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Are you ashamed to be White? Are you ashamed to be reading this blog? Are you afraid of being called racist, or intolerant? Well, don't ...

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Postbellum Slavery

 The Marleyans absolutely love talking about American slavery like it was a living nightmare. They make it sound as if torture, abuse, and rape were common occurrences on every plantation, and they claim that modern day police forces are based on runaway slave hunters collecting bounties on blacks who tried to break free.

The truth is, very few people were employed solely to catch runaway slaves, because runaways were extremely rare. The harsh truth of the matter is that life in the antebellum for a black person wasn't that bad. In exchange for freedom, you at least had a warm place to sleep, you always knew where your next meal was coming from, and some slaves were even paid money, which could be used to purchase your freedom, among other things. While abusive slaveowners undoubtedly existed, they were rare and far-between. Slaves were an extremely valuable commodity after the Yankees banned their importation; you had to treat them well and ensure they lived as long as possible, because breeding them was a slow and inefficient process.

None of this is justifying slavery; it's the opposite in fact. Because in a way, antebellum slavery bears a lot of parallels to the modern day.

What really kept a slave in his position, more than anything else, was being institutionalized. All of the people around him who looked like him were enslaved. Being enslaved was just a fact of life. Eventually you get used to it. You find satisfaction in doing a job well done, and you come to respect and even love your master. It provides structure in your life. It's just like being in prison- former inmates often have a hard time adjusting to the outside world, and repeat offenders are common. 

Freedom means giving up your place to stay, your source of food, and potentially your family. It means going to a new place and starting over. While many slaves knew it was a worthy goal, they often had to be coerced into it. Harriet Tubman, famous for her work in the Underground Railroad, actually carried a gun to make sure her quarries didn't chicken out on her. 

Slave owners knew this, so they played into it. They wrote stories and, later on, movies portraying themselves as being heavily concerned with their slaves' well-being, which wasn't entirely untrue. Stockholm syndrome works both ways. They portrayed slavery as the natural order, and even altered the Bible to make it so that the Israelites never fled Egypt under the hand of Moses. 

When you think about the things modern-day religious leaders are pushing, you start to see the parallels to our current age. Globalists are normalizing your subservience the same way slave-owners acclimated their slaves to the farm. Ignore what the Bible actually says- Jesus never said anything about abortion, and He loved gays! 

Don't worry about the massive debt you're going into to buy a house and an education- if you make enough money, one day you'll buy your freedom! And in the meantime, look at all this delicious food we can provide you! Look at all these video games and Marvel movies! Speaking of movies, look at all these films and TV shows where White people are idiots, racists, and martyrs, while non-whites are heroes, sassy queens, and oppressed victims!

I fully expect the next generation to either be entirely socialized like this, or to enter into a bitter race war, unless we can fight back against it here and now. Fighting back means giving up a lot of things, just like running away from the plantation. You must resist institutionalization, and never become dependent on what they have to offer. The White race depends on it. 

At the end of the day, the one thing in my opinion that makes Antebellum slavery morally superior to the society being forced upon us today is that at least black slaves knew they weren't free. Our globalist masters are trying to make us believe otherwise.


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