Food for Thought?

The following correspondence originally took place upon my Facebook wall…

"Food for Thought"

“Food for Thought”

John T.: Food for thought!

The point and time slavery was abolish, you would think that it was for the Minorities who were effected. But… What if? ( I know you do not like what ifs, but why?… “I know why”, do you?) Slavery was abolish in order to stop the birth of inherited wealth that comes with owning someone that would do paid labor. What does that mean? Slavery was dee stablished not for the purpose of it being wrong and inhuman. Slavery was discontinued in order to make white Americans become slaves themselves? “The White Americans” who have the most wealth are the cruel ones who inherited all the wealth through slavery? How would you feel, if you were a “White American” struggling because of being effected by the reading above?
If you were a minority believing you were freed from slavery because a war got you it, how would you feel if you knew you fought a war to keep Wealth for a group of White Americans who only wanted to stop slavery just so it would not give birth to more wealthy White Americans? We’re you the Minority used as a tool?

Rayn:

"Slavery was never abolished. It was extended to include everyone."

“Slavery was never abolished. It was only extended to include everyone.” (Artwork originally located here, upon the Facebook page, “Get Involved, You Live Here“)

Discussing Saartjie Baartman

The following correspondence originally took place on my Facebook wall, upon my post, “Who Was Saartjie Baartman?“…

Saartjie Baartman

Rayn: ♫ “The more you know…” ♫

The Life and Death of Saartjie Baartman:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/mar/31/featuresreviews.guardianreview12

Rayn: The More You Know:

[youtube_sc url=”v3rhQc666Sg”]

Last Prince: Lol…

Eartha M.: Yup!

Jason L.: Unbelievable

Who Was Saartjie Baartman?

I originally posted the following information and commentary onto my Facebook wall…

Saartjie Baartman

Saartjie Baartman

The Life and Death of Saartjie Baartman:
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/mar/31/featuresreviews.guardianreview12

The body of Saartjie Baartman, better known as the Hottentot Venus, has had greater influence on the iconography of the female body in European art and visual culture than any other African woman of the colonial era. Saartjie, a South African showgirl in the early 19th century, was a small, beautiful woman, with an irresistible bottom. Of a build unremarkable in an African context, to some western European eyes she was extraordinary. Today, she is celebrated as bootylicious.

Saartjie was not only the African woman most frequently represented in racially marked British and French visual culture, she also had less immediately visible influences on western art. In an age when art and science were commonly regarded as bedfellows, her image appeared in a proliferation of media, from popular to high culture. Saartjie was depicted in scientific and anatomical drawings, in playbills and aquatint posters, in cartoons, paintings and sculpture. Both during her life and after her death, caricaturists Thomas Rowlandson and George Cruikshank made her the subject of works typifying London life and the Napoleonic era. Saartjie’s body cast was one of the inspirations for Matisse’s revolutionary restructuring of the female body in The Blue Nude (1907), prompted by African sculpture and conceived, as Hugh Honour argues, “as an ‘African’ Venus: that her skin is not black is hardly of significance in view of his attitude to colour”.

Who was Saartjie Baartman? Not a question anyone will ask in South Africa, where she is a national icon; nor in America, where her life, legend and relevance are well understood. Yet in Britain, where she came to fame and had such an influence, she is less well remembered. Rumoured to be a slave brought to England against her will, Saartjie was an orphaned Khoisan maidservant born in 1789 on the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony. She was 21 years old when she was smuggled from Cape Town to London. Her employer, a free black man named Hendrik Cesars, was manservant to a British Army medical officer named Alexander Dunlop. Dunlop persuaded Cesars that Saartjie had lucrative potential as entertainment and a scientific curiosity in England, which had a thriving stage trade in human and scientific curiosities. A woman from the so-called “Hottentot tribe”, who, legend held, had amazing buttocks and strangely elongated labia, might provide an exceptional draw. Saartjie was persuaded: Dunlop, she said, had “promised to send her back rich”.

(Read entire book review here…)

My Commentary: ♫ “The more you know…” ♫

Ron Paul Exposes the Ill Logic of a Prison Planet Mentality!

As I scrolled through my Facebook news feed, I discovered the following artwork here, being shared by the page, “Being Classically Liberal,” and originally posted it to my own wall, along with commentary…

"Has nobody noticed that the authorities can't even keep drugs out of the prisons? How can making our entire society a prison solve the problem?' - Ron Paul

“Has nobody noticed that the authorities can’t even keep drugs out of the prisons? How can making our entire society a prison solve the problem?’ – Ron Paul

My Commentary: Prison planet…

Which Professionally Lying, War-Hawking Scumbag Best Represents Your Interests as a Voting Slob?

As I scrolled through my Facebook news feed, I discovered the following artwork here, being shared by the page, “Emancipated Human,” and originally posted it to my own wall, along with commentary…

"The DNC & RNC Want These Two Clowns As Their Presidential Nominees 2 Families in Power for Over 20 Years, Can You Say Oligarchy? Keep Telling Yourself You Have a Choice..."

“The DNC & RNC Want These Two Clowns As Their Presidential Nominees 2 Families in Power for Over 20 Years, Can You Say Oligarchy? Keep Telling Yourself You Have a Choice…”

My Commentary: Which professionally-lying, war-hawking scumbag do you think best represents your interests as a completely delusional voting slob?