Race Card Fraud
Race Card Fraud
So now the NAACP has besmirched themselves and deserves no more respect.
http://townhall.com/columnists/ThomasSo ... aud/page/1
http://townhall.com/columnists/ThomasSo ... aud/page/1
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Re: Race Card Fraud
and your suprised??? the NAACP along with Jackson and Sharpton love to flash the race card, anything to allow then to stay relevant and keep them in the spot light
"In reality, there exists only fact and fiction.
Opinions result from a lack of the former and a reliance on the latter."

Opinions result from a lack of the former and a reliance on the latter."

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Re: Race Card Fraud
+1 (fixed)CUDA wrote:and your suprised??? the NAACP along with Jackson and Sharpton love to flash the race card, anything to allow then to appear relevant and keep them in the spot light

Re: Race Card Fraud
Can't wait for Slick to chime in w/his white guilt and take up for Jesse or the NAACP. Since his descendants have been here since the Mayflower (allegedly) you can bet that his family has had some honest to goodness slaves running around the shed out back.
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Re: Race Card Fraud
ruggbutt wrote:Can't wait for Slick to chime in w/his white guilt and take up for Jesse or the NAACP. Since his descendants have been here since the Mayflower (allegedly) you can bet that his family has had some honest to goodness slaves running around the shed out back.
stopped the slave thing in the 1820's......actually, and I've said it here more than once, one great plus of Obama's election is that it finally rendered Jackson, Sharpton, et al more or less irrelevant. You can't make much of a living blaming 'the man', when 'the man' is a Black man.
as for the allegedly, look up John Littleton, Accomac, Virginia, if you care to.
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Re: Race Card Fraud
Factoid: My Grandfather, same surnameruggbutt wrote: Since his descendants have been here since the Mayflower (allegedly)
not aware of any slaves in the family history, but that doesnt mean there weren't any it was not against the law and was a common practice.Samuel Fuller (baptised 1580 – died 1633) was an English doctor and church deacon. He is remembered as one of the Separatist Pilgrims who together formed the colony in North America at Plymouth, Massachusetts.
"In reality, there exists only fact and fiction.
Opinions result from a lack of the former and a reliance on the latter."

Opinions result from a lack of the former and a reliance on the latter."

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- Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 4:09 pm
Re: Race Card Fraud
so THATS where the "fuller brush girl" comes fromCUDA wrote:Factoid: My Grandfather, same surnameruggbutt wrote: Since his descendants have been here since the Mayflower (allegedly)not aware of any slaves in the family history, but that doesnt mean there weren't any it was not against the law and was a common practice.Samuel Fuller (baptised 1580 – died 1633) was an English doctor and church deacon. He is remembered as one of the Separatist Pilgrims who together formed the colony in North America at Plymouth, Massachusetts.


- callmeslick
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Re: Race Card Fraud
CUDA wrote:Factoid: My Grandfather, same surnameruggbutt wrote: Since his descendants have been here since the Mayflower (allegedly)not aware of any slaves in the family history, but that doesnt mean there weren't any it was not against the law and was a common practice.Samuel Fuller (baptised 1580 – died 1633) was an English doctor and church deacon. He is remembered as one of the Separatist Pilgrims who together formed the colony in North America at Plymouth, Massachusetts.
I probably mis-read the above, but if your Grandfather died in 1633, either you or your father are EXTREMELY long-lived.

Slave-holding was pretty uncommon in the Massachusetts colony and in the New England states. Mainly a matter of economics, as opposed to ethics or morality. My ancestors ran a couple of tobacco plantations, ending up around 2500 acres in size. To work that kind of land, slaves were the most cost efficient labor available. The cotton farmers, later, in the Deep South, owned tons more slaves as their production was even more labor intensive and the property sizes larger. Northern farms were smallish, within the scope of a large family to manage, so no extra expenditures needed to be made.
Re: Race Card Fraud
Well that's ok then. As long as they only had a few slaves.......................
- callmeslick
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Re: Race Card Fraud
given the mores of the time, yes, it was acceptable. Although, you provide a fine example of how the nation has grown to accept what is morally right. I'll bet, if Rasmussen were here to do polls in 1750, 90% of the citizens would have considered owning slaves to be ok. Doesn't make it right, does it? Now, go back to your thread with the poll data and consider how your stepped on your own dick again, and as is becoming alarmingly regular, come off as a slow-witted buffoon. A real joke, actually.ruggbutt wrote:Well that's ok then. As long as they only had a few slaves.......................


