Slavery in Africa - Wikipedia
"
Chattel slavery is a specific servitude relationship where the slave is treated as the property of the owner. As such, the owner is free to sell, trade, or treat the slave as he would other pieces of property and the children of the slave often are retained as the property of the master.
[8] There is evidence of long histories of chattel slavery in the Nile river valley and Northern Africa, but evidence is incomplete about the extent and practices of chattel slavery throughout much of the rest of the continent prior to written records by Arab or European traders."
Wrong again read my link and stop asserting nonsense
Note: "...evidence is incomplete." Also from the article:
"The forms of slavery in Africa were closely related to
kinship structures. In many African communities, where land could not be owned, enslavement of individuals was used as a means to increase the influence a person had and expand connections.
[7] This made slaves a permanent part of a master's lineage and the children of slaves could become closely connected with the larger family ties.
[1]Children of slaves born into families could be integrated into the master's kinship group and rise to prominent positions within society..."
And:
"Many slave relationships in Africa revolved around domestic slavery, where slaves would work primarily in the house of the master but retain some freedoms. Domestic slaves could be considered part of the master's household and would not be sold to others without extreme cause. The slaves could own the profits from their labour (whether in land or in products), and could marry and pass the land on to their children in many cases."
Also:
"According to Ugo Kwokeji, early European reports of slavery throughout Africa in the 1600s are unreliable because they often conflated various forms of servitude as equal to chattel slavery...kinship structures and rights provided to slaves (except those captured in war) appears to have limited the scope of slave trading before the start of the Arab slave trade and the Atlantic slave trade."
If modern America must share the guilt of its ancestors in the past for slavery then so must Africans Americans. You cannot apply guilt to one and not another. That is injustice.
Then admit African Americans share the burden of guilt of slavery as does the rest of America.
As I've stated, African Americans are the descendants of slaves not the slave traders. We are (as I provided evidence for) still dealing with the repercussions of their enslavement. While likely
everyone has the very human cultural guilt of slavery given its ubiquity, I am not willing to assign guilt of the Atlantic slave trade to the descendants of its victims. Least of all while climates of racism towards them still exist.
Due to the treatment of their own ancestors. If Britain never decided to use slaves in the Colonies, the slaves from Africa would have still been slaves, they just would have been sold elsewhere is all.
So you are suggesting that Europeans may as well have used them since they were already enslaved? I mean, they were people not things, and Britain could have just as easily freed them as used them as slaves.
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Leave it in the past and move forward like Jay.
I get that often the Southern Cross is used as a symbol of heritage: oddly, lots of my fellow rural Mainers fly it as a symbol of rural identity (mostly for controversy or to align with pop country culture, I think, since New England has its own rural identity separate from the South). However, it's connection to a racist past should not be forgotten. Consider the similarities between Holocaust denial and the role of slavery in Southern succession:
https://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/world/article29557972.html
"It’s notable that when Ku Klux Klan members recently rallied in South Carolina, they carried both the battle flag and the Nazi swastika. The two flags in recent years have been commonly seen together at white supremacist groups and gatherings.
'Those who fly both flags rely on horribly distorted versions of history,' said Potok. 'They both say that the Civil War wasn’t about slavery, and that the Holocaust was exaggerated, or didn’t happen.'"