Sun Devil
Death and Taxes
Well, that's all well and good. However, like much I've read in this thread.... it's responding to comments that were imagined, never made.
Which comments pray tell?
Well, that's all well and good. However, like much I've read in this thread.... it's responding to comments that were imagined, never made.
How does a white person living in economic poverty equate to being a slave?
Impoverished whites could vote.
Were free to read.
Were free to use a "white only" bathroom stall.
They were free to get a job without suffering from ethnic backlash.
They were free to not be hung.
They were free to not have crosses burned on their lawn.
They were free to not be called nigger.
Be that as it may, you have to admit no one really had it that good during the 18th century, or some call it, the 1800's. As the point made earlier shows, factory workers in the North had it really bad too. It was about the same. We all have it better now. We all had it bad then. But they had some good times then too. The factory workers had their paychecks and could buy beer, the slaves sometimes had dance parties. Whatever. It's not black or white.
I think things have gotten a lot better since Reagan. I know they have for me. Will Hollywood make that into a movie? I bet not. I won't hold my breath anyway.
At least you are polite to the women, unlike your butt buddy Truth Deleter. Kudos for that. Now if we could just get past your massive fact denial and rewriting of history we might accomplish something.
Which comments pray tell?
I described it above.
Fat lot of good it did them.
Usually were illiterate because their parents kept them home in the tenement to do piece work.
But were forbidden to use "black only" bathroom stalls.
Are you joking? You've lived your whole life without ever hearing the expression "Irish Need Not Apply"?
White people weren't hung?
Unless they were Jewish or Catholic.
OK, you got me there.
I described it above.
Fat lot of good it did them.
Usually were illiterate because their parents kept them home in the tenement to do piece work.
But were forbidden to use "black only" bathroom stalls.
Are you joking? You've lived your whole life without ever hearing the expression "Irish Need Not Apply"?
White people weren't hung?
Unless they were Jewish or Catholic.
OK, you got me there.
I'm not running away. You moved the goal posts.
I asked you if the film was a complete and accurate portrayal of all slave owners, including black slave owners. You didn't answer. I'm waiting.
Yeah I was going to mention that whites were not allowed to use blacks only bathrooms, but I'm new and didn't want to be seen as jumping on the guy. Fair point though. If you are going to complain that blacks couldn't use white only bathrooms, why leave out the other half of the story? Like I said, there's two sides to every story. It's not black and white.
I think you missed the entire point. I'm not denying that there were SOME whites that were struggling during slavery times, sure, but the point is their social condition whether they were impoverished or not were a lot better than black slaves end of story you cannot provide a counter to that because that is how history sees it. This is why you have social programs for minority students today because of past discrimination, and because there were opportunities not afforded to blacks despite their academic accomplishments, and it is because of past and contemporary racism is why we continually have this problem today.
I think you missed the entire point. I'm not denying that there were SOME whites that were struggling during slavery times, sure, but the point is their social condition whether they were impoverished or not were a lot better than black slaves end of story you cannot provide a counter to that because that is how history sees it. This is why you have social programs for minority students today because of past discrimination, and because there were opportunities not afforded to blacks despite their academic accomplishments, and it is because of past and contemporary racism is why we continually have this problem today.
I would probably say MOST, instead of SOME, inner city whites.
I think your viewpoint is too simplistic. If a slave died at work, his wife and children would be cared for... and could hope for better times. A factory worker's widow and children had nothing to look forward to except homelessness, misery, and starvation.
The white man's "freedom" was an illusion.
And now subsequent generations of those downtrodden white folks are compelled to foot the bill for slavery from long ago...slavery they were drafted to fight against, leave their own impoverished families behind, and which hundreds of thousands of them never returned to.
it was the depiction of two slave owners and their relationships with their property. Was it accurate or not?
Whites were not allowed to use blacks only bathroom because that is the rules whites designed it. You think blacks who were forced to use a "colored only" bathroom is going to tell a white person to not use their restroom? There was a lot of fear in those times because blacks had no representative power. Not only that they were afraid to end up like Emmitt Till.
Accurate in which sense? The sense of the story told by the movie? Or an accurate portrayal of every slave-master relationship?
how in the world could a movie that depicted the relationship between two slave owners and their property possibly be an accurate portrayal of every slave-master relationship? Can you possibly imagine what a totally ridiculous, tap dancing sort of question that is????
Is the Sound of Music an accurate portrayal of every single family musical act in the history of show business?
Is Apollo 13 an accurate portrayal of every single manned space flight ever?
moron.
Now the little creep is going after my avatar. lol.The conservatives on this thread are wonderful.
Who else thinks that Granule's avatar looks like something from the middle ages? It just looks so appropriate.
I would probably say MOST, instead of SOME, inner city whites.
I think your viewpoint is too simplistic. If a slave died at work, his wife and children would be cared for... and could hope for better times. A factory worker's widow and children had nothing to look forward to except homelessness, misery, and starvation.
The white man's "freedom" was an illusion.
And now subsequent generations of those downtrodden white folks are compelled to foot the bill for slavery from long ago...slavery they were drafted to fight against, leave their own impoverished families behind, and which hundreds of thousands of them never returned to.
It was made to activate leftist operatives. Take Dearthla, for example. The little tool probably ran straight from the theater to JPP where she could start this thread and point her skanky finger at Conservatives.the movie was an adaptation of a non-fiction piece of literature. So... do you think that the author accurately portrayed life as a slave in the south, and do you think that the director and producer of the film accurately transcribed the work from page to screen? Or do you think the whole thing was hyped... from the author exaggerating his treatment to the filmmakers exaggerating his writing?