Serious question

...and that's always been true, whether it's building an ancient city in the middle of Africa, building a pyramid in Egypt, Asia, or America, or building modern cities across Africa and elsewhere.
There is no evidence that anywhere in sub-Saharan Africa that any substantial and sustained construction of large projects occurred. No canals. No grand monuments. No extensive walled fortifications. No radical modifications of the landscape.
 
Slavery did not establish the South or anywhere else, anchovies.
I might also point out the South lost the War of Secession.
Correct. Slavery and indentured servitude, along with 'transporting' convicts was all done to supply a basic manual labor force to what at the time were the equivalent of larger corporations (aka plantations) for use in a labor-intensive activity, large-scale agribusiness. There was no other reason to do any of that. The only reason it occurred at all was the indigenous population was decimated first and foremost by disease and secondly by simply not having sufficient numbers to supply the labor.
 
There is no evidence that anywhere in sub-Saharan Africa that any substantial and sustained construction of large projects occurred.
I already listed some of them. Go back and read it.
No canals. No grand monuments. No extensive walled fortifications. No radical modifications of the landscape.
Yes. Canals. Grand monuments. Walled fortifications...and cities.
 
Actually, the lead construction was done by skilled artisans and tradesmen who knew their profession. Statues sculpted from stone didn't carve themselves and some farmer in the off season wasn't doing that. Sure, grunt workers might have been something like that to earn extra cash, but the core of the construction was done by professional, skilled labor.
Farmers in the off season made the irrigation canals, and dams that fed water to their farms. If there was not enough work doing that, they made a pyramid or other structure that took the exact same skills.

It was all about keeping people busy.

There was a problem with the pyramids, that they were bringing a 100,000 people or so together for half the year. After a few generations, they were going to have disease outbreaks. That pretty much doomed large pyramid making.

They continued to make more spread out religious projects.

It is interesting Gardner cannot believe peasants made the pyramids, but can believe slaves did.
 
Farmers in the off season made the irrigation canals, and dams that fed water to their farms. If there was not enough work doing that, they made a pyramid or other structure that took the exact same skills.

Two different skill sets. Digging a ditch is a far cry from hewing stone out of a quarry and shaping it as needed.
It was all about keeping people busy.

There was plenty of work, and most people followed in a family trade. So, if you were a skilled carpenter and built boats, that's likely what your male kids would do for a living, then their kids...
There was a problem with the pyramids, that they were bringing a 100,000 people or so together for half the year. After a few generations, they were going to have disease outbreaks. That pretty much doomed large pyramid making.

It took far less than 100,000 people to build a pyramid. Crews that moved the stones were pros at moving stones. Crews that shaped the stones were pros at shaping stone. This wasn't unskilled labor.
They continued to make more spread out religious projects.

It is interesting Gardner cannot believe peasants made the pyramids, but can believe slaves did.
It's you that thinks that. I have argued that it was full-time skilled craftsmen and labor crews that did the work, not slaves, peasants, or farmers.
 
We are always to,d that blacks built America. If that is true then where are the ancient structures in Africa? I mean you have the Coliseum in Rome. The Parthenon on Greece. Surely Africa is as ancient. Where is the technological marvels from that time in Africa?

I am sure that instead of coming up with an answer the JPP Marxists will just scream “RACIST”

But that will only prove my point.
The only black person you'll make happy is the one who digs your grave you sorry racist fuck.
 
Farmers in the off season made the irrigation canals, and dams that fed water to their farms. If there was not enough work doing that, they made a pyramid or other structure that took the exact same skills.
It is not the same skills to build an irrigation canal that is required to build a pyramid, Wally.
The Egyptians did not dam the Nile in ancient times, Wally. The first dam built on the Nile was built by the British.
It was all about keeping people busy.
No, Wally. It was about growing food.
There was a problem with the pyramids,
There was no problem with the pyramids. They are still standing today, Wally.
that they were bringing a 100,000 people or so together for half the year.
It is unknown how many people built the pyramids, Wally. Argument from randU fallacy.
After a few generations, they were going to have disease outbreaks.
Disease was common among the Egyptians. Living along a river and bogs and having no effective way of treating disease does that.
That pretty much doomed large pyramid making.
You really should see the Great Pyramids of Giza. They are an impressive size.
They continued to make more spread out religious projects.
Mostly smaller sites. There were some larger temples dedicated to their favorite gods.
It is interesting Gardner cannot believe peasants made the pyramids, but can believe slaves did.
Slaves did not make the pyramids. Skilled labor does. Slaves can assist, but they cannot design the pyramid themselves.
City dwellers are not peasants, Wally.
 
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