NobleDrewAli
Superstar
All aboard. ..... the c00n train. He fought for the confederate army to "cook for his master" and described on his OBITUARY as "a white man's darkie" Scust and
on his grave
on his grave
on his graveThe institution of slavery was a peculiar one, let's be careful how we judge people who went through it
Yall nikkas need to educate yourselves on the effects of psychological trauma and mind control. Yall get the idea of a pimp training a chick but shyt on a black man for being a "house nikka" during a time when a black mans life was worth as much as a bale of cotton. Its easy to say "I woulda," but fukk these cacs for doing this to our people. 
The institution of slavery was a peculiar one, let's be careful how we judge people who went through it
fukk racist white peopleThe institution of slavery was a peculiar one, let's be careful how we judge people who went through it

The more I read and research slavery, the more I realize how truly strange that institution was.That nikka was comfortable being a house nikka, He was a coward.
If a person is a slave and there's any chance for freedom then there is no other choice but to fight, not help the ones that want to keep you captive because you have a comfortable life style. Stop making excuses for this c00n
That nikka caught a train back to the south to fight on some..
Yall want some freedom ehh??
Way led the push for a marker in Monroe honoring the Civil War service of nine slaves, including Clyburn, and one free black. Before a 2012 ceremony unveiling that marker, Rice dismissed historians who consider black Confederates a myth.
That nikka caught a train back to the south to fight on some..
Yall want some freedom ehh??
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The more I read and research slavery, the more I realize how truly strange that institution was.
Situations like that, were a lot more complex than we think.
And there's a good chance, he was forced to
"A lot of people ask me if I'm angry," she told The Charlotte Observer. "What do I have to be angry about? There's been slavery since the beginning of time. I'm not bitter about it, and I do not think my father would be bitter about it."
A paternalistic 1930 obituary for Weary Clyburn said he was buried "in the Confederate uniform of gray" — yet it also called him "Uncle Weary Clyburn" and described him as "a white man's darkey." His grave remained unmarked until the SCV lobbied the Veteran's Administration for a headstone that was placed there in 2008, Way said.
This stuff breaks my heart too, I remember reading the slave narratives, and some of the stuff some of them said, was truly shocking and sad.He was an adult and made a conscious decision unless he was legit mentally ill or incompetent then there's no excuse for his actions
I love my people but we try to make excuses and find ways out of taking personal responsibility for everything.
fukk cacs and a lot of blame is theirs but they feed off of us blaming them for things on some twisted parasitic type shyt.
This nikka was comfortable, that's it. He didn't want to go to war or leave his comfort zone and made a conscious decision to c00n at an extremely high level. fukk this nikka and hopefully maggots left nothing of his corpse