It's Amazing How Little Some White People Really Know About American History

IM2

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Mar 11, 2015
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OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
Which one was the 114th amendment again? I forget.
 
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OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
Well, since the founders believed that God gave this land to white Europeans...

Revelation 12: 14

"And to the woman (the church, descendants of Israel) were given two wings of a great eagle (the archangel Michael, who defends Israel), that she might fly into the wilderness (the New World, America), into her place (a land given to her by God), where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent (the Holy Roman Empire that persecuted the true church)."

That there, is the foundational history of white America.
 
Well, since the founders believed that God gave this land to white Europeans...

Revelation 12: 14

"And to the woman (the church, descendants of Israel) were given two wings of a great eagle (the archangel Michael, who defends Israel), that she might fly into the wilderness (the New World, America), into her place (a land given to her by God), where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent (the Holy Roman Empire that persecuted the true church)."

That there, is the foundational history of white America.
Since America apparently was not given by God to whites since nonwhites were already here, try explaining the implications of the 1790 Naturalization Act until the 14th Amendment instead of the usual white racist divert and dodge tactic. Because white Christian Identity is a false philosophy and anyone teaching it to you was a false prophet.
 
Yes I want to take history lessons from someone who cannot even explain what his 114th Amendment says....or not.
14 Amendment. Don't play spelling Nazi and explain the implications of whites only citizenship up until the 14th Amendment.
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.

What's more amazing is how distorted the history is, that some white people believe they know.
 
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14 Amendment. Don't play spelling Nazi and explain the implications of whites only citizenship up until the 14th Amendment.
The 14th Amendment was ratified in the 1860's. My native american ancestors did not get citizenship until 1924. Since this does not have meaningful impact on my life 100 years later, I really have a hard time believing it has a meaningful impact on yours 140 years later. Now, if you want to blame Jim Crow laws that still have living victims of, have at it. Blaming something George Washington signed into law 230 plus years ago is a stretch.
 
The 14th Amendment was ratified in the 1860's. My native american ancestors did not get citizenship until 1924. Since this does not have meaningful impact on my life 100 years later, I really have a hard time believing it has a meaningful impact on yours 140 years later. Now, if you want to blame Jim Crow laws that still have living victims of, have at it. Blaming something George Washington signed into law 230 plus years ago is a stretch.
So now you are native American. Therefore, you should know the implication of how policies created by whites throughout our history have impacted us today. The fact your ancestors got citizenship 100 years ago does affect you now because from 1776 until 1924 they were unable to own property or accumulate wealth that could have been passed down through generations. And even after being given citizenship your people were excluded from programs that allowed whites to create and maintain wealth. All these things together create today, so it is a stupid argument to claim that something that happened 100 years ago doesn't impact you, especially as a Native American because your ancestors were the original nations of this country.

I started with 1790 for a reason, because that was not the only ruling that had impact. That was just the beginning. So do not argue the white man's argument about how 100 years ago doesn't impact us now only when the issue is race, because that argument is not used when we see people talking about a return to the intent of the ideas of men who lived over 200 years ago in order to erase anything that has allowed equal opportunity.
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
So the US was a white country founded and built by whites. But you might notice that a few years later, all the French Creoles in Louisiana were citizens, and a couple of decades later all the Latinos in the Southwest states were citizens. Not to mention all the Japanese and Chinese immigrants who became citizens. In 1790 there were no Blacks or Asians trying to immigrate to the new United States. The US wasn't settled by Japanese, Chinese or Africans. Based upon their racist leanings, they would have prevented whites from immigrating at all, let alone becoming citizens. According to the global standards of 1790, people like you weren't even human, you were domestic animals without rights of any kind. White people have changed things for blacks immensely over the centuries; without massive white support, there would have been no civil rights movement; the demonstrations would have been met by tanks and machine guns like they were in Eastern Europe at the time.
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
You are not living under 1790 laws today.
 
So now you are native American. Therefore, you should know the implication of how policies created by whites throughout our history have impacted us today. The fact your ancestors got citizenship 100 years ago does affect you now because from 1776 until 1924 they were unable to own property or accumulate wealth that could have been passed down through generations. And even after being given citizenship your people were excluded from programs that allowed whites to create and maintain wealth. All these things together create today, so it is a stupid argument to claim that something that happened 100 years ago doesn't impact you, especially as a Native American because your ancestors were the original nations of this country.

I started with 1790 for a reason, because that was not the only ruling that had impact. That was just the beginning. So do not argue the white man's argument about how 100 years ago doesn't impact us now only when the issue is race, because that argument is not used when we see people talking about a return to the intent of the ideas of men who lived over 200 years ago in order to erase anything that has allowed equal opportunity.
Pick a place located in Africa that will solve all of your problems.
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.

Negro...are you still a slave? Why do you act as one?

America changed long ago. Get up to date.



Batboy 464kb.jpg
 
OK, let's break things down about our history because it's clear that a lot of whites in this forum, specifically on the right do not seem to understand the implications of things that have occurred during our history. So let's start at the very beginning. I'll be merciful and not include colonial laws.

On March 26,1790, the United States of America decided who could be a citizen of this country for the first time. The Naturalization Act of 1790 states: “any alien, being a free white person,” could apply for citizenship, so long as they lived in the United States for at least two years and in the state where the application was filed for at least one year. Please notice the first seven words. Only whites were entitled to be citizens of this country.

Now do any of you understand the implications this policy had until the 114th Amendment? Or do you want to pretend that this law meant nothing, and everybody had the exact same rights regardless of race? Do not try that stale ass that was in the past bs, because July 4th, 1776, was even farther past than 1790 and you can recognize the impact of the signing of that document on us as citizens today.
Another boring lecture about ancient history. yawn :th_smiley_emoticons_gaehn:
 

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