the elites. Technological improvements in energy production later made it possible to eliminate slavery in the West. Within approximately 100 years of the Watt-Wilkinson collaboration that produced an efficient fossil fueled steam engine, slavery was abolished in the West. Slavery reappeared in Germany during the fossil fuel shortage of the first half of the 1940s. (Audrey Hepburn’s step-brother along with many other Belgians, Dutch, French and other Europeans were enslaved to ameliorate the fossil fuel shortage)

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    2. Did you know there are 3 silent K's when you spell democrat?

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  3. 600,000 Americans died in a civil war to end slavery. ""
    Slavery continued after the war. The South used "convict leasing" to continue slavery for many decades.
    "The forced labor of prisoners, overwhelmingly African American men, through the convict lease system used by states, local governments, white farmers, and corporations continued after the American Civil War until World War II in the southern United States. "
    Douglas Blackmon's book, "Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II"

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    1. 13th amendment -- "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
      Southern legislatures were quick to take advantage of this exception and quickly created a corrupt system of laws so that the exception would devour the rule. Vagrancy legislation became de rigueur. The methods of conviction were so lax as to be non-existent.

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    2. Good point, but you need to be completely honest and say democrat legislatures instead of southern. After all, the civil war was primarily democrat vs republican. Northern democrats undermined the union and southern republicans fought for it.

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    3. History repeats itself; Democrats are destroying America.

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  4. The best part of the interview was the expression on Lemon's face with she was through with him. I guess when she agreed about reparations, he expected her to ask how much he wanted.

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    1. I could watch that interview over and over and never get tired of that look on Lemon's face.

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  5. No less notable than black Harvard history professor Louis Gates confirms that the first slave holder on these shores - who demanded slavery be legal "Anthony Johnson (a black man) and his wife Mary (a black woman) went to court in Virginia in 1654 to obtain the services of their indentured servant, a black man, John Castor, for life"

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    1. Compare this date 1654 in USA with 1654 in Europe. How many millions of serf/slaves existed in Europe in 1654, especially under Russian owners? In Africa. what tribes by name + religion hunted what other tribes by name to sell/shop for profit? Was Morocco Muslim and their many Sultans hunt/sold African and European tribes relentlessly? Did the Sultan of Morocco only cease a tiny bit when attacked in Morocco by the brand new navy of the new USA? Holding my breath for the legacy MSM to publish such data regularly.

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  6. Hey Don, I guess we're somewhat related (at least by kinship). My Grandmother on my mother's side, back in the 30's had a family tree developed by the Daughters of the American Revolution in order to be able to join. They told her after doing the investigation, that her ancestors were on the Mayflower as well. And when my Grandfather passed in 1968, my mother and Uncle were going through his things and found this folded up piece of old paper in his wallet. Turned out it was a Discharge from the Continental Army signed by George Washington. He apparently signed every discharge from the Continental Army. He kept it I guess because the name of the soldier (his Great, Great, Great Grandfather?) was the same as his, Edwin Cooper. My Uncle had it authenticated and framed. It was unfortunately lost when his house was leveled by Hurricane Andrew.

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    1. How interesting! Sorry to hear that it got lost due to Hurricane Andew.

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    2. usmcmgb nice comments.

      Cousins get in the blog free :)

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    3. Can you imagine casually carrying George Washington's signature around in your wallet?

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  7. Squeeze the lemon, make the juice run down....

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  8. The One-Eyed-Wonder-Weasel posted about Lemon?!
    He loves pointing fingers, but he gets really pissy when they point back at him.

    I'd be pretty effing skeptical of a guy who yells at a girl asking him why he called Jesus fictional.
    I'd be pretty damned suspect of a congressman taking money from Blackrock and it's partners.

    Just sayin'
    -lg

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    1. Agreed. This clip could have found from many other sources other than this complete phony.

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  9. Lemon definitely got schooled and his only comment at the end of his lesson was, "That's very interesting." Then the segment ended. There has always been slavery and unfortunately I think there always will be. Doesn't excuse it. It seems to be human nature.

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  10. If I spanked my kids as hard as Lady Hillary Fordwich spanked Donnie, I'd be in prison for child abuse.
    It's not right to do that to a man which Donnie Lemon aint. Gooder and harder.

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    1. BTW, Poland abolished slavery in 1347, but serfdom became the norm, little better. It in turn was abolished in 1794 whereupon Russia, Prussia and Austria partitioned Poland and Lithuania which enslaved them until 1918 when they were restored.

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  11. Let's not forgot Brandon's adoptive state, DE, was, as he tried to brag, the last state to abolish slavery.

    And of course, 600,000 Americans died in a civil war to end slavery.

    No, they died in an illegal and anti-Constitutional war to deprive Southerners of their Constitutional rights. Even Abe said the Union was more important than the slaves.

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    1. I keep forgetting that you are still proslavery.
      The (in)civil war started before Lincoln had even entered office. Southern democrats acting as childish as the modern ones.
      For those who do not understand, Lincoln wanted to preserve the Union. He opposed slavery but recognised that it was constitutional. The only other way to get rid of slavery would have been to amend the Constitution. How many votes does that take? Yup, not happening.

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    2. The slave power seceded because Lincoln's election signalled an electoral college majority opposed to expansion of slavery. That opened the prospect of enough free states by the end of the century to abolish slavery by constitutional amendment.

      Unilateral secession is illegal because there is this bit in the Constitution called the supremacy clause. Nothing a state does can anull the Constitution.

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    3. Incorrect; secession is legal. The U. S. EXISTS because it--a slave-practicing group of states--SECEDED from a non-slave-supporting nation. Nothing in the Constitution prohibits secession, or the states wouldn't have ratified it in the South. Northern states threatened and met to discuss secession several times decades before the South did; no serious official thought this was shocking. Article I, Section 8 doesn't give the U. S. government power to stop it. A1 S10--a list of things states may not do--doesn't prohibit the states from seceding. The Ninth Amendment says just because certain rights aren't listed in the BOR doesn't mean that the FedGov may mess with them; seceding is one of those rights. The Tenth Amendment says the powers listed in the Constitution granted the FedGov are their ONLY powers. The "Supremacy Clause" bit is also untrue, since you forgot to include the words "IN PURSUANCE THEREOF"--i.e., the FedGov can only make laws that conform to the limits the Constitution puts upon it. Clearly, disallowing secession is not within its powers, so the Supremacy Clause does not apply.

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    4. And to reply to another, pro-secession doesn't mean pro-slavery. The war didn't start until Lincoln illegally started it after he was in office. Making war is illegal constitutionally; in fact, it's defined as "treason" ("Treason against the United States shall consist only in levying war against them" in A3, S3, and Lincoln insisted that the southern states never truly left the union.) Yes, Lincoln wanted union--to enrich his tariff-stealing buddies; that's why he was chosen as the nominee, because he was the one they deemed most likely to continue the steal. He made it plain during his first inaugural address that he didn't care a whit about slavery, promising the South they could keep their slaves if they only returned and paid the tariffs. He also told Horace Greeley he didn't care if he had to free slaves or not, as long as the union remained. Charles Dickens rightly pointed out that the North/South War was "solely a fiscal quarrel."

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  12. Enjoyed the West Africa perspective you shared.

    I'll add that as part of researching the Civil War - when the destruction of monuments first started - I also did a deep dive on Slavery. With a focus on Trade and Economics.

    A number of historical facts stood out to me. Including the fact that in 1807 - three weeks before Britain abolished the Atlantic slave trade - the USA enacted law prohibiting the importation of slaves.

    BTW - Slavery was on the table when the USA was created, and it was agreed that the international slave trade/ importation of slaves could be banned after 20 years, and it was during Jefferson' term.

    Keep up the good work DS.

    ***
    The Cliff Notes version of some of the other key things I learned during my research include:

    - only 3% of the North Atlantic slave trade - what most people hear about - went to North America.
    - over 90% of the North Atlantic slave trade went to South America and the Caribbean.

    - the African empires sold slaves to other areas besides NA, SA, and Caribbean
    - other key African slave trade routes - not destined for NA, SA, Caribbean - included: trans-Saharan, Indian Ocean, and Red Sea
    - 11+ million: North Atlantic Trade Route
    - 9+ million: trans-Saharan Trade Route
    - 4+ million: Indian Ocean Trade route
    - 4+ million: Red Sea Trade route

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  13. I've been pointing out these facts for years. They don't eliminate responsibility for slavery, but those who criticize say that one race is uniquely evil for enslaving members of another should look upon the Africans' sale of their own people to whites and experience at least a minor bout of humility. All races engage in evil.

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    1. First slave owners in America were Blacks.

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  14. And keep in mind, no one is responsible for the actions of their ancestors. Or anyone else's.

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  15. One million dollars to every black that renounces their citizenship and relocates to Mother Africa. Cheaper that way.

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  16. Ah hum.. so called "journalist"
    One don lemonade,think it's a good idea to bed down , with another man....so ..ok whatever.

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  17. Around 700,000 mostly white soldiers died during the Civil War to free slaves and over two million civilians. Being freed was reparations. Slaves were better off than the poor whites who had neither home nor land, were half starved and poorly clothed, and were looked down upon by EVERYONE - including slaves who felt they had it better off as slaves.

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  18. Technically, in the American Civil War, about 300,000 diex to eliminate slavery and the other 300,000 died defending states' rights.

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  19. I think The Lemon's problem is he frames all his statements and questions in a political form. He is not a particularly bright guy but then neither am I. What The Lemon lacks is the ability to ask reasonable questions that are not politically motivated or loaded. So he just reflects his networks ability to hire low intelligence people willing to sell themselves for a large paycheck. It is a total waste of one's time and an insult to one's intelligence to watch CNN today.

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  20. The novel 'Salaga Market' explains much of this.

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