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jusplay4fun wrote:The origin of the English word "slave" is based on enslavement of Slavic people, who are white. Slavery is not limited to ONE culture, one ethnicity, or one location. For most of human history, slaves were part of that society.
DoomYoshi wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:The origin of the English word "slave" is based on enslavement of Slavic people, who are white. Slavery is not limited to ONE culture, one ethnicity, or one location. For most of human history, slaves were part of that society.
Except for the United States after the first generation (source: other idiotic threads).
jusplay4fun wrote:The origin of the English word "slave" is based on enslavement of Slavic people, who are white. Slavery is not limited to ONE culture, one ethnicity, or one location. For most of human history, slaves were part of that society.
2dimes wrote:That is amazing. Weird how they were drawn, painted and sculpted to look like many of the modern Egyptians. Not white yet definately different from most other African people.
You're the expert though.
2dimes wrote:I would love to look again. I want to take the kids too but it seems a little more dangerous now and I can't afford the flights.
Your link to the National Geographic drawing is conclusive for sure. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/e ... e-1.343865 That is exactly how the pyramids originally looked steep and narrow at the bottom.
2dimes wrote:That is amazing. Weird how they were drawn, painted and sculpted to look like many of the modern Egyptians. Not white yet definately different from most other African people.
You're the expert though.
PLAYER57832 wrote:consider is it really logical that the people who lived there then would really and truly be so different from those there today?
MagnusGreeol wrote:- Throughout time, there was always slavery, Not only Africans as you pointed out Migalito, The Hebrews were slaves for a very long time, longer than Africans were in the US/UK error. Alot of the time when an army conquered another, the conquered were turned into slaves, And what happened to their women is a another atrocity all together.
-\MGM/-♎
Dukasaur wrote:Egypt definitely did have black pharaohs at one time -- the famous 25th, or Nubian, Dynasty.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/black-pharaohs/robert-draper-text/1
Still, the 25th Dynasty was notable precisely because it was unusual. It was not the norm.PLAYER57832 wrote:consider is it really logical that the people who lived there then would really and truly be so different from those there today?
Precisely. Then, as now, Egypt had a diverse blend of people, but a clear majority are white.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Egypt definitely did have black pharaohs at one time -- the famous 25th, or Nubian, Dynasty.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/black-pharaohs/robert-draper-text/1
Still, the 25th Dynasty was notable precisely because it was unusual. It was not the norm.PLAYER57832 wrote:consider is it really logical that the people who lived there then would really and truly be so different from those there today?
Precisely. Then, as now, Egypt had a diverse blend of people, but a clear majority are white.
I don't see a single white person in these photos.
So, <1=majority. Huh.
-TG
Dukasaur wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Egypt definitely did have black pharaohs at one time -- the famous 25th, or Nubian, Dynasty.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/black-pharaohs/robert-draper-text/1
Still, the 25th Dynasty was notable precisely because it was unusual. It was not the norm.PLAYER57832 wrote:consider is it really logical that the people who lived there then would really and truly be so different from those there today?
Precisely. Then, as now, Egypt had a diverse blend of people, but a clear majority are white.
I don't see a single white person in these photos.
So, <1=majority. Huh.
-TG
Can I recommend a good optometrist?
You could plop any of those people in Athens or Barcelona without turning heads.
Out of maybe sixty people, I see maybe three dark enough that I would call them black?
PLAYER57832 wrote:2dimes wrote:I would love to look again. I want to take the kids too but it seems a little more dangerous now and I can't afford the flights.
Your link to the National Geographic drawing is conclusive for sure. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/e ... e-1.343865 That is exactly how the pyramids originally looked steep and narrow at the bottom.
Yeah, ridicule beats research for finding truth.. thought I was talking to dimes, not phattscotty?.
Dukasaur wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Egypt definitely did have black pharaohs at one time -- the famous 25th, or Nubian, Dynasty.
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/black-pharaohs/robert-draper-text/1
Still, the 25th Dynasty was notable precisely because it was unusual. It was not the norm.PLAYER57832 wrote:consider is it really logical that the people who lived there then would really and truly be so different from those there today?
Precisely. Then, as now, Egypt had a diverse blend of people, but a clear majority are white.
I don't see a single white person in these photos.
So, <1=majority. Huh.
-TG
Can I recommend a good optometrist?
You could plop any of those people in Athens or Barcelona without turning heads.
Out of maybe sixty people, I see maybe three dark enough that I would call them black?
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:
Saying the people in the photographs are white is like saying all of China is white or the American Indians are white, i.e. non-black.
They're brown of various shades.
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