• @[email protected]OP
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    1489 months ago

    When the reporter persisted, Decker explained that her father—a preacher born around 1933, according to the Courier Journal, or 68 years after slavery was outlawed—was “born into poverty” and worked for free with his family on the property they lived on. (It’s unclear whether the adults were paid, though the Courier Journal notes that it sounds more like “Decker’s father was forced by his parents to do chores” and that the family were tenant farmers.)

    “My dad had to do chores when he was growing up 😭😭” - KY State Rep. Jennifer Decker

    • Flying Squid
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      659 months ago

      Meanwhile, this was her original statement:

      My father was born on a dirt farm in Lincoln County. His mother was the illegitimate daughter of a very prominent person who then was kind enough to allow them to work for him as slaves. So, if you’re asking, did we own slaves? My father was a slave, just to a white man and he was white.

      I wish the Courier Journal had simply asked her, “was your father able to leave whenever he wanted?”

    • athos77
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      569 months ago

      There were landowners who were abusive to their tenant farmers, or her dad could even have grown up in a sharecropper family. You know what eventually ended sharecropping and tenant farmers? FDR’s New Deal. She should study history more.

      • Flying Squid
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        349 months ago

        The paper speculated that they were tenant farmers. And maybe they were abused tenant farmers. But do you know what tenant farmers could do?

        Leave.

    • @[email protected]
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      379 months ago

      anyone who experienced slavery would be opposed to it, want to educate people of it’s evils, not defend it. what a bucket of stupid.

    • Seraph
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      229 months ago

      Wait until she finds out about prison labor and the systematic imprisoning of a portion of the American population.

      I’m sure she’ll be flabbergasted and demand the situation change immediately!

    • @[email protected]
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      139 months ago

      …a preacher…

      Oh, so he’s well-versed in lying to push an agenda. Got it. I guess the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

  • @[email protected]
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    289 months ago

    “My father was born on a dirt farm in Lincoln County. His mother was the illegitimate daughter of a very prominent person who then was kind enough to allow them to work for him as slaves. So, if you’re asking, did we own slaves? My father was a slave, just to a white man and he was white.”

    “Kind enough”. wtf

  • mommykink
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    269 months ago

    I mean, the argument that there are/were white slaves does have some merit, but I wouldn’t expect any of these people to either A) know about it or B) argue it in good faith.

    • @[email protected]
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      69 months ago

      Even if true, what is it an argument against? If her great-great-grandpappy was a real slave, she might have heard slavery is bad.

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        what is it an argument against?

        “All slaves matter”

        ( Just like the “all lives matter” response to “black lives matter”, it’s a way to dismiss the concern behind the original sentiment or facts )

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Poverty in Kentucky and wider Appalachia is still a very real and very serious problem.

    It’s very hopeless feeling and was hit extremely hard by the opioid crisis.

    I’m sure it was bad 100 years ago, too–although alcoholism was usually the drug of choice back then.

    Lots of systematic suffering. Children growing up in the nightmares their parents created for them.

    But it’s not slavery, lol.

    • @Drewelite
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      79 months ago

      This is the best response to this. Slavery is kind of at that “Hitler point”. Like, if you don’t like somebody they’re literally Hitler. If you had hardships it’s literally slavery.

      No folks, you don’t have to have the most extreme take to bring legitimacy to a problem. In fact, it really invalidates your point.

    • GladiusB
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      29 months ago

      My favorite part of this scene is that he is eating cereal while driving