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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Sun Jul 29, 2018 11:50 pm 
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Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Sun Jul 29, 2018 11:53 pm 
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tommy wrote:
Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.

You two are a couple of puds.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Sun Jul 29, 2018 11:54 pm 
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Mr. Reason wrote:
tommy wrote:
Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.

You two are a couple of puds.

jbi11s and Nas? I actually agree.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:01 am 
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Mr. Reason wrote:
tommy wrote:
Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.

You two are a couple of puds.

Agreed.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:01 am 
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tommy wrote:
Mr. Reason wrote:
tommy wrote:
Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.

You two are a couple of puds.

jbi11s and Nas? I actually agree.

Agree as well.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 7:04 am 
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Nas wrote:
tommy wrote:
Nas wrote:
WOW!!!

Welcome back!


Not so sure how welcome I am. I really just want to post about sports and leave the political stuff alone, BUT I can't stop myself from reading the threads even if I don't comment. That's a problem.

We have one poster who hated generalizations, labeling and name calling of white Trump voters so much that he metamorphosed into a stereotypical President Trump supporter. When I read his posts about blacks, Democrats, or posters who have the same views he once had, he is almost always doing at least 1 of the 3 things that he claimed to hate. Makes me wonder if he ever decides to read his own thoughts will he change back to a liberal.

We have several posters who would be the first to rightly point out the structural issues in America that have created generational poverty for many whites, but they'll do all they can not to acknowledge the impact these structural issues may have on some ethnic minorities. Despite also arguing that our structural issues is the primary reason why many people of all colors voted for the president or should support the president.

We have one poster who may be the most sensitive on the board when it comes to being labeled, BUT somehow he spends a good chunk of his time labeling others or making offensive accusations because he's easily frustrated when challenged.

We have many people complaining about the treatment of black conservatives. Complaining about them being labeled Uncle Tom's and having their thoughts unfairly dismissed by some blacks. Somehow the same white people doing the complaining don't realize or care how the statements they make about white men or women who aren't waving a MAGA flag or have different views on race sound. People like Zeph are immediately shamed for not taking a "pro white" stance. They're told that they hate themselves, have white guilt, are woke, are race police and are called the real racists. They're literally doing the same thing (or worse) to white people who see the world differently than them that they complain about some blacks doing to black conservatives.

We even had a "back to Africa" argument.

For better or worse tribalism has taken over CFMB. Scapegoating Toxic or America or JLN doesn't change that. I'll try to have enough self control to keep most of my bad thoughts to the sports sections. That's typically the place that unites everyone regardless of how you look or where you come from.


:lol: Missed this the first time. Classic.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 7:23 am 
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ZephMarshack wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
This response is embarrassing. I attacked Coates on his ideas. He was happy white people died on 9/11.

No you said nothing about his ideas at all and managed the rare feat of being even more dismissive than me. Don't pretend you brought anything substantive to the table while calling him a gimmick several pages ago.

I'm glad to see you were quickly able to Google some right-wing talking points about him now though. If you read the 9/11 quote, he never expressed any kind of happiness at all about 9/11 but merely lack of sympathy for the firefighters and cops. But beyond that, he specifically says his attitude changed in the very next paragraph of that out of context quote anyway.


Coates uses anecdotes to make emotional arguments. I have attacked his ideas and scholarship. Saying right wing talking points is not a argument.
In the course of this argument you have not be able to clearly define:

1. What exactly structural racism is or how to solve for it? (Obstacles that we can never define is the best you seem to be able to do with this.)

2. Dismissed Obama as not really black or concerned with black problems.

3. Failed to say what the factual errors with the Hughes piece.

4. Failed to say what "historians" have backed up the scholarship of Coates.

5. Doubled-down on name calling and accusations of racism.

The last point is really all your side has, and it's a losing hand.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 7:27 am 
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Nas wrote:
tommy wrote:
Nas wrote:
WOW!!!

Welcome back!


Not so sure how welcome I am. I really just want to post about sports and leave the political stuff alone, BUT I can't stop myself from reading the threads even if I don't comment. That's a problem.

We have one poster who hated generalizations, labeling and name calling of white Trump voters so much that he metamorphosed into a stereotypical President Trump supporter. When I read his posts about blacks, Democrats, or posters who have the same views he once had, he is almost always doing at least 1 of the 3 things that he claimed to hate. Makes me wonder if he ever decides to read his own thoughts will he change back to a liberal.

We have several posters who would be the first to rightly point out the structural issues in America that have created generational poverty for many whites, but they'll do all they can not to acknowledge the impact these structural issues may have on some ethnic minorities. Despite also arguing that our structural issues is the primary reason why many people of all colors voted for the president or should support the president.

We have one poster who may be the most sensitive on the board when it comes to being labeled, BUT somehow he spends a good chunk of his time labeling others or making offensive accusations because he's easily frustrated when challenged.

We have many people complaining about the treatment of black conservatives. Complaining about them being labeled Uncle Tom's and having their thoughts unfairly dismissed by some blacks. Somehow the same white people doing the complaining don't realize or care how the statements they make about white men or women who aren't waving a MAGA flag or have different views on race sound. People like Zeph are immediately shamed for not taking a "pro white" stance. They're told that they hate themselves, have white guilt, are woke, are race police and are called the real racists. They're literally doing the same thing (or worse) to white people who see the world differently than them that they complain about some blacks doing to black conservatives.

We even had a "back to Africa" argument.

For better or worse tribalism has taken over CFMB. Scapegoating Toxic or America or JLN doesn't change that. I'll try to have enough self control to keep most of my bad thoughts to the sports sections. That's typically the place that unites everyone regardless of how you look or where you come from.


It was not an argument. It was a question about the central thesis in Coates writings, which is that this society is doomed to be racist forever.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 7:40 am 
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Mr. Reason wrote:
tommy wrote:
Jbi11s wrote:
Sometimes when you're at a serious low point in your life you say things that are exaggerated, paranoid, and incorrect.

OMG, I would never do that! :lol:

Yeah, it happens.

You two are a couple of puds.

Sort of like 'two pees in a pud'.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 7:50 am 
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leashyourkids wrote:
Every group in America is objectively better off than it was four years ago.

Are they?

What do you base that on?

(and maybe they are for the most part, it just always raises an eyebrow for me when someone makes such an all encompassing statement)


I mean, if were just using economy and numbers, you can say the same thing about the Obama years when comparing 2008 and 2012 or 12-16


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 8:03 am 
rogers park bryan wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
Every group in America is objectively better off than it was four years ago.

Are they?

What do you base that on?

(and maybe they are for the most part, it just always raises an eyebrow for me when someone makes such an all encompassing statement)


I mean, if were just using economy and numbers, you can say the same thing about the Obama years when comparing 2008 and 2012 or 12-16

He bases it on the fact that he doesn't give a shit about anything other than his own newfound opinions. Just let him be.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 8:04 am 
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Baby McNown wrote:
rogers park bryan wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
Every group in America is objectively better off than it was four years ago.

Are they?

What do you base that on?

(and maybe they are for the most part, it just always raises an eyebrow for me when someone makes such an all encompassing statement)


I mean, if were just using economy and numbers, you can say the same thing about the Obama years when comparing 2008 and 2012 or 12-16

He bases it on the fact that he doesn't give a shit about anything other than his own newfound opinions. Just let him be.

No, there's a lot of validity in what he says. A lot of groups are doing better, just maybe not "every single one" as he stated.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 8:07 am 
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A rising tide raises all boats...

...except, it doesn't.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 8:54 am 
GoldenJet wrote:
A rising tide raises all boats...

...except, it doesn't.

But giving rich people and coroporations was supposed to get more money to me. Trump said so.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 9:38 am 
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Baby McNown wrote:
GoldenJet wrote:
A rising tide raises all boats...

...except, it doesn't.

But giving rich people and coroporations was supposed to get more money to me. Trump said so.


Has it not done so?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 10:01 am 
Terry's Peeps wrote:
Baby McNown wrote:
GoldenJet wrote:
A rising tide raises all boats...

...except, it doesn't.

But giving rich people and coroporations was supposed to get more money to me. Trump said so.


Has it not done so?

My paycheck is great again.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 10:29 am 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
Coates uses anecdotes to make emotional arguments. I have attacked his ideas and scholarship. Saying right wing talking points is not a argument.
So you agree you were, in fact, full of shit with your attempted GOTCHA by bringing up that out of context 9/11 nonsense? Good.

Just saying Coates uses anecdotes and is "emotional" are definitely not arguments either. Hughes has used plenty of anecdotes alongside his cherrypicked statistics in his writing, so I fail to see why you're so angry at Coates but not him (well I do actually). Likewise I can find plenty of numbers in "The Case for Reparations" alongside the stories he weaves together.
Quote:
1. What exactly structural racism is or how to solve for it? (Obstacles that we can never define is the best you seem to be able to do with this.)
Forgive me if I don't want to play the "educate me with a definition" game with someone who was insisting with hellfire and brimstone that it didn't exist and was all a liberal boogeyman just a few pages ago. You're more than capable of finding scholarly definitions of the term with the help of Google if you actually give a crap about learning what it was. And I posted multiple policies 2 replies ago that went similarly ignored.

Quote:
2. Dismissed Obama as not really black or concerned with black problems.
I am more comfortable with my framing of Obama as a neoliberal than your take, which amounted to "Da blacks got Obama so things must really be equal here!"
Quote:
3. Failed to say what the factual errors with the Hughes piece.
I've listed out charges multiple times, but will elaborate just for you sweetheart. For some reason, I highly doubt you're capable of constructing a list of similar complaints against Coates.

His view on the Civil War is complete garbage. "But slavery is hardly the root cause of America’s prosperity. If it were, then we would expect American states that practiced slavery to be richer than those that did not." This view is complete ahistorical rubbish to anyone the least bit familiar with Civil War economics, or even the concept of the Civil War in general. Most accounts on pre-Civil War economics emphasize the extent to which Southern states hyper-focused on the creation of raw materials with slave labor, at the expense of any kind of diversified economy, and then would have to buy products made with those raw materials back from the North. Additionally, it's almost like there was some mysterious event between the pre-Civil War and post-Civil War eras that may have done something to upset the capital and wealth in the former slave states. I can't quite put my finger on what such an event may be though. The point of course is just saying "The North is doing better than the South economically!" is an utter non-sequitur, and to use it to downplay the effects of slavery is garbage.

Hughes creates strawmen versions of Coates, Baradaran, and Rothstein. I don't believe a single one of them said anything resembling the idea that the racial gap is entirely caused by slavery and New Deal policies. I have a hunch that Hughes did not even read much of the source material, as Baradaran herself anticipates and responds to some of the very cultural arguments Hughes is making. And on the specific spending point, the vast majority of empirical analyses on conspicuous consumption suggest that it's more a product of living in poverty than a cause of it. Of course, said literature is scarcely examined by Hughes in his rush to blame culture.

Hughes cherrypicks data. The biggest example of this of course is his citation of this is the Brandeis study, where he cherrypicks numbers to lowball the effects of institutional and systemic forces by simply focusing on 2 of the variables and instead concludes that 68% must be from some other explanation, including culture. In contrast to that, here are the authors of that very same paper he was citing arriving at a nearly opposite proportion than Hughes did:
Quote:
The evidence we present to examine the racial wealth gap points to institutional and policy dynamics in important spheres of American life: homeownership, work and increased earnings, employment stability, college education, and family financial support and inheritance. Together, these fundamental factors account for nearly two-thirds (66 percent) of the proportional increase in the wealth gap. In the social sciences, this is a very high level of explanatory power and provides a firm foundation for policy and reform aimed at closing the gap.


Hughes does not understand the concept of survivorship bias and as a result makes sloppy, unfounded comparisons between immigrant groups and black Americans. My absolute favorite example of this is when he starts going on about the success of the Japanese, when anyone with even a cursory knowledge of history would realize that group actually received reparations for their treatment in World War II.

Finally, Hughes' arguments are not novel. Perhaps the most annoying part of this episode has been the extent to which IDW members have been tripping all of themselves to prop up this regurgitation of typical conservative race politics. One of those hacks even compared him to James effin' Baldwin.
Quote:
4. Failed to say what "historians" have backed up the scholarship of Coates.
I don't know of any credible historian who's disputed the actual facts of his larger essays to the extent people have with Hughes. People of course disagree with the conclusions and prescription he draws from his history, but I don't believe the facts on the ground have been misrepresented here. And as I noted previously, Coates' longer form works engage more with multiple historians and social scientists in a way that Hughes simply does not.

Quote:
5. Doubled-down on name calling and accusations of racism.
I'm pretty sure I never called you a racist in the course of this discussion, though I understand you'd really like me to in order to continue to play the victim.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 11:27 am 
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1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.

2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?

3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.

You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.

I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?

Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.

4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:

https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... a-mistake/

Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/

5. Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 11:51 am 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.

2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?

3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.

You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.

I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?

Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.

4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:

https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... a-mistake/

Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/

5. Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.



No structural or institutional racism?

Then what do you call this?

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/departme ... s-claiming

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:45 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.
No, I'm simply reacting to your own bad faith line of questioning. Structural racism is discussed at length enough by social scientists that there's a wealth of reading material available via simple search. If you had started the conversation genuinely looking for answers, I'd be inclined to play ball. However, given your obstinate refusal to recognize even the potential of it existing, I have no interest in wasting even more words on a brick wall.
Quote:
2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?
As I said multiple replies ago and you chose to ignore, the success of individual black people does not preclude the existence of institutional racism. Nor does one have to believe the entirety of society is organized to holding minorities down to still realize those barriers exist. Once again, this is just the "I have a black friend" defense against individual racism applied society-wide. And as I also have repeated several times (but you ignored), there's a wealth of policy options including more robust welfare protections, job programs, and harsher anti-discrimination laws (including those where discriminatory outcome outweighs intent).
Quote:
3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.
The industries that thrived in the North were in part created by the raw materials extracted by slave labor. Merely looking at the South's long-term economic mismanagement to conclude that slave labor had little to do with the wealth of the country is an absolute joke.

Quote:
You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.
Please point me to a passage where you think that sums up their positions nicely. An actual quote, thank you.
Quote:
I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?
Shouldn't be so hard to find a good example of that then. And I would say I was being too nice when I suggested Hughes merely cherrypicked data regarding the Brandeis study. He utterly misrepresented the actual conclusions of the authors in service of his own half-baked thesis.

Quote:
Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.
Sorry but this is bollocks. Nothing about Coates at all warrants pumping up Hughes' regurgitation of conservative talking points as some kind of significant and world changing essay on the level of Baldwin.
Quote:
4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:
https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... -a-mistake
But of course, I have explicitly acknowledged multiple times now that one can object to the prescriptions and conclusions Coates draws. Cherry is largely objecting to those and the framing Coates takes, but I see little in the way of having gotten the facts he himself draws on wrong. Now if you want to say he focuses on the wrong facts, go for it, but realize you've just invited in all the bashing of Hughes for his own out of context facts as well, in addition to those he just gets wrong altogether.
Quote:
Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/
Congrats, this "biggest complaint" about Coates has been utterly absent from your previous biggest complaints about Coates throughout this exchange, including the time you suggested he was happy about white people dying during 9/11.

And as someone who's actually met Rodgers and is sympathetic to this critique of Coates, let me assure you that that particular complaint (similar to the one offered by R.L Stephens, among other critics from the left) does not exactly lend support to the bootstraps/culture/respectability dreck of Hughes, Harris, and the IDW. Their problem is the paralysis that Coates' perspective inspires for actual political action and solidarity, but that by no means entails everything is just hunky dory in the present or that we instead should just blame culture for the wealth gap. This is something I myself noted in my own previous criticism of Coates as well to JORR multiple pages ago, while of course rejecting the idea that his pessimism means he's Louis Farrakhan in terms of his hatred of white people.

Quote:
Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.

Your responses have been filled with an equal amount of condescension and name calling and far less substantiation for your critique of Coates and your defense of Hughes.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:52 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:

Quote:
2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?



During the time of slavery some blacks owned slaves. Does that mean that there wasn't institutional racism because a few blacks owned slaves? During Jim Crow some blacks were millionaires or in fact "well off". Does that mean that structural and institutional racism were non existent simply because a few blacks prospered?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:00 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.

2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?

3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.

You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.

I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?

Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.

4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:

https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... a-mistake/

Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/

5. Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.



No structural or institutional racism?

Then what do you call this?

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/departme ... s-claiming


That is a settlement of a long-standing lawsuit announced by a black head of state and the black leader of the Department of Justice. You think that's a good example of showing that racism is structural, and there is no way to fix it?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:10 pm 
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leashyourkids wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
Made up?

You're really going all in on being the most worthless poster here. Congrats.


Attack the person not the idea. Congrats. "Structural racism" is made up. This is a country that elected a black president twice. There are black billionaires. Right now Asians make more per capita as a minority group than the majority whites. Our structure to hold down minorities is really failing there.

Yet, you want to say that our entire society is set-up to hold black people down. If this is the case then why didn't the black president do anything about it when he was in power or make a bigger issue about it?

I also love that you championed bringing back the poster who said black people are trash, while saying I'm the most worthless person here. That's straight up bullshit. I have a more hopeful outlook than our society is broken, and we can't ever fix it. I also would love to know what laws need to be changed to fix the "structural racism" that no one can clearly define or talk about how to fix.

What country in the world is there more opportunity for black people? Is structural racism also to blame for Africa having the lowest GNP of any continent? If it's so racist here why not go back to Africa to become billionaires?


None of this will be answered and instead, you will just be labeled a bigot.

It's pretty unproductive to get into long, drawn out political arguments on here. Especially with someone saying something as ridiculous as structural/institutional racism is made up.

Zeph handled it pretty well anyway.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:15 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
long time guy wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.

2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?

3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.

You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.

I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?

Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.

4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:

https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... a-mistake/

Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/

5. Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.



No structural or institutional racism?

Then what do you call this?

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/departme ... s-claiming


That is a settlement of a long-standing lawsuit announced by a black head of state and the black leader of the Department of Justice. You think that's a good example of showing that racism is structural, and there is no way to fix it?


Actually I do think it is a good example that is why I used it.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:18 pm 
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ZephMarshack wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.
No, I'm simply reacting to your own bad faith line of questioning. Structural racism is discussed at length enough by social scientists that there's a wealth of reading material available via simple search. If you had started the conversation genuinely looking for answers, I'd be inclined to play ball. However, given your obstinate refusal to recognize even the potential of it existing, I have no interest in wasting even more words on a brick wall.
Quote:
2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?
As I said multiple replies ago and you chose to ignore, the success of individual black people does not preclude the existence of institutional racism. Nor does one have to believe the entirety of society is organized to holding minorities down to still realize those barriers exist. Once again, this is just the "I have a black friend" defense against individual racism applied society-wide. And as I also have repeated several times (but you ignored), there's a wealth of policy options including more robust welfare protections, job programs, and harsher anti-discrimination laws (including those where discriminatory outcome outweighs intent).
Quote:
3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.
The industries that thrived in the North were in part created by the raw materials extracted by slave labor. Merely looking at the South's long-term economic mismanagement to conclude that slave labor had little to do with the wealth of the country is an absolute joke.

Quote:
You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.
Please point me to a passage where you think that sums up their positions nicely. An actual quote, thank you.
Quote:
I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?
Shouldn't be so hard to find a good example of that then. And I would say I was being too nice when I suggested Hughes merely cherrypicked data regarding the Brandeis study. He utterly misrepresented the actual conclusions of the authors in service of his own half-baked thesis.

Quote:
Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.
Sorry but this is bollocks. Nothing about Coates at all warrants pumping up Hughes' regurgitation of conservative talking points as some kind of significant and world changing essay on the level of Baldwin.
Quote:
4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:
https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... -a-mistake
But of course, I have explicitly acknowledged multiple times now that one can object to the prescriptions and conclusions Coates draws. Cherry is largely objecting to those and the framing Coates takes, but I see little in the way of having gotten the facts he himself draws on wrong. Now if you want to say he focuses on the wrong facts, go for it, but realize you've just invited in all the bashing of Hughes for his own out of context facts as well, in addition to those he just gets wrong altogether.
Quote:
Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/
Congrats, this "biggest complaint" about Coates has been utterly absent from your previous biggest complaints about Coates throughout this exchange, including the time you suggested he was happy about white people dying during 9/11.

And as someone who's actually met Rodgers and is sympathetic to this critique of Coates, let me assure you that that particular complaint (similar to the one offered by R.L Stephens, among other critics from the left) does not exactly lend support to the bootstraps/culture/respectability dreck of Hughes, Harris, and the IDW. Their problem is the paralysis that Coates' perspective inspires for actual political action and solidarity, but that by no means entails everything is just hunky dory in the present or that we instead should just blame culture for the wealth gap. This is something I myself noted in my own previous criticism of Coates as well to JORR multiple pages ago, while of course rejecting the idea that his pessimism means he's Louis Farrakhan in terms of his hatred of white people.

Quote:
Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.

Your responses have been filled with an equal amount of condescension and name calling and far less substantiation for your critique of Coates and your defense of Hughes.


The success of individuals does not mean the system isn't cast against them. This is the opposite of the black friend argument you like to make. Well all of these people are the exceptions. Sure. It means that there is no threshold that you can create to declare structural racism to be over. It's endless.

My discussions about Coates are not limited to this thread. Do a search as you like to say. As I have said previously Coates amount to nihilism when you drill down to it.

And to say the industries that thrived were in due part to raw materials... come on. Northern industry and farming destroyed the Old South. Chattel slave labor was not an efficient system, and it's legacy plays a trivial amount into the long term wealth of the United States. The United States did not really become a global power until after the Civil War. If he said wage slavery then that's a different story. That continues to this day.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:19 pm 
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long time guy wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
long time guy wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
1. This simply is not a good faith argument. You can't provide an example or definition of institutional racism other than saying minorities face "obstacles." When challenged on this you get angry and say things like hellfire and brimstone, and then Google it. This means that you are deflecting because you don't have a clear definition. You just "know" it exists.

2. Calling Obama a neo-liberal is just a dismissive way end the conversation. Then you tried to make it about childish personal insults. If society is built to hold down minorities how was a black man allowed to hold the highest office in the country-twice? That's a fair question. If this society is irrevocably racist then what society do you recommend we emulate? And what specific policies should we enact to arrive upon this ideal state?

3. This is simply a terrible analysis of what he said. Do you disagree that slavery is hardly the root cause of American prosperity? It seems like that should be obvious to anyone. This does not downplay the effects of slavery. It's meant to say that American wealth is not because of slave labor. This seems like something that everyone can agree upon. The Civil War disrupted the Southern economy, but it was already an unsophisticated economy that had limited industry and railroads. This is clearly to show that majority of American wealth was not built on the broken black bodies of slavery that Coates loves to bring up. This does not mean that slavery was not terrible or did not have long term effects. That's not the argument though.

You disagree with the notion that the long term effects of slavery and the lack of participation in New Deal progress are what Coates and other say are the reasons for the wealth gap? I agree that those are major factors, but hardly the only. It might be a slight oversimplification, but it sums up their positions nicely.

I enjoy that you say Hughes cherry-picks data. You think Coates doesn't?

Toni Morrison started with the James Baldwin by calling Coates the modern version. I am guessing they are responding to that.

4. There are many historians and academics who do not agree with Coates:

https://nypost.com/2016/08/22/making-fr ... a-mistake/

Quote:
But if we are all just helpless agents of physical laws, the question again emerges: What does one do?


-This sums up my biggest complaint about Coates.

Full context here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/national/ar ... es/399641/

5. Your entire response is littered with condensation, name-calling and allusions to racism. I agree that long-term poverty is major problem. I disagree that we live in a nation presently constructed to hold blacks down in the year 2018, and I know that projecting a hopeless situation is not helpful in the least.



No structural or institutional racism?

Then what do you call this?

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/departme ... s-claiming


That is a settlement of a long-standing lawsuit announced by a black head of state and the black leader of the Department of Justice. You think that's a good example of showing that racism is structural, and there is no way to fix it?


Actually I do think it is a good example that is why I used it.


It appears to be remedied.

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Why are only 14 percent of black CPS 11th-graders proficient in English?

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:20 pm 
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FavreFan wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
Made up?

You're really going all in on being the most worthless poster here. Congrats.


Attack the person not the idea. Congrats. "Structural racism" is made up. This is a country that elected a black president twice. There are black billionaires. Right now Asians make more per capita as a minority group than the majority whites. Our structure to hold down minorities is really failing there.

Yet, you want to say that our entire society is set-up to hold black people down. If this is the case then why didn't the black president do anything about it when he was in power or make a bigger issue about it?

I also love that you championed bringing back the poster who said black people are trash, while saying I'm the most worthless person here. That's straight up bullshit. I have a more hopeful outlook than our society is broken, and we can't ever fix it. I also would love to know what laws need to be changed to fix the "structural racism" that no one can clearly define or talk about how to fix.

What country in the world is there more opportunity for black people? Is structural racism also to blame for Africa having the lowest GNP of any continent? If it's so racist here why not go back to Africa to become billionaires?


None of this will be answered and instead, you will just be labeled a bigot.

It's pretty unproductive to get into long, drawn out political arguments on here. Especially with someone saying something as ridiculous as structural/institutional racism is made up.

Zeph handled it pretty well anyway.


I am sure that you can provide a concrete example of this still being the case since it's so prevalent.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 2:23 pm 
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WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
The United States did not really become a global power until after the Civil War. If he said wage slavery then that's a different story. That continues to this day.



I did some digging because I was curious to what extent slavery made the U.S. what it was economically. Apparently the 1870's and 1880's were the highest decades in terms of GDP growth in our history. And it also seems that the U.S. really became a global powerhouse in the wake of WWI.

But I fully admit I have not studied the subject as I prefer modern finance over the historical variety. I actually enjoyed some of the back and forth between WFR and Zeph in this thread.....and I have very little basis to argue the points one way or the other.

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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 9:01 pm 
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denisdman wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
The United States did not really become a global power until after the Civil War. If he said wage slavery then that's a different story. That continues to this day.



I did some digging because I was curious to what extent slavery made the U.S. what it was economically. Apparently the 1870's and 1880's were the highest decades in terms of GDP growth in our history. And it also seems that the U.S. really became a global powerhouse in the wake of WWI.

But I fully admit I have not studied the subject as I prefer modern finance over the historical variety. I actually enjoyed some of the back and forth between WFR and Zeph in this thread.....and I have very little basis to argue the points one way or the other.

Just coming here to ask this very thing. I often hear that slavery made the US wealthy and that it drove the early industrial economy. I know nothing about it, but I had a TA in college who nearly got fired for saying that slavery wasn't beneficial to the regional and national economies. If the question itself sounds insensitive, I definitely don't mean it to be. I was just wondering what the experts (in a variety of fields) say about this.


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 Post subject: Re: Clearing the Air
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2018 9:15 pm 
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tommy wrote:
denisdman wrote:
WaitingforRuffcorn wrote:
The United States did not really become a global power until after the Civil War. If he said wage slavery then that's a different story. That continues to this day.



I did some digging because I was curious to what extent slavery made the U.S. what it was economically. Apparently the 1870's and 1880's were the highest decades in terms of GDP growth in our history. And it also seems that the U.S. really became a global powerhouse in the wake of WWI.

But I fully admit I have not studied the subject as I prefer modern finance over the historical variety. I actually enjoyed some of the back and forth between WFR and Zeph in this thread.....and I have very little basis to argue the points one way or the other.

Just coming here to ask this very thing. I often hear that slavery made the US wealthy and that it drove the early industrial economy. I know nothing about it, but I had a TA in college who nearly got fired for saying that slavery wasn't beneficial to the regional and national economies. If the question itself sounds insensitive, I definitely don't mean it to be. I was just wondering what the experts (in a variety of fields) say about this.


The TA was right. Slavery was an inefficient system and a third world system. They kept people in chains to sell raw materials. Does that sound like an efficient economy? The United States was a second rate power during this time period. Massive industrialization made the country a power after the Civil War. The United State became a world class power after the First World War when it was the bankroll and supplier of the allies. It became the greatest power in the history of the world after the Second. Slavery was a part of the early years of the nation, when it was a divided agrarian state.

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