(September 22, 2016 at 5:31 pm)Homeless Nutter Wrote:(September 22, 2016 at 5:12 pm)Drich Wrote: Read it and weep SON
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Jo...(colonist)
Here's a novel idea rather than argue emotion try and check a fact or two every once and a while...
The fact that you or anyone else does not know the first slave owner in North America was black [...]
LOL, Dripsh*t - here's a novel idea: read the page you're linking to, in order to make sure it supports your claims.
It doesn't say anywhere on that wikipedia page, that Johnson was the first slave owner in North America, you racist twit. It says:
Quote:He became one of the first property owners and slaveholders of African birth there.
But of course - you'll believe anything that suits your idiotic views, won't you, Drippy?
http://www.scaruffi.com/politics/slavetra.html
We are bombarded every day to stop the generalisations about black people because it is considered racist, yet at the same time, blacks love to generalise about white europeans which is somehow justified. Again, culturally speaking, you have to ask yourself as to the reason why blacks are arrested more often than any other demographic. I mean, culturally, Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Indians, native American Indians and Mexicans seem to have a lower rate of arrest compared to blacks. Ask yourself why. As for the term "white guilt", I don't think anyone suffers from it at all apart from sjws. To not put a too finer point on it, you ask a black American to make a choice between racist police and the United States or Africa, he will choose the USA each time because he doesn't identify himself as African i.e. poor, living in tribes, eating very little, traditional medicine, language and religions. In the land of the free, there is everything they ever want. Perhaps if they gave something back to American society, then people might look differently.
Like this guy for example, of someone who was poor, had little understanding of the English language and was like a fish out of water:
Quote:In 1968, Cho immigrated to the United States and settled in Chicago. He spoke very little English, and the only thing he knew about the city was the name of its onetime gangster king, Al Capone. He didn’t know much more about the rest of the country, either. But he learned quickly. After a year, he moved to South Bend, Indiana, then Milwaukee, then New York City, usually working during the day and teaching tae kwon do in the evening before spending the night at the studio. Finally, in Providence, Rhode Island, he opened a small tae kwon do school and used the last of his meager savings to take out a small ad in the local paper. A couple of days later, he had fifty students. He never looked back. Within just a few years, Cho had opened eight schools throughout New England.
https://www.aimaa.com/about_gmcho.htm
He could have just got a job but no, he gave something back to American society from his culture; Tae Kwon-Do. He didn't have to, and then many decades later, he has thousands of students, many hundreds of schools and he is richer culturally and is a top bloke, since I met him once in England.