Brad Sallows
Army.ca Legend
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Nationalism is owned by (exclusively part of) neither the "left" nor the "right".
PuckChaser said:Republicans are racist because they don't pick candidates by race?
Loachman said:Republicans fought slavery and elected the first black US Senator, Hiram Revels, and first black House members, Jefferson Long and Joseph Rainey, in 1869. It took the Democrats sixty-six years longer to elect their first Congressman, Arthur Mitchell, and just shy of a century longer to elect their first black Senator, Edward Brooke in 1967
PuckChaser said:Is life better for their communities since the Civil Rights movement?
mariomike said:That's nice. But, the fact is, African-Americans tend to support Democrats,
mariomike said:147 years later, there is still only one Republican African-American US Senator - Tim Scott. *
SEPT. 14, 2017
Statement from Senator Scott:
"Antifa is bad and should be condemned, yes, but the KKK has been killing and tormenting black Americans for centuries. There is no realistic comparison. Period."
* In a subsequent news release, the White House misidentified Scott in a photo caption by calling him “Senator Tom Scott.”
daftandbarmy said:And how many Irish Catholics?
Kennedy.
Reagan doesn't count. He was from California.
mariomike said:147 years later, there is still only one Republican African-American US Senator - Tim Scott.
mariomike said:I would agree. But, I would not say that makes a moral equivalence to what African-Americans experienced.
kkwd said:Ben Shapiro will speak at Berkley in a few minutes. You can see the advance protesting going on on twitchy.com. Sure you might have no respect for the source but it is there in black and white what is going on.
https://twitchy.com/sd-3133/2017/09/14/ready-to-rumble-ben-shapiro-dumps-more-cold-water-on-berkeley-snowflakes/
Halifax Tar said:That's laughable. I truly hope you are just playing devils advocate.
Bird_Gunner45 said:Really? If you are referring to indentured servitude than its not equivalent to slavery .
Halifax Tar said:I think you need to do some reading on the Irish experience from 1169 (English/Norman invasions) onward. These people were violently; and with extreme prejudice, oppressed on their own land by a foreign power for hundreds of years. The victimhood of racism isn't solely owned by races and colors other than white.
You cannot discuss the Irish in America with out digging into the roots of the emigration from Erin and the Irish diaspora. Not to mention the Irish Catholics, during the Potatoe Famine and US Civil War, were not exactly welcome on the shores of the USA unless they were to be used as fodder for the US Civil War.
Bird_Gunner45 said:A fine vernacular point- the definition of racism is, "a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race." So, no, there was no "racism" towards Irish as they were being prejudiced against by members of the same race.
I don't think anyone is saying that everything was always 100% peachy for the Irish, Italians, Ukrainians, and many other European nationalities. The assertion is that indentured servitude isn't equal to slavery. Indentured servitude started in the early 1600's (1607 according to some sources) as landowners in the Americas realized they had too much land to work on their own and only wealthy people could generally afford to travel to the new world. The system was based on medieval practices and allowed for poor people displaced by the trials and tribulations of the 30 years war (at first at least) to find employment. This is why 2/3 of the initial immigrants came as indentured servants. The new "boss" paid for the trip, clothes, room, board and "freedom" dues in exchange for roughly a 4-7 year contract. After the contract was complete, the indentured servants were often provided resources as part of their "freedom dues" and were free to move about.
The key difference between indentured servitude and slavery is the contractual agreement, the (relatively) free nature of the agreement, and the fact that the landowner didn't own the servants and couldn't sell them as desired. Slaves were generally not free to enter into the slavery agreement, considered property, had little to no hope of freedom, and treated far worse than the servants generally were (since landowners were aware that the servants would be free at some point, it behooved them to treat their servants with some level of dignity and respect as they would eventually be taking their leave.
As for the treatment of the Irish in Ireland there is no argument that it was poor and led to hundreds of years of low level (and sometimes not so low level) insurrection and antagony with the British. However, this isn't "racism" by definition as the British and Irish are both Caucasian... prejudice is a better modifier.
Undoubtedly the Irish experience was one of trials and tribulations. However, I disagree that it is the same as slavery.
Bruce Monkhouse said:Waaaaaaaaaah. ..my ancestors suffered more then your ancestors.
Humans are friggin' stupid...
Bruce Monkhouse said:Not in reference to just your post......just a lot of humans in general.
Halifax Tar said:I would agree. The violent oppression and attempted extermination, in various insidious ways, of an entire culture/race/religious group of people for hundreds and hundreds of years is not the same as slavery.
Your debate about whether the treatment of the Irish was racism or prejudice is semantics and a red herring, and does nothing to further your position.
Again, I reaffirm my position that the victimhood of racism/prejudice/oppression (what ever word you choose) is not the sole property of races and cultures other than white/Caucasian.
PuckChaser said:That's the kind of BS identity politics that lost the Democrats the election.
PuckChaser said:Barrack Obama won 2 elections shutting down the notion that white Americans are so racist they won't elect a black man.