The Subtle Linguistics of Polite White Supremacy — Medium

Lifer11

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Lol, this is the last site you want to speak foolishness. We are very aware of immigrants and to act like you didn't benefit from the Jim Crow laws and the effects of slavery is extremely disrespectful not to mention the WW2 laws that directly helped whites like yourself. The entire white world benefited from the slave trade and colonialism.

This is the last place you want to run around making white supremacist talking points.


Corda e Sapone: how the Italians were lynched in the USA


"It has long been known in the historical documents of the period that rather than being perceived as “white,” Italian immigrants in fact were perceived in the South as enemies of the racist Jim Crow laws. The literature on Sicilians’ widely known resistance to the Jim Crow laws goes back to the 1890s in an article published in the popular Harper’s Magazine. The problem of lynchings became so widespread at the time that a law professor, after the lynching of two Italian immigrants October of 1914 and June of 1915 in Illinois, published an article in the Yale Law Review in which he urged the federal government to override states’ rights and pass federal legislation allowing the federal government to prosecute the perpetrators of the lynchings.

Following the New Orleans 1891 lynchings, in 1896 three more Italian immigrants were taken from the prison in Hahnville, Louisiana, and lynched. Three years after that event, in another of the largest lynchings in the South, five more Sicilian immigrants were lynched in 1899 in Tallulah, Louisiana. The towns’ growing animosity towards two Sicilian store owners was the basis for the killings. Over a period of months, the Sicilian store owners had offended the towns’ racists by refusing to wait on white people before their black customers.

In the wake of the Tallulah lynchings, in a Harper’s Magazine article entitled “Tallulah’s Shame,” the author wrote that “When the Italians first came into Madison, a few years ago, they were a puzzle to the white people of that parish. Like the bat, they were difficult to classify, and this is more difficult because they dealt mainly with the negroes, and associated with them nearly on terms of equality. They could therefore hardly be classed as ‘white men,’ yet they were certainly not negroes. Just how to treat them was a difficult problem. It has finally been settled. They are to get the justice awarded a negro in Madison who assaults, or shoots at, or kills a white man—lynching; not a trial.” The journalist concludes by writing that the dominant white population in Madison is simply not willing to “admit the Italian to their ranks.” This article was unique at the time in the sympathy it expressed for the Italian immigrants."

By all means tell me how aware you are again.

@Beegio

@ridedolo

When Italian immigrants were 'the other' - CNN.com

"There were a number of things that surprised me in my initial research. I knew something about our nation's early antipathy toward Catholics and Italians, but I had not fully appreciated the depth of that antagonism. For example, the largest mass lynching in U.S. history took place in New Orleans in 1891 — and it wasn't African-Americans who were lynched, as many of us might assume. It was Italian-Americans."
 

ridedolo

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To be 100% honest, I've made life far harder on myself due to white guilt, being completely upfront, cause I don't want to benefit from a system that fukks over an entire race for no good reason.

:laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff::laff:

these people love lying thru their forked tongues.
 

Lifer11

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It's amazing, when presented with facts and someone who supports your cause you'd rather attack and marginalize due to race, then claims blacks can't be racist.
 

ridedolo

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It's not up for debate bud, take a look at my last post.

she died in january when wops were considered white.

all white ppl benefit off of racism white supremacy, and are inherently demonic.

we're all fully aware that whites are comfortable brutalizing each other...does hitler ring a bell? white on crime has been going on since ya'll were in the caves.
 

Lifer11

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she died in january when wops were considered white.

all white ppl benefit off of racism white supremacy, and are inherently demonic.

Yea but during her early life Italians were considered black, I didn't say her whole life genius.
 

Lifer11

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As were the Irish and some Eastern Europeans, what is your point?

As I said causing confusion


My point is we have things in common and that I'm not your enemy and don't support a system that is out to destroy you, as I've said many times.
 

DillaTUDE

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And did u know that during Dr. Welsings' life Italians weren't classified as white? Couldn't marry whites? Marked black on US census forms?

And yet they still had no problem oppressing blacks like other whites when they attempted to colonize Ethiopia in 1935.

They obviously didn't view themselves as black.
 

ridedolo

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Yea but during her early life Italians were considered black, I didn't say her whole life genius.

whats your point? do you have one or are you just trying to play oppression olympics? you talk about being italian but were blacks not targeted by the mafia?

you people are dangerous to those who are unaware of your manipulation tactics.
 

Beegio

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Corda e Sapone: how the Italians were lynched in the USA


"It has long been known in the historical documents of the period that rather than being perceived as “white,” Italian immigrants in fact were perceived in the South as enemies of the racist Jim Crow laws. The literature on Sicilians’ widely known resistance to the Jim Crow laws goes back to the 1890s in an article published in the popular Harper’s Magazine. The problem of lynchings became so widespread at the time that a law professor, after the lynching of two Italian immigrants October of 1914 and June of 1915 in Illinois, published an article in the Yale Law Review in which he urged the federal government to override states’ rights and pass federal legislation allowing the federal government to prosecute the perpetrators of the lynchings.

Following the New Orleans 1891 lynchings, in 1896 three more Italian immigrants were taken from the prison in Hahnville, Louisiana, and lynched. Three years after that event, in another of the largest lynchings in the South, five more Sicilian immigrants were lynched in 1899 in Tallulah, Louisiana. The towns’ growing animosity towards two Sicilian store owners was the basis for the killings. Over a period of months, the Sicilian store owners had offended the towns’ racists by refusing to wait on white people before their black customers.

In the wake of the Tallulah lynchings, in a Harper’s Magazine article entitled “Tallulah’s Shame,” the author wrote that “When the Italians first came into Madison, a few years ago, they were a puzzle to the white people of that parish. Like the bat, they were difficult to classify, and this is more difficult because they dealt mainly with the negroes, and associated with them nearly on terms of equality. They could therefore hardly be classed as ‘white men,’ yet they were certainly not negroes. Just how to treat them was a difficult problem. It has finally been settled. They are to get the justice awarded a negro in Madison who assaults, or shoots at, or kills a white man—lynching; not a trial.” The journalist concludes by writing that the dominant white population in Madison is simply not willing to “admit the Italian to their ranks.” This article was unique at the time in the sympathy it expressed for the Italian immigrants."

By all means tell me how aware you are again.

@Beegio

@ridedolo

When Italian immigrants were 'the other' - CNN.com

"There were a number of things that surprised me in my initial research. I knew something about our nation's early antipathy toward Catholics and Italians, but I had not fully appreciated the depth of that antagonism. For example, the largest mass lynching in U.S. history took place in New Orleans in 1891 — and it wasn't African-Americans who were lynched, as many of us might assume. It was Italian-Americans."


Not about to read all that shyt doggy :umad:
 

Lifer11

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whats your point? do you have one or are you just trying to play oppression olympics? you talk about being italian but were blacks not targeted by the mafia?

you people are dangerous to those who are unaware of your manipulation tactics.


There were definitely members of the mafia that were racist, but no there wasn't a focused attack on blacks. The mafia in America when finally giving in and selling drugs insisted on drugs being kept out of their own neighborhood that's it, there wasn't a focus on anyone specific. Joey Merlino and the mob in Philly in the 80s and 90s worked with the JBM.
 

Lifer11

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And yet they still had no problem oppressing blacks like other whites when they attempted to colonize Ethiopia in 1935.

They obviously didn't view themselves as black.


"When their white customers demanded that they be waited on first ahead of their black customers, the Sicilian store owners told them that they had to wait their turn behind their black customers who had entered the store before them. They and three other Sicilians paid the highest price for their resistance to the Jim Crow laws: they were lynched along with three other Sicilians. The Louisiana lynchings terrorized all other Italians in the region for years."

They didn't sympathize with whites either. They were lynched for refusing to adhere to Jim Crow laws.
 
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