A white Republican state lawmaker in Kentucky made headlines this past week for all the wrong reasons, after it was revealed that she claimed that her white father - born in the 1930's - was a slave. She made the comments while railing against diversity, equity, and inclusion standards in her state at an NAACP event. She now says that she probably could have made her point better without saying that her father was a slave, but the damage is already done. Ring of Fire's Farron Cousins explains what happened.
Link - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/wo...
Check out our merch by visiting our store: https://www.buyrof.com/
Subscribe to our podcast: http://www.ROFPodcast.com
Become a member today!: / @theringoffire
Support us by becoming a monthly patron on Patreon, and help keep progressive media alive!: / theringoffire
Spread the word! LIKE and SHARE this video or leave a comment to help direct attention to the stories that matter. And SUBSCRIBE to stay connected with Ring of Fire's video content!
Support Ring of Fire by subscribing to our YouTube channel: / theringoffire
Be sociable! Follow us on:
Facebook: / ringoffireradio
Twitter: / ringoffiremedia
Instagram: / ringoffirenetwork
*This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos.
A Kentucky State Republican lawmaker who is white. And yes, that's relevant to the story. She made headlines this week after it was revealed that on February 1st, she was meeting with a group of the naacp, and she told these people that her white father, who was born in the 1930s was a slave. Now again, this happened on February 1st. It was not reported until this past week, but you had Kentucky State representative Jennifer Decker, while speaking out against diversity, equity, and inclusion standards to the naacp telling these people, my father was a slave just to a white man, and he was white. That's the direct quote. My white father born in the 1930s, decades and decades after slavery had been abolished. He too was a slave when asked by reporters to kind of, you know, what the hell are you talking about? She did try to try to clear it up as she.
She insisted that her father was born on a dirt farm and that his mother was the illegitimate child of a very prominent person who then was kind enough to allow them to work for him as slaves. Um, she later told the Courier Journal in Kentucky that her father was essentially the same as a slave because he was born poor and worked on someone else's land. My father was a child, and his family all worked there. She said, she later admitted that calling her father a slave was probably too much noting that her father did not experience the same abuses that enslaved black people endured. And Ms. Decker also admitted that her family hadn't been kidnapped from their homes and shipped across the ocean to do their work. So basically what she's trying to say, you know, when she says, Hey, my father was a slave too. What she means is, Hey, aren't, aren't we all kind of slaves to the man? Right? Aren't we all just, you know, working for somebody else, which is, I guess, what she thinks slaves were doing. They were just employed by people. They didn't own the land, and that's what made them slaves.
This is the most brain dead, historically illiterate thing that I have seen a Republican say in a very long time. And again, I cannot underscore this enough, she was talking to the NAACP and she was talking to them about why diversity, equity, and inclusion programs are bad and will be illegal under her new bill. Which basically means like, we're not going to allow companies to basically have this inclusion training. We're not gonna talk about, you know, discrimination. And we're also probably not gonna
Have companies have to fill positions with people who actually represent the demographics of the area. So, yeah, that's, that's pretty racist. Litiga, or, or legislation, excuse me. She's talking to a group of African Americans and she's also telling them that her white father was a slave just because he had to work for somebody else. She clearly has no idea what slavery actually was, which is why the banning of things like critical race theory and the altering of history books here in the United States is such a horrific thing because this woman is old enough to have gone to school before they started editing the history books. She knows exactly what slavery was, and she should probably immediately be removed from office from making such a disgustingly racist comment.
Информация по комментариям в разработке