Slavery still affects black people in america

Page 10 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

Gunther

Golden Member
Mar 6, 2001
1,292
0
0
I know that this thread has been beaten to death, but here's my opinion anyways I agree that slavery affects people. It does not hinder these people nor take away opportunities in their life. Instead slavery provides people an easy excuse to use for their own shortcomings. I have a very difficult time understanding how people can blame the color of their skin or something that had happened to their great great grandfather/grandmother for their failures. Yes starting in certain economic classes helps life a lot, but I feel that in this country anyone from the lower class can bring themselves up if they work hard enough. Also to get out of the lower class takes a lot of sacrifice, i.e. sacrificing everything for your kids so that they can have better education/life.

You say that slavery had a detrimental effect on people wanting to gain higher education, I disagree. How can you say that people put less emphasis on higher education because of slavery when everyone in this country knows that getting a college degree allows better job opportunities and access to higher classes? African Americans know the importance of education, if they don?t achieve it then it?s just their choice not to get it. Imho I believe that African Americans have the most opportunities for higher education of any group because of African American only scholarships and affirmative action.

From my personal experiences I feel that African Americans are the most racist group? and Asians a close second?

I don?t believe that slavery has effected my generation of African Americans economically. Of course it did when slavery was in effect, but I feel that if they are poor now then it is of their own doing. The reason I believe this is because of personal experience. My parents came here with nothing I would say they were probably lower class then many African Americans yet they were able to make a middle class life for themselves and give me a chance at a good life. I mean they could barely even speak English when they got here? They achieved this through HARD work and sacrifice. My parents had crap lives so that I could have a good life, but as a side of effect of all their hard work they created good lives for themselves. I have also seen this in my friend?s parents.

I don?t know why people see getting to the middle class so difficult in this country. The formula for the American dream is simple:
Do well in high school + Do well in college (pick a good major ) + don?t go to jail + work hard = middle class. It doesn?t work all the time, but I am sure this formula is solid. Done ranting like a lunatic.
 

Pohemi

Diamond Member
Oct 2, 2004
9,374
12,773
146
Originally posted by: Gunther

I don?t know why people see getting to the middle class so difficult in this country. The formula for the American dream is simple:
Do well in high school + Do well in college (pick a good major ) + don?t go to jail + work hard = middle class. It doesn?t work all the time, but I am sure this formula is solid. Done ranting like a lunatic.

Because the middle class in America has been steadily disappearing over the last two decades (ever hear of outsourcing, people?). There are now technically more people in the lower middle class (just above poverty levels basically) and upper middle class (living in a >$400K home in the burbs) than there is a straight middle class to even speak of. This, however, does not necessarily have to do with the color of your skin. There are just as many redneck honkies working in factories as black people or other minorities. Except that you won't really see a cornbread redneck working as an executive making $100K+/yr, where you do see a decent number of African Americans/Asians in positions like these. This is because they went to school and worked to get where they are.

I hear Arkitech's point that he's trying to make, and I do agree that racism IS NOT a moot point in today's America. But I also agree with many of the other posters on this thread- you are responsible for your own destiny. I don't think it's valid any longer to say,"Well, my ancestors were slaves, so I have the right to be a lazy asshole on welfare or be in a gang and hate white people". Bunch of finger pointing that people still want to do after all is said and done.
 

Arkitech

Diamond Member
Apr 13, 2000
8,356
3
76
Again I did'nt create this topic as a way to excuse other people's lack of effort or drive, but this was more in response to another thread where a poster said that slavery did'nt affect people anymore. It offends me when people attempt to explain a situation they have no knowledge on.

To all the people who have had family that immigrated to this country and lived in unfavorable conditions but yet their offspring has manged to succeed I tip my hat to you.

To the people who suggest that I should move on, I already have. In fact I never let the past slow me down or detain me from acheiving my goals. Hell I'm in the process of learning how to break from a well paying job and run my own business. If that does'nt scream of a person not being held back because of the past I don't know what does.

I find it kind of funny however that everyone ignored my statement about Oprah and slavery. Many people used her as an example of how a person from the worst possible background can ascend to great heights of sucess. But yet even the mighty Oprah has strong feelings about the history of black people and the issue of slavery as evidenced in some of her movies. This did'nt mean she felt america owed her something, it did'nt mean she used it as an excuse to become hostile to other races. But as I mentioned before many people have different outlook slavery and how they choose to deal with it.
 

Tom

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
13,293
1
76
Originally posted by: otello
Originally posted by: Arkitech
For those who have taken this post out of context I urge you to at least read this reply.


Slavery is not an excuse for blacks today who choose not to try and make something of themselves. Thats not the intention of this post. The purpose of this thread is to make it clear that slavery although many years ago does indeed affect black people in this country.

ok. assuming this is a true statement, what do you want us to do with information?



I'm not the person you addressed, but here is what I think about it.

The most important reason for not being blind to issues like discrimination, racism, or any other area where there's room for improvement, is that in order to fix a problem you first have to see it.

And as far as what needs to be done about it, I think the most important thing by far is for people to see the world the way it really is, and if something they see, or even something they feel inside themselves, doesn't fit with the idea that all men are created equal, that they make an effort to change.

Because that is really what changed things in the 1960s. Great leaders like MLK, and actions like the Civil Rights Act, Freedom marches, etc., woke people up, made them see things that were unjust, and then individual people changed themselves and changed the world. A little bit anyway.



 

Wuffsunie

Platinum Member
May 4, 2002
2,808
0
0
Originally posted by: FinalFantasy
Tell me, what other race other then "Blacks", has been forced out of their country, taken 3,000 miles, OVER SEA, to foreign country, enslaved and then abandoned in the same country with no "reparations" and left to survive in a world they were not educated or taught to live in.

I can't think of any either.
Then your knowledge of history must suck. With the sole debatable point being sheer distence, I can point to much of ancient history when slavery was an accepted form of commerce. Peoples captured, bought, sold, etc. American blacks were just the last massive group in history that it happened to, and they refuse to let anyone forget it (except for the "last" part)

My favorite retort to the enslavement argument is Liberia. Founded by former slaves in 1821 with help from the American Colonization Society as a form of reparations, it never worked as well as expected. Ironically, the former American slaves became a ruling class in Liberia and constitutionally denied rights and equal participation in government to the indigenous peoples of the country. There are even accounts of them setting up plantations and taking black slaves of their own. Natives were used as forced labor until an admonishment from the League of Nations in 1931 halted the practice.
 

CanOWorms

Lifer
Jul 3, 2001
12,404
2
0
Originally posted by: FinalFantasy
I know for a fact that their are things that SOME Black people in America can change or do in their lives/community/school/etc to "make it", but their are just some "parts of town" that there is literally no way out and the only thing to do is man up, join a gang and start selling then of course they end up in jail, coincidence that half the Black male population is jail?...nope ...Tell me, what other race other then "Blacks", has been forced out of their country, taken 3,000 miles, OVER SEA, to foreign country, enslaved and then abandoned in the same country with no "reparations" and left to survive in a world they were not educated or taught to live in.

I can't think of any either.

Read about the history of colonialism.
 

Codewiz

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2002
5,758
0
76
Originally posted by: HalosPuma
Originally posted by: Arkitech
Some of the reasons slavery still affects people in America

1. The Civil War
That is incorrect. It was the War of Northern Aggression. A sovereign nation - the Confederate States of America - was invaded by Lincoln.

Further, no one is affected by slavery in America. That's just an excuse for lazy people to not do anything. Just take a look at all of the foreigners who have come to our country since the 1960's and how they are successful. The problem is that the black community as a whole thinks they are entitled to something instead of actually working hard to attain it just like all of the other minorities do. Now, if every non-white person was a failure, then that could be something to complain about. In fact, blacks have every advantage over foreigners - they aready speak American English, know our traditions, and have plenty of relatives to support them.

Now, what is still negatively affecting America today? The so-called "civil-rights" movement of the 60's. That piece of legislation has taken away one of the biggest freedoms we had: freedom of association. I have the freedom to be friends with whomever I choose (no homos). I have the freedom to date whomever I choose (white girls). However, if I start my own company, I now have to follow a whole mess of regulations and "affirmative action" for "equal-opportunity employment?" What kind of crap is that? Let the free-market decide. If people are so offended that I won't hire certain types of people, then they won't buy my product and I'll either (a) go out of business; or (b) compromise and hire those other types of people in order to generate more business.

For the record, I do have a black friend and he thinks like Bill Cosby and the other respectable blacks. Never once called his other black friends "n!ggas" or other degrading comments like that, speaks English clearly, and wears clothes that fit him, not XXXXXL sizes.


WOW, just WOW. The stupidity continues.....

And I am from South Carolina(born and raised).
 

g8wayrebel

Senior member
Nov 15, 2004
694
0
0
Originally posted by: FleshLight
Originally posted by: BannedTroll
Originally posted by: FleshLight
Maybe we should continue this thread at http://tightrope.cc

You are an idiot. You are just as bad or worse than those people . Just at the opposite end of the spectrum.

How the hell does that make me an idiot? I'm not even caucasian/aryan/whatever


Fleshlight, and any other ATOT'er who posts such a link,you should catagorize a link such as that in post. There are some of us who would choose not to go to, or be associated with, sights like that one.
 

AmbitV

Golden Member
Oct 20, 1999
1,197
0
0
Hey how about we enslave all minorities, because we can just abolish it in the future again and it'll be okay.
 

RichPLS

Senior member
Nov 21, 2004
477
0
0
Many whites were slaves also. And many blacks were slave owners. History you were taught has been liberalized and distorted.

The Truth About Slavery
from the American Dissident Voices

The history of America and of Western Civilization is not being taught as it should be in our schools and universities today. Historical facts are suppressed, and what is taught is distorted in such a way as to advance the world government agenda, with all inconvenient historical facts, knowledge of which might cause our young people to question that agenda, purposely left out.
It is a tragedy of monumental proportions that our schools have been converted into "liberal" brainwashing institutions, though I do feel a sense of encouragement when I read that more and more real Americans are taking their children out of the public schools and teaching them at home. As regular listeners to this program know, the global elite that push multiculturalism push it because it undermines our national and racial sense of identity, and not out of any love or concern for ethnic minorities. In fact, it should be obvious to everyone that multiculturalism and globalism threaten the racial and cultural integrity of all peoples, not just White Americans. Nevertheless, because America is, or was until recently, a predominantly White nation, one of the primary ways that national disintegration is promoted by the destroyers of nations in this country is by the inculcation of White guilt for Black slavery.
By recounting and emphasizing again and again the real and imagined sufferings of Black people under slavery, the White student is made to feel that his ancestors were cruel, morally retarded, and evil. They are made to feel that they owe Black people a nearly infinite compensation, since, they are taught, Black people's problems today are the legacy of hundreds of years of slavery for which White people are responsible. They are taught that the relative prosperity which we enjoy today was achieved largely by exploitation of Black slaves. Is it any wonder that thousands of our young people join Jesse Jackson in chanting "Hey Hey Ho Ho, Western Culture's Gotta Go"? Is it any wonder that they all too often reject our European cultural heritage and embrace all forms of alien styles of music, dancing, dress, grooming and slang, from Jamaican "rasta" to "gangsta rap"? Is it any wonder that White teenagers are committing suicide in higher numbers every year? They have received, in our public schools and colleges, not a "liberal education," but an education by liberals. They have been taught very well indeed -taught that they and their ancestors and their traditions and their natural feelings are worthless and an obstacle to be overcome.
Now these liberal lies are easily countered by facts. The primary fact that must be emphasized is that many hundreds of thousands of White people were slaves in early America. In fact, White slavery was not only extremely common, but until the late 18th century it was far more common than Black slavery here. Also little known is the fact that living and labor conditions for Black slaves, bad as they often were, were usually far better than those for White slaves.
At this point, many of you are probably saying "White slaves? What in the world is he talking about? Sure, there were White indentured servants and apprentices in colonial America, and maybe sometimes they were treated badly, but actual White slavery - that's something that disappeared with the Romans and the Vikings. And to compare White indentured servants to Black slaves is the worst sort of racist distortion of history!"
Some of you are probably saying or thinking exactly that, and quite frankly to most of us the idea of White slavery in early America is hard to accept, schooled as we are by the controlled media and the liberal-dominated public schools. But researcher and writer Michael Hoffman has recently come out with one of the most earth-shaking works of historical research in the last decade, entitled They Were White and They Were Slaves. This program is based on Mr. Hoffman's original research into documents long hidden from the public eye and revealing a very different America from that presented in the controlled media.

(Following from They Were White and They Were Slaves)

There is a history of White people that has never been told in any coherent form, largely because most modern historians have, for reasons of politics or psychology, refused to recognize White slaves in America as just that.
Today, not a tear is shed for the sufferings of millions of our enslaved forefathers. 200 years of White slavery in America have been almost completely obliterated from the collective memory of the American people. Writer Elaine Kendall asks "Who wants to be reminded that half - perhaps as many as two-thirds - of the original American colonists came here, not of their own free will, but kidnapped, shanghaied, impressed, duped, beguiled, and yes, in chains - ?...we tend to gloss over it... we'd prefer to forget the whole sorry chapter."
A correct understanding of the authentic history of the enslavement of Whites in America could have profound consequences for the future. Most of the books on White labor in early America use words like "White indentured servitude," "White bondservants," White servants," etc. Few are now aware that the majority of these so-called "servants" were bound to a condition more properly called permanent chattel slavery unto death. The papers legally allowing the enslavement, called indentures, were often forged by kidnappers and press-gangs; and in cases where these papers did not literally specify a life term of servitude, the slave-owner had the legal right to unilaterally increase the length of the term on the flimsiest pretexts. The so-called "apprentices" or "indentured servants" had no say in the matter. These enslaved White people are, however, never called slaves by establishment academics and media spokesmen. To do so would destroy the myth of unique Black victimhood and universal White guilt.
Today, with the massive concentration of educational and media resources on the Black experience of slavery, the unspoken assumption has been that only Blacks have been enslaved to any degree or magnitude worthy of study or memorial. The historical record reveals that this is not the case, however. The word "slave" itself is derived from the word "slav," a reference to the Eastern European White people who, among others, were enslaved by their fellow Whites, by the Mongols, and by the Arabs over a period of many centuries.
According to Thomas Burton's Parliamentary Diary 1656-1659, in 1659 the English parliament debated the practice of selling British Whites into slavery in the New World. In the debate, these Whites were referred to not as "indentured servants" but as "slaves."
In the Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America and West Indies of 1701, we read of a protest over the "encouragement to the spiriting away of Englishmen without their consent and selling them for slaves, which hath been a practice very frequent and known by the name of kidnapping." In the British West Indies, plantation slavery was instituted as early as 1627. In Barbados by the 1640s there were an estimated 25,000 slaves, of whom 21,700 were White.
This document records that while White slaves were worked to death, as they cost next to nothing, there were Caribbean Indians brought from Guiana to help propagate native foodstuffs who were well-treated and received as free persons by the wealthy planters.
The Englishman William Eddis, after observing White slaves in America in the 1770s wrote: "Generally speaking, they groan beneath a worse than Egyptian bondage." Governor Sharpe of the Maryland colony compared the property interest of the planters in their White slaves, with the estate of an English farmer consisting of a "Multitude of Cattle."
Lay historian Col. A. B. Ellis, writing in the British Newspaper Argosy for May 6, 1893, said: "Few, but readers of old colonial state papers and records, are aware that between the years 1649 to 1690 a lively trade was carried on between England and the plantations, as the colonies were then called, [a trade] in political prisoners... they were sold at auction... for various terms of years, sometimes for life, as slaves."
Sir George Sandys' 1618 plan for Virginia referred to bound Whites assigned to the treasurer's office to "belong to said office forever." The service of Whites bound to Berkeley's Hundred was deemed "perpetual."
Numerous documents from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and even nineteenth centuries reveal that these Whites in bondage certainly referred to themselves as slaves, and there are even records of Blacks referring to them as "White slaves." Did you know that the expression "kidnapping," (originally kid-nabbing) had its origin in the abduction of poor White children to be sold into factory slavery in Britain or plantation slavery in America? Did you know that the expression "spirited away" likewise originated with the White slavers, who were also called "spirits"?
The White slavery in America was but an extension of the White slavery in the mother country, Britain, where the legal form of contracted indentured servitude and apprenticeship was maintained as a spurious cover for plain and simple lifetime chattel slavery. Particularly shocking was the enslavement of White children for factory labor. Children were openly seized from orphanages and workhouses and placed in the factories.
In Brian Inglis' Poverty and the Industrial Revolution we read: "Here then was a ready source of labor - and a very welcome one. The children were formally indentured as apprentices... What happened to them was nobody's concern. A parish in London, having got rid of a batch of unwanted pauper children, was unlikely to interest itself in their subsequent fate... The term 'apprenticeship' was in any case a misnomer...."
In Marjorie Cruikshank's Children and Industry: "many employers imported child apprentices, parish orphans from workhouses far and near. Clearly, overseers of the poor were only too keen to get rid of the orphans... children were brought (to the factories) like 'cartloads of live lumber' and abandoned to their fate... poor children, taken from workhouses or kidnapped in the streets of the metropolis, used to be brought down by... coach to Manchester and slid into a cellar in Mosley Street as if they had been stones or any other inanimate substance."
White children worked up to sixteen hours a day and during that period the doors were locked. Children - and most of the mill workers were children - were allowed out only to 'go to the necessary.' In some factories it was forbidden to open the windows... The child 'apprentices' who were on night shift might have to stay on it for as long as four or five years. They were lucky if they were given a half penny an hour.
This was labor without any breaks - unceasing labor. When the children fell asleep at the machines, they were lashed into wakefulness with a whip. If they arrived late to the factory, talked to another child, or committed some other infraction they were beaten with an iron bar known as a "billy-roller," eight feet long and one inch and a half in diameter. Many were thus murdered, often for trifling offenses such as calling out names to the next child.
Thousands of children were mangled or mutilated by the primitive factory machinery every year. They were often disfigured or disabled for life, then abandoned, receiving no compensation of any kind. Similar conditions obtained for enslaved White children on this side of the Atlantic, as what William Blake called "these Satanic Mills" spread to our shores.
Historian Oscar Handlin writes that in colonial America, White servants could be bartered for a profit, sold to the highest bidder for the unpaid debts of their masters, and otherwise transferred like moveable goods or chattels...
The controlled media focus exclusively on the enslavement of Blacks. The impression is given that only Whites bear responsibility for enslaving Blacks and that only Blacks were slaves. In fact, Blacks in Africa engaged in extensive enslavement of their own kind. Slavery was endemic in Africa, with entire tribes being enslaved through conquest on a regular basis. When Arabic, Jewish and White slave traders arrived on the coast of sub-Saharan Africa, they seldom if ever had to travel inland and fight or pursue their quarry. They were met on the coast by Africans more than willing to sell slaves to them by the thousands. And in America, records show that Black slaves were owned, not just by a few wealthy Whites, but by free Blacks and by Cherokee Indians. In some cases, these Blacks and Indians even owned White slaves.
White slaves were actually owned by Blacks and Indians in the South to such an extent that the Virginia Assembly passed the following law in 1670: "It is enacted that no negro or Indian though baptized and enjoying their own freedom shall be capable of any such purchase of Christians." The records of the time reveal that free Blacks often owned Black slaves themselves. In 1717, it was proposed that a qualification for election to the South Carolina Assembly was to be "the ownership of one White man."
From 1609 until the early 1800s, between one half and two thirds of all the White colonists who came to the New World came as slaves. White slaves cleared the forests, drained the swamps, built the roads, sweated in the fields, and died like flies in hellish factories. Owned like property, they had no rights nor recourse to the law. Fugitive slave laws applied to them just as to Blacks if they should flee their masters. Black slaves were expensive, and though at times cruelly used, were not often used beyond the limits of human endurance. That would have been a waste of a costly investment. White slaves, however, consisting of the poor and unwanted "surplus population" of Britain, were available for nearly nothing, just a few pence for a thug to billyclub them and shanghai them aboard a westward-bound vessel. Thus they were expendable.
Both psychologically and materially Whites in modern times are called upon to bear burdens of guilt and monetary reparation for Black slavery. This position is based entirely on enforced ignorance and the deliberate suppression of the record of White slavery in North America.
Reparations? Welfare and affirmative action as compensation for past slavery? Leaving aside for the moment the very questionable idea of punishing the great-grandson for the sins of the great-grandfather, let us consider the principles involved. Far more Whites in America are descendants of White slaves than are descendants of slave owners. And considering the endemic nature of slavery in Black Africa, it is quite likely that a large proportion of Blacks in America have ancestors who were themselves slave owners. So let us hear no more of White guilt and endless payments and "affirmative action" to atone for the sin of the enslavement of Blacks. These endless payments themselves are a form of slavery. For the good of all races and peoples, let us rid ourselves of slavery for all time.

 

Tom

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
13,293
1
76
"Many whites were slaves also. And many blacks were slave owners. History you were taught has been liberalized and distorted. "

I don't know what schools your article refers to, but my "liberalized" public school education included those facts.

 

overclock

Senior member
Apr 28, 2001
720
0
0
Oprah had one messed up childhood. She was sexually abused and lived in a couple of different places with different relatives. She has used nothing as a crutch and is amazing.
 

Papagayo

Platinum Member
Jul 28, 2003
2,302
22
81
1. People love to blame others for their problems..
2. Blacks were not the only people to be slaves..
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,145
10
81
Originally posted by: Tom
"Many whites were slaves also. And many blacks were slave owners. History you were taught has been liberalized and distorted. "

I don't know what schools your article refers to, but my "liberalized" public school education included those facts.

yeap. But i will take a guess and say you are "older" like me (hey I'm 31 so not that old!). When i was in school we had more then a glance over slavery. we actually studied it.

My younger sister (who is black by the way) Was amazed to learn that many white people were also slaves. Not to mention that there was a sizable black population that owned slaves. She didn't learn that in high school but when she took a college history class (think it was a black history class even) they studied slavery in depth

I don't think its that schools do not want to mention it. I just think schools want to dumb down what they study. heck she didn't know what the one drop rule was.




 

shuan24

Platinum Member
Jul 17, 2003
2,558
0
0
slavery != racism.

obviously millions of people viewed slavery as not such a bad thing, otherwise please explain to me how slavery existed since the beginning of man, and up until recenty was it finally banned.

racism, on the other hand, is for ignorant fools. Connecting the two is also foolish. Unfortunately these are not mutually exclusive.
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,145
10
81
Originally posted by: shuan24
slavery != racism.

obviously millions of people viewed slavery as not such a bad thing, otherwise please explain to me how slavery existed since the beginning of man, and up until recenty was it finally banned.

racism, on the other hand, is for ignorant fools. Connecting the two is also foolish. Unfortunately these are not mutually exclusive.

i agree.

but hate to tell you there are still places where slaver is practiced.
 

Brutuskend

Lifer
Apr 2, 2001
26,558
4
0
Many white people were slaves at one time or another during the course of history.


Black people want repartitions?

How this for repartitions, a MUCH MUCH MUCH higher standard of living than 99.9% of the blacks still living in Africa. :Q
 

shuan24

Platinum Member
Jul 17, 2003
2,558
0
0
well that is somewhat my point.

I hate it how people refer to America's slavery with putting down the black man. News flash folks: IT WASN'T SLAVERY THAT PUT DOWN THE BLACK MAN. IT WAS RACISM. Black people of today are not affected (anymore) by slavery; they are affected by *gasp* racism. Like I said, they are not mutually exclusive, but they are distinct.

the OP's title "Slavery still affects black people in america" is IMHO completely ignorant. What really affects black people (hell, all minorities) in america today is racism.

In that respect, yes I agree racism has put down the black people. Racism has also put down the asian people, the mexican people, hell just about anybody.
 

Ranger X

Lifer
Mar 18, 2000
11,218
1
0
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Many white people were slaves at one time or another during the course of history.


Black people want repartitions?

How this for repartitions, a MUCH MUCH MUCH higher standard of living than 99.9% of the blacks still living in Africa. :Q
Blacks want to repartition their hard drives? LOL, I think you mean reparation.

I agree with everyone when they say whites were also once slaves. Many were brought to America as indentured servants. And if you want racism in America, think about the racism that the Irish had to endure during the famine in Ireland. Many immigrated to the New England territories seeking a better life. While they were looking for work, many stores and factories had a sign outside that read, "Irish need not apply".
 

everman

Lifer
Nov 5, 2002
11,288
1
0
Originally posted by: Ranger X
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Many white people were slaves at one time or another during the course of history.


Black people want repartitions?

How this for repartitions, a MUCH MUCH MUCH higher standard of living than 99.9% of the blacks still living in Africa. :Q
Blacks want to repartition their hard drives? LOL, I think you mean reparation.

I agree with everyone when they say whites were also once slaves. Many were brought to America as indentured servants. And if you want racism in America, think about the racism that the Irish had to endure during the famine in Ireland. Many immigrated to the New England territories seeking a better life. While they were looking for work, many stores and factories had a sign outside that read, "Irish need not apply".

No you see they partitioned their drives rather poorly and now it's getting all fragmented and slow. The page file is taking up way too much space. So basically repartitioning and a complete reinstallation should do the trick.
 
sale-70-410-exam    | Exam-200-125-pdf    | we-sale-70-410-exam    | hot-sale-70-410-exam    | Latest-exam-700-603-Dumps    | Dumps-98-363-exams-date    | Certs-200-125-date    | Dumps-300-075-exams-date    | hot-sale-book-C8010-726-book    | Hot-Sale-200-310-Exam    | Exam-Description-200-310-dumps?    | hot-sale-book-200-125-book    | Latest-Updated-300-209-Exam    | Dumps-210-260-exams-date    | Download-200-125-Exam-PDF    | Exam-Description-300-101-dumps    | Certs-300-101-date    | Hot-Sale-300-075-Exam    | Latest-exam-200-125-Dumps    | Exam-Description-200-125-dumps    | Latest-Updated-300-075-Exam    | hot-sale-book-210-260-book    | Dumps-200-901-exams-date    | Certs-200-901-date    | Latest-exam-1Z0-062-Dumps    | Hot-Sale-1Z0-062-Exam    | Certs-CSSLP-date    | 100%-Pass-70-383-Exams    | Latest-JN0-360-real-exam-questions    | 100%-Pass-4A0-100-Real-Exam-Questions    | Dumps-300-135-exams-date    | Passed-200-105-Tech-Exams    | Latest-Updated-200-310-Exam    | Download-300-070-Exam-PDF    | Hot-Sale-JN0-360-Exam    | 100%-Pass-JN0-360-Exams    | 100%-Pass-JN0-360-Real-Exam-Questions    | Dumps-JN0-360-exams-date    | Exam-Description-1Z0-876-dumps    | Latest-exam-1Z0-876-Dumps    | Dumps-HPE0-Y53-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-HPE0-Y53-Exam    | 100%-Pass-HPE0-Y53-Real-Exam-Questions    | Pass-4A0-100-Exam    | Latest-4A0-100-Questions    | Dumps-98-365-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-98-365-Exam    | 100%-Pass-VCS-254-Exams    | 2017-Latest-VCS-273-Exam    | Dumps-200-355-exams-date    | 2017-Latest-300-320-Exam    | Pass-300-101-Exam    | 100%-Pass-300-115-Exams    |
http://www.portvapes.co.uk/    | http://www.portvapes.co.uk/    |