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USA Blacks And The Sport Of Boxing: The Greatest In The World!
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [QB] [b]This part requires some critical thinking. The Albinos answer to why Blacks in the Americas had those skills was because they were trained by Albinos! (Remembering that they have to provide explanations in keeping with their false history). THE ONLY PROBLEM IS THAT THEIR STORY DOESN'T JIBE WITH THE REALITY OF THE TIMES! REMEMBER - THE LIST OF SLAVE TRADESMEN I POSTED, COVERED THE YEARS 1769 - 1780.[/b] United States Department of Labor: Chapter 1: The Emergence of American Labor By Richard B. Morris On August 5, 1774, just a month before the First Continental Congress convened in Philadelphia, the ship Needham landed in New York from Newry, England, Captain William Cunningham, master. The ship's cargo was white indentured servants. On arrival they protested to the authorities that they had been kidnapped in Ireland and had suffered "bad usage" on the voyage across the Atlantic. Whereupon the city fathers ordered them discharged. The servants had gained their freedom, but Cunningham nursed a grudge, and later, as the notorious provost marshal of the British army in America, he confined captured Patriots to atrocious prison ships and jails. The incident of the Needham's cargo dramatizes how the early American labor market was supplied. It also reveals that certain aspects of the old labor system were repugnant to that free society the American inhabitants sought to create for themselves. The colonists quickly discovered that the Indians, the native Americans who had settled the continent centuries before the Europeans, would not make compliant workers confined to settled abodes. The alternatives for labor power were to be found in the British Isles, the European continent, and [b]along the west coast of Africa. (This is never creditably explained - merely a throwaway to cover skilled Blacks).[/b] Convinced that England was overpopulated, the government encouraged the emigration to America of the unemployed poor and vagrant class and permitted skilled workers to go to the colonies. Gradually, with England's rise to commercial and industrial primacy by the end of the seventeenth century, the official attitude changed, culminating in [b]the enactment by Parliament in 1765 of a law forbidding the emigration of skilled workers.[/b] This was followed in turn by statutes of 1774, 1781, and 1782 forbidding the exportation of textile machinery, plans, or models. Toward the poor, the untrained, the vagrants, and the criminal class the government felt no such inhibitions; they were encouraged to immigrate to the colonies if someone, somewhere, would foot the bill for the passage. Official obstructions notwithstanding, the importation of skilled artisans continued virtually unabated throughout the colonial years. The rest of this is basically typical Albino lie history as relates to race. https://www.dol.gov/general/aboutdol/history/chapter1 [/QB][/QUOTE]
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