Sadly, many blacks have yet to differentiate between keeping it real and keeping it “real stupid.” The fumarole through which the asphyxiating stupidity flows most freely is any discussion and/or point of view regarding slavery that doesn’t encourage the “Kunta Kinte” version born out of a plagiarized fictional book and television series called “Roots.” It can be argued that this mythical drama did as much to harm blacks as crack cocaine has done – because it celebrated the ingesting of a lie and validated the ignorance associated with same.
Anyone with a scintilla of integrity regarding historical accuracy will acknowledge slavery an immoral, painful period of time to both the persons sold on auction blocks and those who purchased them. Well, maybe not the Muslims, because slave trading was a key means of industry for them, but then again, I did draw the distinction of historical accuracy, but I digress.
Most blacks cleave to the idea of slavery as if it just ended a few weeks ago. The outright falsehoods and distortions that are used to keep people ignorant and angry are legion and with good purpose.
The purpose is draconian and Erebusic, and yet it is simplistic in the genius of its application. But, I’m getting a bit ahead of myself.
[…]The truth is that blacks contributed massively to the betterment of America, but they neither built America nor was America built on their backs. There is a major difference in definition. Indians from British Columbia and other parts of Canada built New York’s skyline. The Japanese are responsible for the far-reaching rail lines. Irish and Italians built much of the infrastructure of New York. How much of Chicago, Miami, Dallas, Houston, Minnesota, Nebraska, Colorado, North and South Dakota, Hawaii, Maine, Vermont and New Mexico did blacks actually build?
— Mychal Massie, Sept. 23 WorldNetDaily column
(It wouldn’t be a Massie column if the word “Erebusic” wasn’t in there somewhere.)