Taft2016
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Two books is more than the average american? Maybe where you live. Arrogance, meet your new equal.
Did I say only two books?
It's incredible how well you libs argue against points that no one ever made.
Two books is more than the average american? Maybe where you live. Arrogance, meet your new equal.
Now you are comparable to Lincoln? You agree with Racist Y and in the same sentence compare yourself to Lincoln. Spaz.
Now you are comparable to Lincoln? You agree with Racist Y and in the same sentence compare yourself to Lincoln. Spaz.
Shyte. It says what I was saying almost word for word:
We can say with relative certainty that had the South been allowed to go her way,
600,000 American lives would have been saved and a hundred and twenty-five years of a
unique kind of racial oppression and hatred subsequent to it might have been prevented.
Of course, much of what we see through the clarity of hindsight we cannot reasonably
expect the participants at the time to have seen.
Thanks for that!
Thanks for that!
Yeah if you knew half as much as you say you do you would know that Southerners have been saying this since around 1865! So to only have two sources of this here is not only amazing it is simply stupyfying that none of you dolts have a clue that this argument is as old as the damn war itself.
Where's that book photo?
Did I say only two books?
It's incredible how well you libs argue against points that no one ever made.
Yeah, like you knew that without Googling it .
And I suppose you missed the point that I was in Natchez at the time on an historical tour?
I never said I was a "southern scholar." I said I've read on it quite a bit, probably more than the average American. And I've actually taken the time to travel and visit the locations in question, their museums, etc. A long way from my home in New York City.
Again, arguing against points that no one ever made.
Are you really impressed with this mental masturbation of yours?
And where's the source verifying no white man was ever convicted of rape in south for 400 years?
Arguing? Hardly. I quoted you. That means those ARE the points you actually made.
Kindly demonstrate where I said I "was comparable to Lincoln".
Prakosh is dirt poor and lives on the West Coast, so he can't afford to go to the South to see for himself.
Certainly. That would be here in the same post you agree with Racist Y (ILA);
Today, 08:25 AMTaft2016
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Join DateAug 2013Posts1,457Thanks685Thanked 1,394 Times in 984 PostsGroans6Groaned 175 Times in 163 Posts
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Good points. I agree about Lincoln and the Civil War.
If the Confederacy would have been allowed to stand on its own for maybe 10 more years.... the pressure from attempting to trade with foreign nations repulsed by slavery would have lead them to end it on their own. In the end, they would have recognized more in common with the north than at odds. But the southern mind of the time was obstinate about being told what to do...they were descendants of the Scottish/Irish clan mentalities of the old world.
But in this we have 20/20 hindsight, which Lincoln did not have. In his place at the time, I probably would have acted as Lincoln did.
Mr. Tik squeezes the juice from Lensy's soiled Depends.![]()
Why don't you prove it wrong? It was your claim after all. You are a serious idiot. I guess you just seemed smart when compared to Truth Detecter! LOL
If you want to know more stuff I've read about the era...
Virtually everything Bruce Catton, Shelby Foote, and Douglass Freeman wrote to start with. Numerous primary source memoirs of leaders from the era; Grant, Sherman, Longstreet, Beauregard... those come to mind off the top of my head. And a lot of this stuff naturally covered slavery as well as it was a key cause of the war.
Mostly about the war itself, some about southern antebellum culture, the leadup to the war. One was entirely about the Confederate gov't itself as an administrative structure. Reconstruction. As a New Yorker, I was also read up on the draft riots, which was also a backlash against abolition. Fernando Wood. Etc. Lots. I don't remember all titles because I don't own all of the books.
And, as I've said, I've visited these places. Spent long days in the museums, etc.
But enough about me.... let's about how white men in the south were not convicted of rape for 400 years. And let's see that photo of the book.
If you want to know more stuff I've read about the era...
Virtually everything Bruce Catton, Shelby Foote, and Douglass Freeman wrote to start with. Numerous primary source memoirs of leaders from the era; Grant, Sherman, Longstreet, Beauregard... those come to mind off the top of my head. And a lot of this stuff naturally covered slavery as well as it was a key cause of the war.
Mostly about the war itself, some about southern antebellum culture, the leadup to the war. One was entirely about the Confederate gov't itself as an administrative structure. Reconstruction. As a New Yorker, I was also read up on the draft riots, which was also a backlash against abolition. Fernando Wood. Etc. Lots. I don't remember all titles because I don't own all of the books.
And, as I've said, I've visited these places. Spent long days in the museums, etc.
But enough about me.... let's about how white men in the south were not convicted of rape for 400 years. And let's see that photo of the book.
If you want to know more stuff I've read about the era...
Virtually everything Bruce Catton, Shelby Foote, and Douglass Freeman wrote to start with. Numerous primary source memoirs of leaders from the era; Grant, Sherman, Longstreet, Beauregard... those come to mind off the top of my head. And a lot of this stuff naturally covered slavery as well as it was a key cause of the war.
Mostly about the war itself, some about southern antebellum culture, the leadup to the war. One was entirely about the Confederate gov't itself as an administrative structure. Reconstruction. As a New Yorker, I was also read up on the draft riots, which was also a backlash against abolition. Fernando Wood. Etc. Lots. I don't remember all titles because I don't own all of the books.
And, as I've said, I've visited these places. Spent long days in the museums, etc.
Oh, and several bios about Nathan Bedford Forrest, and yet recently someone on this forum posted something about Forrest I had never read before. So, it's always important to keep reading.
But enough about me.... let's hear about how white men in the south were not convicted of rape for 400 years. And let's see that photo of the book.