Is anyone catching Larry Elder’s Uncle Tom documentary ???

Mr. Met

So Amazin
BGOL Investor


From the trailer it’s obviously the same black conservative whoa is me cry fest with the same culprits.:yawn:

I guess this is Larry’s new chick so all that shuffling money has it’s benefits.


 
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From the trailer it’s obviously the same black conservative whoa is me cry fest with the same culprits.:yawn:

I guess this is Larry’s new chick so all that shuffling money has it’s benefits.




This nigga's teeth gray and shit. :smh:

Just like my man's soul... diminished and dilapidated. Even his own teeth prob sick of the stupid bullshit spewing from his mouth smdh. Didn't click the link btw... coons will never prosper from my clicks if I can help it. Death and ignobility to them all.
 
The Story of Josiah Henson, the Real Inspiration for ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’

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Despite the fact that he wouldn't learn to read until much later in life, Henson also became a great preacher, memorizing verses and relying on his eloquence and natural sense of humor to connect with parishioners. A white minister convinced him to secretly raise money to purchase his own freedom while traveling between the Riley family’s farms. The minister arranged for churches to host Henson, and he raised $350 towards his emancipation, but Riley swindled him out of the money and tried to sell him south to New Orleans. Henson narrowly avoided that harsh fate through a highly providential twist of events: Riley’s nephew Amos, the young man tasked with selling Henson, contracted malaria. Rather than letting the son die, Henson loaded him on a steamship and returned north. In 1830, Henson ran away with his wife and two youngest children; they walked more than 600 miles to Canada.

Once in a new land, Henson helped start in 1841 a freeman settlement called the British American Institute, in an area called Dawn, which became known as one of the final stops on the Underground Railroad. Henson repeatedly returned to the U.S. to guide 118 other slaves to freedom. It was a massively dangerous undertaking, but Henson saw a greater purpose than simply living out his life in Ontario, Canada. In addition to his service to the school, Henson ran a farm, started a gristmill, bred horses, and built a sawmill for high-quality black lumber— so good, in fact, that it won him a medal at the first World's Fair in London ten years later.


 
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