Host Paul Angel, the managing editor of The Barnes Review (TBR) history magazine, will be discussing a variety of historical matters
with an eye toward how they affect our lives today. With Paul will be his partner in historical crime, Dave Gahary.
The riots in Ferguson and Baltimore are still on everyone’s mind. The
media seems obsessed with giving a forum to disgruntled blacks who are
having a hard time admitting that one’s life is what one makes of it.
(And one’s culture, as well.) Besides the bugaboos of “white
entitlement” and “white racism,” slavery, of course, is the “reason”
many blacks use to justify the sad state of the urban areas in which
they dwell.
With that in mind, we will be discussing several historical events that deny this narrative.
Hundreds of thousands of Irish were sold into slavery by the British
and brought to North America and the Caribbean. The men were literally
worked to death, and the women used to produce an army of half-breed
slaves. The Irish were the first slaves brought to the New World—not the
Africans. But somehow, the Irish overcame this and thrived in America.
Michael Rockefeller, the son of the late Nelson Rockefeller, ventured
off to Papua/New Guinea in the last 1950s and early 1960s to collect
the art of the head-hunting cannibal Asmat people of the island. What
happened to him after that is one of the great missing person’s cases of
the 20th century. But now that case has been solved—and it is a
shocker.
We will be discussing the black Asmat people and their strange and
violent culture which bears an amazing resemblance to the culture of
inner-city black America.
Show-page AmericanFreePress.net
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