Anonymous ID: bcd898 July 2, 2020, 10:43 p.m. No.9836988   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Q, since you're around, I wanted to share this article with you, and give you an idea towards drawing in more independents that may have been put-off by the way the MSM has painted POTUS' handling of racial issues and the destruction of monuments, particularly ones with Confederate history.

 

This is the article-→https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/02/12/magazine/1619-project-slave-auction-sites.html

 

"There are some restored plantations, like the Whitney in Louisiana, that conduct excellent slavery tours. But sites of African-American focus currently represent just 2 percent of those registered on the National Register of Historic Places, and only a portion of those are devoted to slavery — even as some 1,800 monuments to the Confederacy still exist all across the country, an inequality that mirrors the social injustices that have haunted this country since its founding."

 

Given the calls for destruction of national monuments, and that to go either way on that debate is a losing battle, the only great option I see is topay recognition to sites of African American/slavery heritage, as a way of "leveling the field", and become one of the few administrations in history to pay tribute to the suffering that they went through, acknowledge that it is history that all of America should give respect to (the same as Confederate history), and to recognize that when one of us suffers, we all suffer. The one thing that has to be very carefully done though is to not make this look like an attempt at pandering to African Americans, though – perhaps other POC sites could be recognized as well? I'm not sure, but we all know that POTUS and Q team love America, that they are not racist, and have the best intentions and plans for the future - one of the best ways to express this might be by looking at the past.