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"The second American revolution"

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Blogger Unknown said...

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Actually, if you want to be precisely accurate, the first Civil Rights Revolution was in 1776, when seditious slaveowners who did not want to pay their taxes, claimed oppression and spoke of freedom and liberty, treacherously betrayed their King and got a lot of people killed so they could evade their taxes.
But no freedom and liberty for the slaves.
Then when the “oppressive” British Empire abolished slavery in 1833, without killing two percent of its population in a civil war and even had the “oppressive” ROYAL NAVY INTERDICTING SLAVE SHIPS, the free and liberated United States kept its slaves.
So no Revolutionary War and slaves would have been freed decades earlier.
Something to think about when you bite into that Fourth of July hot dog. Try not to choke.
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January 18, 2018 at 10:36 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The United States is certainly not nor has it ever been a "perfect" government or place to live. The saving grace of the United States is that eventually, through argument, debate and at times, peaceful civil disobedience has changed and evolved, moving more and more toward a more perfect society. It is the writers' opinion that we will never reach "perfection" but should never stop striving to improve our society. Those individuals that constantly look back at times of less "perfection", do the United States and its citizenry a disservice by tearing the scabs off of old wounds that were being healed by time.

January 23, 2018 at 12:57 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

By the time Britain enacted the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, Massachusetts had been a free state for 50 years. A dozen US states had abolition statutes or constitutional provisions before 1833. (Five states had abolition statutes before The Constitution of The United States of America had been ratified.)

The British Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 started by freeing those who had not yet reached the age of six years. That act transformed slaves into "apprentices" with a six-year term of commitment to their masters. That act did not abolish slavery in colonies controlled by the East India Company - the monopoly whose favored tax treatment was what incited the Boston Tea Party.

The British Empire then used its imperial navy to suppress the Atlantic slave trade, which reduced competition with British colonial slave labor (which centered around the Indian Ocean).

So, no Revolutionary War and the British might have left slavery to continue in their American colonies, just as they did their Indian colonies. In that scenario, would the American Colonies have been in a position to provide Britain with so much support in WWII? Or would the American Colonies have ended up being more like Afghanistan, Jordan, Iraq, India, Pakistan, Burma, Ceylon, Cyprus and so many other now-former colonies?

January 24, 2018 at 4:23 PM

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