If No One Today Owned Slaves...

Then why do Republicans keep trying to talk about today's Democrats and slavery?

There is a lot modern republicans choose not to tell young blacks as they try luring blacks into supporting a move back into Jim Crow. First, not all Republicans were for racial equality. The Party had several factions in the beginning. One was the Radical Republicans. The Radical Republicans were for the eradication of slavery. They were not conservatives. Frederick Douglass was a Radical Republican. Lincoln was moderate politically. He opposed the expansion of slavery but did not believe in racial equality.

As the country began splitting up, a great panic started consuming the outgoing Buchanan administration and members of congress. They wanted to keep the union together. They did not want the south to leave. They did not want war. President Buchanan declared secession was a constitutional crisis and then asked Congress to develop a plan to keep the south in the union.4 He wanted Congress to assure the southern states that slavery would be protected once Lincoln took office. Congress offered over fifty different proposals trying to keep the union together. In the end, congress settled for a proposal by Republican Thomas Corwin. It is called the Corwin Amendment, or more accurately, the slavery amendment.

The Corwin Amendment is a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been adopted, but owing to the absence of a ratification deadline, could still be adopted by the state legislatures. It would shield slavery within the states from the federal constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Although the Corwin Amendment does not explicitly use the word slavery, it was designed specifically to protect slavery from federal power. The out-going 36th United States Congress proposed the Corwin Amendment on March 2, 1861, shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War, with the intent of preventing that war and preserving the Union. It passed Congress but was not ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures.

Several Southern states attempted to secede after the 1860 presidential election, eventually forming the Confederate States of America. Several federal legislative measures, including the Corwin Amendment, were proposed during this period in the hope of either reconciling the sections of the United States or avoiding the secession of the border states. Senator William H. Seward and Representative Thomas Corwin, Republicans and allies of President-elect Abraham Lincoln, introduced the Corwin Amendment, which was endorsed by the outgoing president, James Buchanan. Because it was only ratified in a handful of Northern states and Kentucky, the amendment failed to achieve its goal of preventing civil war and preserving the Union. Ultimately, it fell out of favor during the Civil War.



This was proposed by 2 republicans, it's documented fact and it's time republicans stopped posting disingenuous junk. Blacks know the history and the more you think we are stupid enough to fall for your tale and keep trying to tell it, the more we will refuse to become Republicans.
It’s a historical fact that democrats were the party of slavery. I’m not saying there are slave owners today, but their role as a party in slavery shouldn’t be white washed
Then why do Republicans keep trying to talk about today's Democrats and slavery?

There is a lot modern republicans choose not to tell young blacks as they try luring blacks into supporting a move back into Jim Crow. First, not all Republicans were for racial equality. The Party had several factions in the beginning. One was the Radical Republicans. The Radical Republicans were for the eradication of slavery. They were not conservatives. Frederick Douglass was a Radical Republican. Lincoln was moderate politically. He opposed the expansion of slavery but did not believe in racial equality.

As the country began splitting up, a great panic started consuming the outgoing Buchanan administration and members of congress. They wanted to keep the union together. They did not want the south to leave. They did not want war. President Buchanan declared secession was a constitutional crisis and then asked Congress to develop a plan to keep the south in the union.4 He wanted Congress to assure the southern states that slavery would be protected once Lincoln took office. Congress offered over fifty different proposals trying to keep the union together. In the end, congress settled for a proposal by Republican Thomas Corwin. It is called the Corwin Amendment, or more accurately, the slavery amendment.

The Corwin Amendment is a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been adopted, but owing to the absence of a ratification deadline, could still be adopted by the state legislatures. It would shield slavery within the states from the federal constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Although the Corwin Amendment does not explicitly use the word slavery, it was designed specifically to protect slavery from federal power. The out-going 36th United States Congress proposed the Corwin Amendment on March 2, 1861, shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War, with the intent of preventing that war and preserving the Union. It passed Congress but was not ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures.

Several Southern states attempted to secede after the 1860 presidential election, eventually forming the Confederate States of America. Several federal legislative measures, including the Corwin Amendment, were proposed during this period in the hope of either reconciling the sections of the United States or avoiding the secession of the border states. Senator William H. Seward and Representative Thomas Corwin, Republicans and allies of President-elect Abraham Lincoln, introduced the Corwin Amendment, which was endorsed by the outgoing president, James Buchanan. Because it was only ratified in a handful of Northern states and Kentucky, the amendment failed to achieve its goal of preventing civil war and preserving the Union. Ultimately, it fell out of favor during the Civil War.



This was proposed by 2 republicans, it's documented fact and it's time republicans stopped posting disingenuous junk. Blacks know the history and the more you think we are stupid enough to fall for your tale and keep trying to tell it, the more we will refuse to become Republicans.
you can’t complain of slavery being white washed and at the same time deny the democrats role in slavery
 
You should forget, because the republican party of today is the party of racism and the confederacy.
The problem with your scenario is that many politicians are chameleons. Joe is the opposite of his views near a half century ago. He adjusted for power and money and not personal integrity.
 
Republicans freed the slaves.

Democrats tried to keep the slaves on the plantations.

Democrats tried to keep Blacks from voting for decades after the Civil War.

Democrats only snuggled-up to Blacks when they realized that they could buy Black votes with welfare and statutes.

Democrats nowadays play the Race Card every thirty seconds trying to suppress opposition to their kiss-ass policies.

Republicans have always been more honest about race relations and moving minorities towards equality than Democrats.
I like how we have these Simps shitting on the memory of Democrats like Robert E Lee and Jefferson Davis and yet they don't realize how thoroughly they've been conquered. Having them claim along with us that Robert E Lee was a piece of human shit from a shit culture is a victory. Let's all celebrate together! 😄
 
It’s a historical fact that democrats were the party of slavery. I’m not saying there are slave owners today, but their role as a party in slavery shouldn’t be white washed

you can’t complain of slavery being white washed and at the same time deny the democrats role in slavery
What should not be whitewashed is the republican complicity in slavery and segregation. Nobody denies the role democrats had in the past but its disingenuous to make the claims that are being made by republicans here all the time. The fact is that today's Republican party is the party of white supremacists, the lost cause, and racism. That's why Republicans repeat this bullshit all the time. Republicans wrote the Corwin Amendment. A Republican president made the agreement to end reconstruction. Jim Crow was maintained by Republican legislators making compromises with southern democrats. These are the facts Republicans here don't talk about, THIS is whitewashing history and it's time this dishonest bullshit came to an end.
 
Or in freeing them and giving them the right to vote.
Didn't your Founder heroes teach you anything? Rights are inalienable aren't they? That's how the story goes right? In that case you can't give someone rights can you? You can only stop infringing on them. White people finally relenting and agreeing to not infringe on the inalienable rights of black people isn't the win you apparently think it is.
 
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Didn't your Founder heroes teach you anything? Rights are inalienable aren't they? That's how the story goes right? In that case you can't give someone rights can you? You can only stop infringing on them. White people finally relenting and agreeing to not infringe on the inalienable rights of black people isn't the win you apparently think it is.

Didn't your Founder heroes teach you anything? Rights are inalienable aren't they?

Except for those Dems, eh?
 
Didn't your Founder heroes teach you anything? Rights are inalienable aren't they?

Except for those Dems, eh?
Is that all you got? I'm happy that you agree with me that Democrats Robert E Lee, Jefferson Davis, and Nathan Bedford Forrest were shit people from a shit culture. 😄 Good boy.
 
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Dixiecrats became Republicans after 1965.
/——/ That lie has been refuted many times. I grew up in the segregated south in the 50s and 60s. The old Dixiecrats stayed that way until they died off. The young people like me registered as Republicans. I was there, not you.
 
Then why do Republicans keep trying to talk about today's Democrats and slavery?

There is a lot modern republicans choose not to tell young blacks as they try luring blacks into supporting a move back into Jim Crow. First, not all Republicans were for racial equality. The Party had several factions in the beginning. One was the Radical Republicans. The Radical Republicans were for the eradication of slavery. They were not conservatives. Frederick Douglass was a Radical Republican. Lincoln was moderate politically. He opposed the expansion of slavery but did not believe in racial equality.

As the country began splitting up, a great panic started consuming the outgoing Buchanan administration and members of congress. They wanted to keep the union together. They did not want the south to leave. They did not want war. President Buchanan declared secession was a constitutional crisis and then asked Congress to develop a plan to keep the south in the union.4 He wanted Congress to assure the southern states that slavery would be protected once Lincoln took office. Congress offered over fifty different proposals trying to keep the union together. In the end, congress settled for a proposal by Republican Thomas Corwin. It is called the Corwin Amendment, or more accurately, the slavery amendment.

The Corwin Amendment is a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been adopted, but owing to the absence of a ratification deadline, could still be adopted by the state legislatures. It would shield slavery within the states from the federal constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Although the Corwin Amendment does not explicitly use the word slavery, it was designed specifically to protect slavery from federal power. The out-going 36th United States Congress proposed the Corwin Amendment on March 2, 1861, shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War, with the intent of preventing that war and preserving the Union. It passed Congress but was not ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures.

Several Southern states attempted to secede after the 1860 presidential election, eventually forming the Confederate States of America. Several federal legislative measures, including the Corwin Amendment, were proposed during this period in the hope of either reconciling the sections of the United States or avoiding the secession of the border states. Senator William H. Seward and Representative Thomas Corwin, Republicans and allies of President-elect Abraham Lincoln, introduced the Corwin Amendment, which was endorsed by the outgoing president, James Buchanan. Because it was only ratified in a handful of Northern states and Kentucky, the amendment failed to achieve its goal of preventing civil war and preserving the Union. Ultimately, it fell out of favor during the Civil War.



This was proposed by 2 republicans, it's documented fact and it's time republicans stopped posting disingenuous junk. Blacks know the history and the more you think we are stupid enough to fall for your tale and keep trying to tell it, the more we will refuse to become Republicans.

They don't have much to talk about. Dems talk about slavery all the time as well.

Biden gun strip LR.jpg
 
Then why do Republicans keep trying to talk about today's Democrats and slavery?

There is a lot modern republicans choose not to tell young blacks as they try luring blacks into supporting a move back into Jim Crow. First, not all Republicans were for racial equality. The Party had several factions in the beginning. One was the Radical Republicans. The Radical Republicans were for the eradication of slavery. They were not conservatives. Frederick Douglass was a Radical Republican. Lincoln was moderate politically. He opposed the expansion of slavery but did not believe in racial equality.

As the country began splitting up, a great panic started consuming the outgoing Buchanan administration and members of congress. They wanted to keep the union together. They did not want the south to leave. They did not want war. President Buchanan declared secession was a constitutional crisis and then asked Congress to develop a plan to keep the south in the union.4 He wanted Congress to assure the southern states that slavery would be protected once Lincoln took office. Congress offered over fifty different proposals trying to keep the union together. In the end, congress settled for a proposal by Republican Thomas Corwin. It is called the Corwin Amendment, or more accurately, the slavery amendment.

The Corwin Amendment is a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been adopted, but owing to the absence of a ratification deadline, could still be adopted by the state legislatures. It would shield slavery within the states from the federal constitutional amendment process and from abolition or interference by Congress. Although the Corwin Amendment does not explicitly use the word slavery, it was designed specifically to protect slavery from federal power. The out-going 36th United States Congress proposed the Corwin Amendment on March 2, 1861, shortly before the outbreak of the American Civil War, with the intent of preventing that war and preserving the Union. It passed Congress but was not ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures.

Several Southern states attempted to secede after the 1860 presidential election, eventually forming the Confederate States of America. Several federal legislative measures, including the Corwin Amendment, were proposed during this period in the hope of either reconciling the sections of the United States or avoiding the secession of the border states. Senator William H. Seward and Representative Thomas Corwin, Republicans and allies of President-elect Abraham Lincoln, introduced the Corwin Amendment, which was endorsed by the outgoing president, James Buchanan. Because it was only ratified in a handful of Northern states and Kentucky, the amendment failed to achieve its goal of preventing civil war and preserving the Union. Ultimately, it fell out of favor during the Civil War.



This was proposed by 2 republicans, it's documented fact and it's time republicans stopped posting disingenuous junk. Blacks know the history and the more you think we are stupid enough to fall for your tale and keep trying to tell it, the more we will refuse to become Republicans.
As the article YOU posted says, the Corwin Amendment was a last-ditch effort to avoid a civil war that eventually killed or injured millions of people and was unnecessary since slavery was dying a natural death all over the world. Mechanization was killing it and the South had already ruined it's plantations by over growing and not resting the soil. The slaveholders were forced to do that by the extremely high costs of keeping their slaves. Was a decade or two of continued slavery worth killing or wounding one million six hundred thousand troops and uncounted civilians? If the Corwin Amendment had actually passed, there wouldn't have been the southern hostility towards blacks that resulted in Jum Crow and you'd have nothing to complain about. The US would be like the other slave-holding countries where slavery died a natural death like Brazil where there is little animosity based upon past events.
 
/——/ That lie has been refuted many times. I grew up in the segregated south in the 50s and 60s. The old Dixiecrats stayed that way until they died off. The young people like me registered as Republicans. I was there, not you.
That's an admission of the switch..... 😄

A lot of young Dixiecrat aides later ran as Republicans like Trent Lott.

Professor Kruse has an excellent old Twitter thread detailing these switches.

 
Housing?

fined for discriminating against black people in his hotels, twice.

Not hotels? LOL!
Hotels, condos, whatever. It's not surprising that's what you'd rather focus on than his housing discrimination. You're not really doing anything with these arguments other than suggesting that White America as a whole is hella racist like you were BLM or something. 😄
 
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That's an admission of the switch..... 😄

A lot of young Dixiecrat aides later ran as Republicans like Trent Lott.

Professor Kruse has an excellent old Twitter thread detailing these switches.



A lot of young Dixiecrat aides later ran as Republicans like Trent Lott.

Dixiecrat aide? What's that?
 

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