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/ptg/ PRESIDENT TRUMP GENERAL - BURGERS ARE STILL ASLEEP EDITION

This is a red board which means that it's strictly for adults (Not Safe For Work content only). If you see any illegal content, please report it.

Thread replies: 307
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PRESIDENT DONALD J TRUMP
https://www.whitehouse.gov
https://www.donaldjtrump.com/

DAILY SCHEDULE (WH Press Corps)
https://publicpool.kinja.com/
WH PRESS BRIEFINGS
http://pastebin.com/QidpHWKJ

APPEARANCES
>Pres Trump Weekly Address #23 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/0ewCRiVq-Eg
>Pres Trump admonishes the press 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/GBHk2_FQSyA
>Pres Trump signs Space Council EO 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/TAUqcBc0hYI
>Pres Trump bilateral meet w/Moon Leader 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/io-H31RVEEg
>Victims of Illegal Immigration 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/Oj4L5Pgz9Qc
>Victims of Illigal Immigration - Juan Pina's story 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/5pbv73uL3us
>Pres Trump joint statement w/Moon Leader 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/R_3Y5Ry-eQo
>Pres Trump meets w/Moon Leader 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/NzRnUdQ6xJA
>VP Pence/Moon Leader Wreath Laying Ceremony for korean war 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/gftHkW8RiVc
>WH Press Brief (Sarah, audio only) 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/solU9ySDTrw
>State Dept FPC Brief - US leadership in Energy 6/30/17
https://youtu.be/nuzrk1z0a_o
NEWTRUMP NIGHTLY NEWS
http://pastebin.com/yArfUKdC
PREV APPEARANCES
http://pastebin.com/ynXV6CHT

FUN STUFF
Trump Playlist
http://pastebin.com/X9qQJVKJ
>Trump SwordDancing to Shadilay
https://youtu.be/Wd6TPIxWQwA
>AF1 Takeoff in the rain
https://youtu.be/taZcJqUZAF8
>Donald Trump Emperor of America
https://youtu.be/xQCaWLF2gfs
>TrumpBot vs Mexico
https://youtu.be/Q__bSi5rBlw
>Shadilay
https://youtu.be/ZNriNoWOtXA

INSPIRATION
>Trump Triumphant
www.dailymotion.com/video/x4ulway
>MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!
https://youtu.be/Nyuv_bPSHBA
>Hold Back The Night
https://youtu.be/ldnH5ms50Jc
>Inauguration of Fire
https://youtu.be/XKf8jSiaghU
>#TrumpTheEstablishement
https://youtu.be/kIsctZlgMqg
>American Hero
https://youtu.be/d-X3BVxySLo
>TRUMP - MAGA
https://youtu.be/PagVeZgHbhk

OP pastebin: http://pastebin.com/nygxu29R
prev >>132090932
>>
MAGA
>>
NO MORE FUCKING ESSAY POSTS
>>
>Taney's opinion took up first the question whether Dred Scott, as a black man, was a citizen with the right to sue in federal courts. Taney devoted more space to this matter than to anything else. Why he did so is puzzling, for in the public mind this was the least important issue in the case. But southern whites viewed free blacks as an anomaly and a threat to the stability of slavery; Taney's own state of Maryland contained the largest free Negro population of any state. The chief justice's apparent purpose in negating U.S. citizenship for blacks, wrote Fehrenbacher, was "to launch a sweeping counterattack on the antislavery movement and . . . to meet every threat to southern stability by separating the Negro race absolutely from the federal Constitution and all the rights that it bestowed." To do so, however, he had to juggle history, law, and logic in "a gross perversion of the facts."8 Negroes had not been part of the "sovereign people" who made the Constitution, Taney ruled; they were not included in the "all men" whom the Declaration of Independence proclaimed "created equal." After all, the author of that Declaration and many of the signers owned slaves, and for them to have regarded members of the enslaved race as potential citizens would have been "utterly and flagrantly inconsistent with the principles they asserted." For that matter, wrote Taney, at the time the Constitution was adopted Negroes "had for more than a century before been regarded as beings of an inferior order . . . so far inferior, that they had no rights which a white man was bound to respect."
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das rite awoo mufuggah
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awooo
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I wonder when we are going to get a update on today's schedule
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>This was false, as Curtis and McLean pointed out in their dissents. Free blacks in 1788 and later had many legal rights (to hold and bequeath property, make contracts, seek redress in courts, among others). In five of the thirteen states that ratified the Constitution black men were legal voters and participated in the ratification process. No matter, said Taney, these were rights of state citizenship and the question at issue was United States citizenship. A person might "have all of the rights and privileges of the citizen of a State," opined the chief justice, and "yet not be entitled to the rights and privileges of a citizen in any other State"—a piece of judicial legerdemain that contradicted Article IV, Section 2 of the Constitution: "The citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states." Having established to his satisfaction that blacks were not citizens, Taney could have stopped there and refused jurisdiction because the case was not properly before the Court. That he did not do so rendered the remainder of his decision, in the opinion of many contemporaries and the earliest generations of historians, obiter dictum —a statement in passing on matters not formally before the Court and therefore without force of law. But Taney insisted that because the circuit court had considered all aspects of the case and decided them "on their merits," the whole case including the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise restriction on which Scott based part of his suit for freedom was properly before the Court. Modern scholars agree. Whatever else Taney's ruling was, it was not obiter dictum.
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>>132096507
lel
>>
Fuck Drumpf and fuck white people.
>>
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>33 posts by this ID
>53 by the other

Well, at least it keeps the thread bumped
>>
>Taney and six other justices (with only Curtis and McLean dissenting) concurred that Scott's "sojourn" for two years in Illinois and for a similar period at Fort Snelling, even if the latter was free territory, did not make him free once he returned to Missouri. To this matter Taney devoted only one of the 55 pages of his opinion. The constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise received 21 pages of labored prose arguing that Congress never had the right to prohibit slavery in a territory. That the Constitution (Article IV, Section 3) gave Congress the power to "make all needful rules and regulations" for the territories was not relevant, said the chief justice in a typical example of hair-splitting, because rules and regulations were not laws. The Fifth Amendment protected persons from being deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process; slavery was no different from other property, and a ban on slavery was therefore an unconstitutional deprivation of property. "And if Congress itself cannot do this," continued Taney in what he intended as a blow against popular sovereignty, "it could not authorize a territorial government to exercise" such a power. This clearly was obiter dictum, since the question of the power of a territorial government over slavery was not part of the case.
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>>132096482
Too late, he's here too.
Its gotta be a dump script, no way someone would do this 3:47AM when most users are asleep.
>>
>>132096507
oh.

It's been a long time since that memory came up. Thanks for that, I guess.
>>
>Republicans adopted the dissents by Curtis and McLean as their official position on the case. Not only was Scott a free man by virtue of his prolonged residence in free territory, said the dissenters, but he was also a citizen under the Constitution. And that Constitution did empower Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories. "All needful rules and regulations" meant precisely what it said. The first Congress under the Constitution had reaffirmed the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 banning slavery in the Northwest Territory. Subsequent Congresses down through 1820 excluded slavery from specific territories on four additional occasions. Many framers of the Constitution were alive during this period, and none objected to these acts. Indeed, several framers served in Congress and voted for them or, as presidents of the United States, signed them into law! If the exclusion of slavery from a territory violated due process, asked Curtis, what of the 1807 law ending importation of slaves from Africa? Indeed, what of laws in free states banning slavery? In any case, to prevent a slaveowner from taking his slaves into a territory did not deprive him of that property.
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>Land on Moon 50 years ago.
>"Ok better stop this insanity, lets not colonize the near space, moon & mars.

What made Man do such a stupid thing
>>
A quick reminder to please report any spam and spam posters so that hopefully some fatass gets off of their ass and deals with it at some point.
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>>132096547
Salty about losing the election and based on that flag you are also salty about the travel ban
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>>132096563
Essaybot is here, now where's the reddit troll?
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Can you filter ids on mobile?
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>dumpf voters
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Reminder that /ptg/ is full of kekistani redditor cucks, all alt righters go for intellectuals discussions over to TRS

Keep dropping those tactical blackippls, fellow fashypedes!
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MELANIA, IVANKA, KELLYANNE, SARAH, HOPE BTFO
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AWOO~
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>Instead of removing the issue of slavery in the territories from politics, the Court's ruling became itself a political issue. Northern Democrats gloated that Taney's opinion was "the funeral sermon of Black Republicanism . . . crushing and annihilating . . . the anti-slavery platform . . . at a single blow." Southerners congratulated themselves that "Southern opinion upon the subject of Southern slavery . . . is now the supreme law of the land." The decision "crushes the life out of that miserable . . . Black Republican organization." But the Republican party declined to die. Its press condemned this "Jesuitical decision" based on "gross historical falsehoods" and a "willful perversion" of the Constitution. If this ruling "shall stand for law," wrote William Cullen Bryant, slavery was no longer the "peculiar institution" of fifteen states but "a Federal institution, the common patrimony and shame of all the States. . . . Hereafter, wherever our . . . flag floats, it is the flag of slavery. . . . Are we to accept, without question . . . that hereafter it shall be a slaveholders' instead of the freemen's Constitution? Never! Never!" In this spirit several Republican state legislatures passed resolutions asserting that the ruling was "not binding in law and conscience."
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>>132096614
No, stop being a phoneposter.
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>>132096595
Between then and now, satellites were launched into space. It broadened out the advancement of technology, especially the internet.
Imagine what the new US Space Corps will bring us.
>>
>>132096628
You just described a Liberal SJW. Projection?
>>
drumpf has crashed and burned

if only we elected a constitutional conservative like Ted Cruz who could restore America
>>
>>132096644
Stop spamming.
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>>132096595
The beans, anon. The answer lies within the beans
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>>132096634
Didn't the MSM just have a melt down over Trump criticizing Mika's face...
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>>132096629
Can you stop. You've been doing this all day.
>>
>The New York Tribune declared contemptuously that this decision by "five slaveholders and two doughfaces"15 was a " dictum . . . entitled to just as much moral weight as would be the judgment of a majority of those congregated in any Washington bar-room." The dictum theory justified Republican refusal to recognize the ruling as a binding precedent. They proclaimed an intent to "reconstitute" the Court after winning the presidency in 1860 and to overturn the "inhuman dicta" of Dred Scott. "The remedy," said the Chicago Tribune, was "the ballot box. . . . Let the next President be Republican, and 1860 will mark an era kindred with that of 1776."

>It soon dawned on northern Democrats that Taney had aimed to discomfit them as well as the Republicans. Although the question of popular sovereignty had not been directly before the Court, the principle of Dred Scott was not merely that Congress had no power to exclude slavery from a territory, but that slave property could not be excluded. Douglas grasped this nettle fearlessly. Yes, he said in a speech at Springfield, Illinois, in June 1857, the Dred Scott decision was law and all good citizens must obey it. A master's right to take slaves into any territory was irrevocable. BUT—citizens of a territory could still control this matter. How? The right of property in slaves "necessarily remains a barren and worthless right," said Douglas, "unless sustained, protected and enforced by appropriate police regulations and local legislation" which depended on "the will and the wishes of the people of the Territory."
>>
>This anticipated the famous Freeport doctrine enunciated by Douglas more than a year later in his debates with Lincoln. It was an ingenious attempt to enable both northern and southern Democrats to have their cake and eat it. It might have worked had not Lecompton crumbled Democratic unity. When that happened, southern Democrats insisted on another dessert. They agreed with Douglas that the Dred Scott decision would not enforce itself. "The Senator from Illinois is right," conceded Senator Albert G. Brown of Mississippi. "By non-action, by unfriendly action . . . the Territorial Legislature can exclude slavery." But that would amount to a denial of the "right of protection for our slave property in the Territories. The Constitution as expounded by the Supreme Court, awards it. We demand it; we mean to have it." Congress must pass a federal slave code for the territories, said Brown, and enforce it with the United States army if necessary. If pirates seized ships owned by citizens of Massachusetts, senators of that state would demand naval protection. "Have I, sir, less right to demand protection for my slave property in the Territories?" If you of the North "deny to us rights guarantied by the Constitution . . . then, sir . . . the Union is a despotism [and] I am prepared to retire from the concern."
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>>132096679
>constitutional conservative like Ted Cruz
You got your talking points backward, that was McMuffin and "the renegades."
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>>132096659
I'm in bed anon, not gonna lug that shit on top of me
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>>132096635
C'MERE YOU SLUT
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>>132096629
We asked you to stop posting random screenshots that have nothing to do with Trump.
>>
>Thus instead of crippling the Republican party as Taney had hoped, the Dred Scott decision strengthened it by widening the sectional schism among Democrats. Republicans moved quickly to exploit their advantage by depicting the decision as the consequence of a slave-power conspiracy. Seward and Lincoln were two of the foremost advocates of a conspiracy theory. Citing "whisperings" between Taney and Buchanan at the inaugural ceremony plus other unnamed evidence, Seward charged collusion between the president-elect and the chief justice. One day after the inauguration and one day before announcing the decision, said Seward, "the judges, without even exchanging their silken robes for courtiers' gowns, paid their salutations to the President, in the Executive palace. Doubtlessly the President received them as graciously as Charles I did the judges who had, at his instance, subverted the statutes of English liberty." Seward's accusations provoked an uproar. Some historians have echoed Democratic opinion that they were "venomous" and "slanderous."
>>
>But in fact Seward hit uncomfortably close to the mark. He might almost have read the letter from Buchanan to Grier urging the Pennsylvania justice to go along with the southern majority.

>Seward's insinuations enraged Taney. The chief justice said later that if the New Yorker had won the presidency in 1860 he would have refused to administer the oath. Ironically, Taney did administer the oath to a man who had made a similar accusation. In a speech after his nomination for senator from Illinois in 1858, Abraham Lincoln reviewed the process by which Democrats had repealed the Missouri Compromise in 1854 and then declared it unconstitutional in 1857. We cannot know that all of this was part of a conspiracy to expand slavery, conceded Lincoln. "But when we see a lot of framed timbers . . . which we know have been gotten out at different times and places by different workmen—Stephen, Franklin, Roger and James, for instance—and when we see these timbers joined together, and see they exactly make the frame of a house . . . we find it impossible to not believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James . . . all worked upon a common plan ."
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>>132096741
Get out of bed or go to sleep and please report the spammer in some vain hope that a hotpocket will get off of their lazy ass.
>>
>>132096674
That was still not properly actualized version of conquering immediate near space.
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>>132096482
No trips no long post just everyone stop posting period!
Waaaahh! My pussy hurts!
>>
>>132096804
Meant for
>>132096737
>>
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>someone posts a gallery link to 230 high quality awoos

>keep reposting the same shitty old ones
>>
>The same speech included a more famous house metaphor. " 'A house divided against itself cannot stand,' " said Lincoln quoting Jesus. "I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free." The opponents of slavery hoped to stop the spread of the institution and "place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction." But advocates of slavery—including those conspiring carpenters—were trying to "push it forward, till it shall become lawful in all the States . . . North as well as South." How could they do this? "Simply [by] the next Dred Scott decision. It is merely for the Supreme Court to decide that no State under the Constitution can exclude it, just as they have already decided that . . . neither Congress nor the Territorial Legislature can do it." Article VI of the Constitution affirms that the Constitution and laws of the United States "shall be the supreme law of the land . . . anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding." If, therefore, the U.S. Constitution protected "the right of property in a slave," noted Lincoln, then "nothing in the Constitution or laws of any State can destroy the right of property in a slave." Lincoln himself believed that "the right of property in a slave is not distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution." But Democrats including Douglas believed that it was. If they had their way, Lincoln told Illinois Republicans in June 1858, "we shall lie down pleasantly dreaming that the people of Missouri are on the verge of making their State free; and we shall awake to the reality , instead, that the Supreme Court has made Illinois a slave State."
>>
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>>132096824
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>>132096402
I'll awoo to that
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>>132096810
>No trips

I agree
>>
>Did Lincoln and other Republicans really believe that the Dred Scott decision was part of a conspiracy to expand slavery into free states ? Or were they creating a bugaboo to frighten northern voters? Stephen Douglas presumed the latter. "A school boy knows" that the Court would never make "so ridiculous a decision," said Douglas. "It is an insult to men's understanding, and a gross calumny on the Court." A good many historians have echoed Douglas's words. But was the Republican claim ridiculous? In November 1857 the Washington Union, organ of the Buchanan administration, carried an article asserting that the abolition of slavery in northern states had been an unconstitutional attack on property. In private correspondence and in other contexts not conducive to propaganda, Republicans expressed genuine alarm at the implications of Dred Scott. "The Constitution of the United States is the paramount law of every State," Senator James Doolittle of Wisconsin pointed out, "and if that recognizes slaves as property, as horses are property, no State constitution or State law can abolish it." Noting that Scott had lived as a slave in Illinois for two years, the New York legislature denounced the doctrine that "a master may take his slave into a Free State without dissolving the relation of master and slave. . . . [This] will bring slavery within our borders, against our will, with all its unhallowed, demoralizing, and blighting influences."
>>
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Look at these based black men protecting this Trump voter from crazy white nationalists.

fucking BASED.
>>
woooow, what the fuck is this, my fellow fashypedes?
>>
>>132096817
No, /comfy/. I've reported the fucking nigger almost 10 times, I don't want to get banned myself for reporting so much.
>>
>The legislature's concern was not abstract. Pending in the New York courts was a case concerning a slaveholder's right to retain ownership of his slaves while in transit through a free state. Lemmon v. The People had originated in 1852 when a New York judge upheld the freedom of eight slaves who had left their Virginia owner while in New York City on their way to Texas. Most northern states had earlier granted slaveowners the right of transit or temporary sojourn with their slaves. But by the 1850s all except New Jersey and Illinois had laws on the books offering freedom to any slave brought by a master within their borders. The Dred Scott decision challenged the principle of these laws. Virginia therefore decided to take the Lemmon case to the highest New York court (which upheld the state law in 1860) and would undoubtedly have appealed it to Taney's Supreme Court had not secession intervened. The Lemmon case might well have become Lincoln's "next Dred Scott decision." Recent scholarship sustains Lincoln's apprehension that the Taney Court would have sanctioned "some form of slavery in the North." Even the right of transit or temporary sojourn was, from the antislavery point of view, an ominous foot in the door. "If a man can hold a slave one day in a free state," asked a Republican newspaper, "why not one month, why not one year? Why could not his 'transit' be indefinitely lengthened, his 'visit' a practical permanency?"
>>
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MAGA
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>>132096853
Everyone who isn't reddit would much prefer it.
>>
>>132096595
the expense mainly, and to a lesser extent the lack of rivalry after the soviets fell
>>
>>132096809
True, and in the meantime NASA and other space agencies conducted experiments in zero gravity environments. Space exploration is an expensive field, but its rewarding.
Its our destiny as a species. This world is going to die one day, and only the ones who can leave this world can survive.
>>
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>>132096741
BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRAP
>>
>Thus in the context of Dred Scott, Lincoln's "warning that slavery might become lawful everywhere was . . . far from absurd." His attempt to identify Douglas with this proslavery conspiracy ("Stephen and Franklin and Roger and James") was part of Lincoln's campaign for the Senate in 1858. 26 During the Lecompton debate Douglas had said that he cared not whether slavery was voted down or up in Kansas—his concern was that Kansas have a fair vote. This "care not" policy, said Lincoln, had been prolific of evil, for it enabled the proponents of slavery to push forward their program of expansion without effective opposition. The only way to stop them was to elect Republicans "whose hearts are in the work—who do care for the result," who "consider slavery a moral, social, and political wrong," who "will oppose . . . the modern Democratic idea that slavery is as good as freedom, and ought to have room for expansion all over the continent."

>This was the message that Lincoln carried to Illinois voters in dozens of speeches during that summer of '58. Douglas traversed the same territory branding Lincoln a Black Republican whose abolition doctrines would destroy the Union and flood Illinois with thousands of thick-lipped, bullet-headed, degenerate blacks. Lincoln "believes that the Almighty made the Negro equal to the white man," said Douglas at Springfield in July. "He thinks that the Negro is his brother. I do not think the Negro is any kin of mine at all. . . . This government . . . was made by white men, for the benefit of white men and their posterity, to be executed and managed by white men."
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>>132096578
>>132096563
I noticed that they started spamming in the early morning since a few days.
It's often two guys at once and it can really clutter up the thread when it is a bit slow.
It will die out between 6 AM and 7 AM.
But I just don't understand why they would do that at this time, there's hardly anyone here.
>>
>>132096927
but what about the GAINS
>>
>Desiring to confront Douglas directly, Lincoln proposed a series of debates. Douglas agreed to seven confrontations in various parts of the state. These debates are deservedly the most famous in American history. They matched two powerful logicians and hard-hitting speakers, one of them nationally eminent and the other little known outside his region. To the seven prairie towns came thousands of farmers, workers, clerks, lawyers, and people from all walks of life to sit or stand outdoors for hours in sunshine or rain, heat or cold, dust or mud. The crowds participated in the debates by shouted questions, pointed comments, cheers, and groans. The stakes were higher than a senatorial election, higher even than the looming presidential contest of 1860, for the theme of the debates was nothing less than the future of slavery and the Union. Tariffs, banks, internal improvements, corruption, and other staples of American politics received not a word in these debates—the sole topic was slavery.
>>
>>132096824
cute!
>>
>>132096868
The guy on the left looks like a literal chimpanzee.

Smartphones are why the internet has gone to shit, they're too easy to use if a savage like that can figure it out.
>>
>>132096927
You mean the communist empire you sided with against the pro white anti Jew nation of nazi Germany?

They turned out to be the real bad guys?
>>
Time for some nostalgia!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1FW36keZJw
>>
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>>132096747
>>132096868
That's right,fashypede, you are doing a good job convincing them you are one of the kekistani redditors!

They won't know a thing, keep dropping those tactical blackpills!
>>
Seems the left was salty about today's rally
>>
>In the fashion of debaters, Douglas and Lincoln opened with slashing attacks designed to force the other man to spend his time defending vulnerable positions. A Republican journalist phrased this strategy in a letter of advice to one of Lincoln's associates: "When you see Abe at Freeport, for God's sake tell him to 'Charge Chester! charge!' . . . We must not be parrying all the while. We want the deadliest thrusts. Let us see blood follow any time he closes a sentence." Lincoln's main thrust was the accusation that Douglas had departed from the position of the founding fathers, while the Republicans were upholding that position. Like the fathers, Republicans "insist that [slavery] should as far as may be, be treated as a wrong, and one of the methods of treating it as a wrong is to make provision that it shall grow no larger ." Lincoln reiterated that the country could not exist forever half slave and half free; it had existed in that condition so far only because until 1854 most Americans shared the founders' faith that restricting slavery's growth would put it on the path to ultimate extinction. But Douglas not only "looks to no end of the institution of slavery," he looks to its "perpetuity and nationalization." He is thus "eradicating the light of reason and the love of liberty in this American people."
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>>132096981
Excuse me?

You fucking racist white nationalist. How can you say such vile hatred towards a based black pede like that?
>>
>In one respect Lincoln's celebrated Freeport question was a departure from this strategy of linking Douglas to the slave power. Was there any lawful way, Lincoln asked at Freeport, that the people of a territory could exclude slavery if they wished to do so? The point of the question, of course, was to nail the contradiction between Dred Scott and popular sovereignty. Folklore history has portrayed this question as the stone that slew Goliath. If Douglas answered No, he alienated Illinois voters and jeopardized his re-election to the Senate. If he answered Yes, he alienated the South and lost their support for the presidency in 1860. The problem with this thesis is that Douglas had already confronted the issue many times. Lincoln knew how he would answer the question: "He will instantly take ground that slavery can not actually exist in the territories, unless the people desire it, and so give it protective territorial legislation. If this offends the South he will let it offend them; as at all events he means to hold on to his chances in Illinois. . . . He cares nothing for the South—he knows he is already dead there" because of his opposition to Lecompton. Lincoln asked the question anyway; Douglas answered as expected. His answer became famous in retrospect as the Freeport doctrine. It did play a role in prompting the southern demand for a territorial slave code—an issue that split the Democratic party in 1860. But this would have happened anyway. Lincoln did not press the question in subsequent debates, for its tendency to highlight Douglas's differences from southern Democrats ran counter to Lincoln's effort to highlight their similarities.
>>
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>>132096967
They have problems they need sorting out, and they need a place to vent. Deal with it, fashypedes are here to stay
>>
>>132096994
Oh, very. Any day that they chimp out is a good day to me.
>>
>>132096992
You posted this last thread. Nobody cared.
>>
>>132096967
I dunno. Who cares. They're wasting no one's time but their own.
>>
>Douglas's counterattack smote Lincoln's house-divided metaphor. Why cannot the country continue to "exist divided into free and slave States?" asked Douglas. Whatever their personal sentiments toward slavery, the founding fathers "left each State perfectly free to do as it pleased on the subject." If the nation "cannot endure thus divided, then [Lincoln] must strive to make them all free or all slave, which will inevitably bring about a dissolution of the Union." To talk about ultimate extinction of slavery "is revolutionary and destructive of the existence of this Government." If it means anything, it means "warfare between the North and the South, to be carried on with ruthless vengeance, until the one section or the other shall be driven to the wall and become the victim of the rapacity of the other." No, said Douglas, "I would not endanger the perpetuity of this Union. I would not blot out the great inalienable rights of the white men for all the negroes that ever existed."

>Lincoln's inclusion of blacks among those "created equal" was a "monstrous heresy," said Douglas. "The signers of the Declaration had no reference to the negro . . . or any other inferior and degraded race, when they spoke of the equality of men." Did Thomas Jefferson "intend to say in that Declaration that his negro slaves, which he held and treated as property, were created his equals by Divine law, and that he was violating the law of God every day of his life by holding them as slaves? ('No, no.')"
>>
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>>132096967
This is the only time I've been on here late night, I usually would have gone to bed four hours ago as I work during the day, but since I have the next three days off due to the sabbath and the holiday, I decided to check out /ptg/ this late at night.
>>
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>>132096634
What an (((interesting))) face
>>
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>>132097113
>>
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>>132097052
>ha I'm calling them pedes like they call us
>got em

Meanwhile
>>
>Douglas hit his stride in exploitation of the race issue. He considered it a sure winner in southern and central Illinois. The Negro "must always, always occupy an inferior position," shouted Douglas to cheering partisans. "Are you in favor of conferring upon the negro the rights and privileges of citizenship? ('No, no.') Do you desire to strike out of our State Constitution that clause which keeps slaves and free negroes out of the State . . . in order that when Missouri abolishes slavery she can send one hundred thousand emancipated slaves into Illinois, to become citizens and voters on an equality with yourselves? ('Never,' 'no.') . . . If you desire to allow them to come into the State and settle with the white man, if you desire them to vote . . . then support Mr. Lincoln and the Black Republican party, who are in favor of the citizenship of the negro. ('Never, never.')"
>>
Are the burgers in America actually pretty good?
>>
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>>132097097
>the sabbath
>>
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>>132097081
>>132097143
plz like my video, fellow fashypede
>>
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Germanclobber with a heart warming non-political article
>>
>>132096844
so true
>>
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>>132097142
Donkey
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=TmUs5qVZJEQ
>>
>>132096741
Please someone hat the ass.
>>
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Fuck off Spencerpedes
>>
>Douglas's harping on this theme exasperated Lincoln. "Negro equality! Fudge!!" he wrote privately. "How long . . . shall there continue knaves to vend, and fools to gulp, so low a piece of demagougeism?" But try as he might, Lincoln could not ignore the issue. As he emerged from his hotel for the fourth debate at Charleston in southern Illinois, a man asked him if he was "really in favor of producing a perfect equality between negroes and white people." Placed on the defensive, Lincoln responded defensively. "Anything that argues me into his idea of a perfect social and political equality," complained Lincoln of Douglas's innuendoes, "is but a specious and fantastic arrangement of words, by which a man can prove a horse chestnut to be a chestnut horse." Lincoln admitted that he believed black people "entitled to all the natural rights enumerated in the Declaration of Independence, the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." But "I do not understand that because I do not want a negro woman for a slave I must necessarily have her for a wife. (Cheers and laughter)" So that his horse chestnut should no longer be mistaken for a chestnut horse, Lincoln spelled out his position with clarity: "I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black races, (applause)—that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the races which I believe will for ever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality."
>>
>>132097161
Better than any other country I have been in, absolutely. Beef is insanely inexpensive in the US so they are meaty as hell.
>>
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What do you guys think would have happen to us if Hillary won?
>>
>So far Lincoln would go in concession to the prejudices of most Illinois voters. But no farther. "Let us discard all this quibbling about this man and the other man—this race and that race and the other race being inferior," he said in Chicago. Instead let us "unite as one people throughout this land, until we shall once more stand up declaring that all men are created equal." Whether or not the black man was equal to the white man in mental or moral endowment, "in the right to eat the bread, without leave of anybody else, which his own hand earns, he is my equal and the equal of Judge Douglas, and the equal of every living man. (Great applause.)" As for political rights, racial intermarriage, and the like, these were matters for the state legislature, "and as Judge Douglas seems to be in constant horror that some such danger is rapidly approaching, I propose as the best means to prevent it that the Judge be kept at home and placed in the State Legislature where he can fight the measures. (Uproarious laughter and applause.)"
>>
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>>132097161
You tell me.
>>
>>132097179
Yeah, I have Sundays off. The union that works there must have bargained for it.
>>
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>>132096844
Wow a christian attacking a christian nation.

Also funny how whites when pulling off rare terror attacks, do it so much better..like Breivik
>>
>Despite Lincoln's wit, Douglas scored points on this issue. The Little Giant also backed Lincoln into a corner on the matter of slavery's "ultimate extinction." More than once Lincoln had said: "I have no purpose directly or indirectly to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists." "Well, if he is not in favor of that," asked Douglas, "how does he expect to bring slavery in a course of ultimate extinction? ('Hit him again.')" With such obfuscatory rhetoric, charged ouglas, the Black Republicans tried to conceal their purpose to attack slavery and break up the Union. Lincoln replied that when he spoke of ultimate extinction, he meant just that. "I do not mean . . . it will be in a day, nor in a year, nor in two years. I do not suppose that in the most peaceful way ultimate extinction would occur in less than a hundred years at the least; but that it will occur in the best way for both races in God's good time, I have no doubt. (Applause.)" Like the abolitionists, Lincoln refused to be drawn into discussion of a "plan" for ending slavery. He hoped that southerners would once again come to regard bondage as an evil, just as Washington, Jefferson, and the other founders had regarded it. And just as they had limited its expansion as a first step toward ending the evil, "I have no doubt that it would become extinct, for all time to come, if we but re-adopted the policy of the fathers."
>>
>>132097221
Blackbagged, dead, etc etc.
>>
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Who has the rally salt? I need it.
>>
Word is that @Greta Van Susteren departure from @MSNBC due in part to @TomCruise and @Scientology pilling because Scientologists voted for Trump overwhelmingly.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-pol-scientology-trump-hollywood-20170119-story.html

http://tampabaybeat.info/index.php/2016/10/06/donald-trump-pam-bondi-and-the-church-of-scientology/

To paraphrase, 'Scientologists draw a parallel between Trump and Hubbard by his ability to control behavior and manipulate the media and those under his wing.'

... and quote, "Multiple sources assert Scientologists overwhelmingly vote as a bloc with a pre-election understanding as to which candidates should be supported."
>>
>In any case the questions of "a perfect social and political equality . . . upon which Judge Douglas has tried to force the controversy . . . are false issues," said Lincoln in the concluding debate. The true issue was the morality and future of slavery. "That is the issue that will continue in this country when these poor tongues of Judge Douglas and myself shall be silent. It is the eternal struggle between these two principles—right and wrong—throughout the world . . . from the beginning of time. . . . The one is the common right of humanity and the other the divine right of kings. . . . No matter in what shape it comes, whether from a king who seeks to bestride the people of his own nation and live by the fruit of their labor, or from one race of men as an apology for enslaving another race, it is the same tyrannical principle."
>>
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>>132097185
You mad they called out the Jew and you're too scared if you do you'll get fired from Burger King?

>>132097201
> muh Spencer boogeyman
>>
>In the judgment of history—or at least of most historians—Lincoln "won" the debates. The judgment of Illinois voters in 1858 is more difficult to discover. Republican and Democratic candidates for the legislature won virtually the same number of votes statewide—125,000 for each party.42 Democrats carried all but three of the fifty-four southern counties and Republicans all but six of the forty-eight northern counties. Because the legislature had not been reapportioned to reflect the faster growth of northern counties in the 1850s, and because eight of 125,000 votes, Douglas Democrats 121,000, and anti-Douglas Buchanan Democrats 5,000. Tribune Almanac, 1859, pp. 60–61. the thirteen holdover senators not up for election were Democrats, that party had a majority of fifty-four to forty-six in the next legislature and elected Douglas. It was a significant triumph for the Little Giant. He confirmed his standing as leader of his party in the North and its strongest candidate for the next presidential nomination. For Lincoln the election was a victory in defeat. He had battled the famous Douglas on at least even terms, clarified the issues between Republicans and northern Democrats more sharply than ever, and emerged as a Republican spokesman of national stature.
>>
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>>132097052
>That pic.

Not really surprised by it, but it does make me a bit sad.
>>
>>132097221
By this point in time? Not much. By the end of her first term? 4chan would be shut down.
>>
>Democrats also carried five of the nine congressional districts in Illinois. That made the state one of the few northern bright spots for the party in 1858. Elsewhere Democrats suffered almost as great a debacle as in 1854. In the next House of Representatives the number of northern Democrats would drop from fifty-three to thirty-two. In the four lower-North states carried by Buchanan in 1856 (Pennsylvania, Indiana, Illinois, and New Jersey) the party balance shifted in 1858 from twenty-nine Democratic and twenty-one Republican congressmen to sixteen Democrats and thirty-four Republicans. The Republican share of the vote in these four states jumped from 35 percent in 1856 (when the American party was in the field) to 52 percent in 1858. Buchanan had invited a few friends to an elegant White House dinner on election night. As telegrams bearing tidings of the returns from Pennsylvania came in, "we had a merry time of it," wrote the president next day, "laughing among other things over our crushing defeat. It is so great that it is almost absurd."
>>
>>132096392
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>poland is getting rapefugees

CAN ONE FUCKING COUNTRY NOT JUST REMAIN WHITE?
>>
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>>132097287
It's okay, fashypede. We have a place to soothe our jimmies now :)
>>
>Lecompton and Dred Scott accounted for much of this Republican gain. Once again, victories by the "slave power" had produced a backlash that strengthened its deadliest enemies in the North. Other issues also worked in favor of the Republicans. The disappearance of the American party in the North pushed most of the remaining nativists into Republican ranks because they continued to perceive Democrats as the party of Romanism. In manufacturing regions the Democratic tariff policy and the depression following the Panic of 1857 intensified voter backlash. Republicans also benefited from continued southern opposition 43. The best analysis of the election is in to homestead legislation and to federal aid for construction of a transcontinental railroad.
>>
>>132096967
to get the ball rolling for later hours, dont these threads usually stay open longer than most?
>>
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>>132097097
>that awooooo
Is impregnating awooos considered cross-breeding?
>>
>>132097322
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>>132097287
Man that's such a fashy Ancom flag ya have there.
>>
>A dozen years of growth and prosperity came to a jolting halt in 1857–58.45 The Panic of 1857 had both foreign and domestic roots. The Crimean War (1854–56) had cut off Russian grain from the European market. American exports mushroomed to meet the need. This intensified a surge of speculation in western lands. The decade-long expansion of all economic indices had also produced rapid rises in the prices of stocks and bonds. From 1848 to 1856 the number of banks increased 50 percent and their notes, loans, and deposits doubled. Railroad mileage and capital grew threefold from 1850 to 1857. Textile mills, foundries, and factories ran at full tilt to meet an apparently insatiable demand. California gold continued to pump millions of dollars monthly into the economy. By 1856, however, pessimists began to discern some cracks in this economic structure. Much of the capital invested in American railroads, insurance companies, and banks came from Europe, especially Britain. The Crimean War plus simultaneous British and French colonial ventures in the Far East drained specie from the banks of those countries. This brought a doubling and even tripling of interest rates in Britain and France, causing European investors to sell lower-yielding American securities to reinvest at home. The resulting decline in the prices of some American stocks and bonds in 1856–57 in turn reduced the assets of American banks holding these securities. Meanwhile British banks increased the ratio of reserves to liabilities, causing some American banks to do the same. And a buildup of unsold inventories caused several American textile mills to shut down temporarily.
>>
>>132096595
Read the book "Whitey on the moon"
you can gleam from the title as to why
>>
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>>132097351
Can you teach us how to be cool like you magapedes?
>>
>>132097358
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>>132096973
>"american footprints on distant worlds"
>reorganization at nasa
>restoration of national space council
>space corps in 2018
whitey's going back to the moon
>>
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>>132097349
the countries on mars will be
>>
>>132097378
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>By the summer of 1857 the combination of speculative fever in some parts of the economy and ominous cutbacks in others created a climate of nervous apprehension. "What can be the end of all this but another general collapse like that of 1837?" asked the financial writer of the New York Herald. "The same premonitory symptoms that prevailed in 1835—36 prevail in 1857 in a tenfold degree . . . paper bubbles of all descriptions, a general scramble for western lands and town and city sites, millions of dollars, made or borrowed, expended in fine houses and gaudy furniture. . . . That a storm is brewing on the commercial horizon there can be no doubt."
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>>132097398
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>>132097396
AND WHITIES ON THE MOON
>>
>Given this mood, any financial tremor was likely to become an earthquake through the mechanism of self-fulfilling prophecy. On August 24 came the tremor: the New York branch of an Ohio investment house suspended payments because the cashier had embezzled its funds. The crisis of confidence set off by this event reverberated through the economy. Financial markets in most parts of the country were now connected by telegraph; the novelty of instant communication charged these markets with a volatility that caused a rumor in one region to become a crisis somewhere else. Depositors made runs on banks, which had to call in loans to obtain specie. This caused over-extended speculators and entrepreneurs to go under. A wave of panic selling hit Wall Street. As the ripple of these failures began to spread through the country in September, a ship carrying $2 million in gold from California went to the bottom in a storm. By mid-October all but a handful of the nation's banks had suspended specie payments. Factories shut down; business failures multiplied; railroads went bankrupt; construction halted; crop prices plummeted; the intricate structure of land speculation collapsed like a house of cards; immigration dropped in 1858 to its lowest level in thirteen years; imports fell off; and the federal treasury (whose revenues came mainly from tariffs and land sales) ran a deficit for the first time in a decade. Men and women by hundreds of thousands lost their jobs and others went on short time or took wage cuts as the winter of 1857–58 came on.
>>
>>132097425
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
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>being this upset over a fucking speech at a rally
Kek
>>
>>132097453
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>>132097392
I go to therightstuff.biz

again, that's therightstuff.biz, where all the dank memes come from
>>
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DAMN WE GOT BTFO! I SURRENDER MY ANAL VIRGINITY TO OUR LEADERS SPENCER AND ENOCH!
>>
>Remembering that some of the European revolutions in 1848 (which had been preceded by a financial downturn) had taken a radical turn toward class warfare, Americans wondered if they would experience similar events. Unemployed workers in several cities marched in demonstrations carrying banners demanding work or bread. In New York a large crowd broke into the shops of flour merchants. On November 10 a mob gathered in Wall Street and threatened forced entry into the U.S. customs house and subtreasury whose vaults contained $20 million. Soldiers and marines dispersed them, but unrest persisted through the winter, causing more than one anxious citizen to apprehend that "a nightmare broods over society."
>>
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>>132097370
No, it's considered an upgrade.

White women can't compete with wolfgirls.
>>
>>132097459
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>>132097485
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>>132097370
A year ago I had a conversation about genetics and whether or not if wolfgirls are dominant genes and if they'd be compatible with humans gametically.
I mean, there's mechanical compatibility, the question now is the gametes are compatible, and if so, what the offspring would be like in terms of survivability as an embryo, then a fetus, then determining survival after birth and beyond growth and development leading up to the next generation.
It was detailed and I applied biological terms to it. Its probably somewhere in the archives way back when this place was /tg/.
>>
>Though often militant in rhetoric, however, these demonstrations generated little violence. No one was killed and few were injured—in sharp contrast to the Know-Nothing riots a few years earlier and the ongoing guerrilla warfare in Kansas. Relief and public works in northern cities helped alleviate hardships over the winter. One of the most striking consequences of the depression was a religious revival that brought people of all occupations together in prayer meetings at which they contemplated God's punishment for the sins of greed and high living that had caused the crash.

>Perhaps the Lord took pity. The depression of 1857–58 turned out to be milder and shorter than expected. California gold came east in large quantities during the fall and winter. Banks in New York resumed specie payments by December 1857, and those elsewhere followed suit during the next few months. The stock market rebounded in the spring of 1858. Factories reopened, railroad construction resumed its rapid pace, and unemployment declined. By early 1859 recovery was almost complete. Trade unions, which had all but disappeared under impact of the depression, revived in 1859 and began a series of strikes to recoup predepression wages. In February 1860 the shoemakers of Lynn, Massachusetts, went out in what became the largest strike in American history to that time, eventually involving 20,000 workers in the New England shoe industry.
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>>132096844
His actions were a direct reaction to an out of control and over reaching Federal Govt. you commie boot licker.
>>
>essayfag shitposting
>TRS/Spencer fag going full retard this early in the morning.
>no mods in sight

Well this was a shitty Saturday/sunday.
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>>132097489
That isn't a wolfgirl desu.
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>>132097524
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>>132097481
>'dank maymays'
>Reddit mascot
>>
>The political effects of the depression may have equaled its economic consequences. It took time, however, for political crosscurrents to settle into a pattern that benefited Republicans. The initial tendency to blame banks for the panic seemed to give Democrats an opportunity to capitalize on their traditional anti-bank posture. They did reap some political profits in the Old Northwest. But elsewhere the issue had lost much of its old partisan salience because Democrats had become almost as pro-bank as the opposition. Republicans of Whig origin pointed the finger of blame at the absence of a national bank to ride herd over irresponsible practices of state banks. Several Republicans called for revival of something like the Second Bank of the United States from the grave in which Andrew Jackson had buried it two decades earlier. Democratic tariff policies also came under indictment from Whiggish Republicans.
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>>132096844
Since you hate white people then gtfo

If you actually bothered to look at the facts of the case, you would know that McVeigh was just a patsy
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>>132097489
Oh, thank God.
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>>132097530
Maybe if they get enough reports they will finally do something. Are people actually reporting this spam?
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>>132097367
Yes, less posters.
We are now burning tthrough threads way faster and they get bumped to the top more.
After more than a year, shills still haven't figured out how to sage or come up with a strategy that will actually hamper us.
Like the essaybot for example, it takes me 5 seconds to filter him and that's that.
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>>132097527
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>>132097529
Yeah, his actions,

http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/POLITICS/OK/TRUCK/truck.html
>>
>Although no modern historian has attributed the depression of 1857–58 to low tariffs, Horace Greeley and his fellow protectionists did so. The Walker Tariff enacted by Democrats in 1846 had remained in effect until 1857. It had been mildly protectionist with average duties of about 20 percent, the lowest since 1824. Another Democratic tariff passed in March 1857 lowered duties still further and enlarged the free list. The depression began a few months later. Greeley not surprisingly saw a causal connection. "No truth of mathematics," intoned the New York Tribune, "is more clearly demonstrable than that the ruin about us is fundamentally attributable to the destruction of the Protective Tariff."
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>>132097559
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What's going on, /ptg/? Moments remain until the end of my shift here at the wally world. I'm curious to see how much hand-wringing is going to be made on the rounds of the Sunday morning political shows since last week was practically a whitepill right after another. How can we possibly top the week ahead?

Anyways, how y'all doing?
>>
>Republicans made tariff revision one of their priorities, especially in Pennsylvania, where recovery of the iron industry lagged behind other sectors. The argument that the lower 1857 duties had enabled British industry to undersell American railroad iron carried great weight among workers as well as ironmasters. Indeed, Republicans pitched their strongest tariff appeals to labor, which had more votes than management. "We demand that American laborers shall be protected against the pauper labor of Europe," they declared. A higher tariff would "give employment to thousands of mechanics, artisans, laborers, who have languished for months in unwilling idleness." Such arguments seemed to work, for in the 1858 elections Republicans scored large gains in Pennsylvania industrial districts.
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>>132097524
I think I read that.

I want to make strong babies with awooo.
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>>132097459
he went more pro-christian than usual
probably triggered millions
>>
>The tariff issue provides an illustration of how political fallout from the depression exacerbated sectional tensions. In each of three congressional sessions between the Panic and the election of 1860, a coalition of Republicans and protectionist Democrats tried to adjust the 1857 duties slightly upward. Every time an almost solid South combined with half or more of the northern Democrats to defeat them. With an economy based on the export of raw materials and the import of manufactured goods, southerners had little interest in raising the prices of what they bought in order to subsidize profits and wages in the North. Thus Congress remained, in the view of one bitter Republican, "shamelessly prostituted, in a base subserviency to the Slave Power." A Pennsylvanian discerned a logical connection between the South's support for the Lecompton constitution and its opposition to tariff adjustment: "popular rights disregarded in Kansas; free industry destroyed in the States."
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>>132097580
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>In walks the fucking blogging tripfag in the middle of the raid
>>
>Sectional alignments were even more clear on three land-grant measures of the 1850s: a homestead act, a Pacific railroad act, and grants to states for the establishment of agricultural and mechanical colleges. The idea of using the federal government's vast patrimony of land for these purposes had been around for a decade or more. All three measures took on added impetus from the depression of 1857–58. Free land would help farmers ruined by the Panic get a new start. According to the theories of labor reformer George Henry Evans, homesteads would also give unemployed workingmen an opportunity to begin new lives as independent landowners and raise the wages of laborers who remained behind. Construction of a transcontinental railroad would tap the wealth of the West, bind the country together, provide employment, and increase the prosperity of all regions. Agricultural and mechanical colleges would make higher education available to farmers and skilled working-men. All three measures reflected the Whig ideology of a harmony of interests between capital and labor, which would benefit mutually from economic growth and improved education. Along with a tariff to protect American workers and entrepreneurs, these land-grant measures became the new Republican free-labor version of Henry Clay's venerable American System. Republicans could count on more northern Democratic support for the land bills than for the tariff, especially from Douglas Democrats in the Old Northwest.
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>>132097611
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>>132096595
I think welfare is the answer
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>But most southerners opposed these measures. The homestead act would fill up the West with Yankee settlers hostile to slavery. "Better for us," thundered a Mississippian, "that these territories should remain a waste, a howling wilderness, trod only by red hunters than be so settled."53 Southerners also had little interest in using the public lands to establish schools most of whose students would be Yankees. Nor did they have much stake in the construction of a Pacific railroad with an expected eastern terminus at St. Louis or Chicago. Southern senators provided most of the votes in 1858 to postpone consideration of all three bills. At the next session of Congress a series of amendments to the railroad bill whittled it down to a meaningless provision for preliminary bids. In February 1859 Republicans and two-thirds of the northern Democrats in the House passed a homestead act. Vice-President Breck-inridge of Kentucky broke a tie vote in the Senate to defeat it. But enough northern Democrats joined Republicans in both Senate and House to pass the land-grant college act. Buchanan paid his debts to southern Democrats by vetoing it.
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>>132097665
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>>132097640
What the fuck are you even yaking about? No one's reading all that shit.
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>>132097693
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>A somewhat different path led to a similar outcome in the first session of the 36th Congress (1859–60), elected in 1858 and containing more Republicans than its predecessor. Disagreement over a northern vs . a southern route once again killed the Pacific railroad bill. The South also continued to block passage of a land-grant college act over Buchanan's veto. But a homestead act reached the president's desk. The House had passed it by a vote in which 114 of the 115 Ayes came from northern members and 64 of the 65 Nays from southern members. After much parliamentary maneuvering the Senate passed a modified version of the bill. A conference committee worked out a compromise, but Buchanan vetoed it as expected. Southern opposition in the Senate blocked an attempt to pass it over his veto.
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>>132097191
Winning and losing make me feel the same urge to continue the struggle to better myself and to continue fighting the enemies of reason and those who skip leg day.
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>>132097634
I saw at work, the "muh christcucks" anon was on trying to divert the high energy. Wish I could have seen the rally, but the money's too good.
>>132097622
It would be a blessing.
>>
>>132097564
Yes I've reported essaybot >14 fucking times
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>>132097634
>Sinclar Lewis
Hello fellow white people
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>>132097719
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>>132097542
go back to r/donzld, centipede, this is a fashypede board now

but plz like and subscribe first :)
>>
>The southern checkmate of tariff, homestead, Pacific railroad, and land-grant college acts provided the Republicans with vote-winning issues for 1860. During the effort to pass the homestead bill in 1859, Republicans tangled with Democrats over another measure that would also become an issue in 1860—the annexation of Cuba. Manifest Destiny was a cause that united most Democrats across sectional lines. Whatever they thought of slavery in Kansas, they agreed on the desirability of annexing Cuba with its 400,000 slaves. Both Douglas and Buchanan spoke in glowing terms of Cuba; the signs seemed to point to a rapprochement of warring Democratic factions, with Cuba as the glue to piece them together. In his December 1858 message to Congress, Buchanan called for new negotiations with Spain to purchase Cuba. Senator John Slidell of Louisiana introduced a bill to appropriate $30 million for a down payment. The foreign relations committee approved it in February 1859. For the next two weeks the $30 million bill was the main topic of Senate debate. Republicans rang all the changes of the slave power conspiracy, prompting southerners to reply in kind while northern Democrats kept a low profile. Republican strategy was to delay the bill until adjournment on March 4, 1859. At the same time they hoped to bring the homestead bill, already passed by the House, to a vote. Democrats refused to allow this unless Republicans permitted a vote on Cuba. The question, said the irreverent Ben Wade of Ohio, was "shall we give niggers to the niggerless, or land to the landless?" In the end the Senate did neither, so each party prepared to take the issues to the voters in 1860.
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>>132097745
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>Meanwhile a clash between Douglas and southern Democrats over the issue of a federal slave code for territories had reopened the party's Lecompton wounds. The Senate Democratic caucus fired the first round by removing Douglas from his chairmanship of the committee on territories. Then on February 23, 1859, southern senators lashed out at Douglas in language usually reserved for Black Republicans. The Little Giant's sin was an assertion that he would never vote for a slave code to enforce bondage in a territory against the will of a majority living there. Popular sovereignty, said Jefferson Davis, who led the attack on Douglas, was "full of heresy." A refusal to override it would make Congress "faithless to the trust they hold at the hands of the people of the States." "We are not . . . to be cheated," the Mississippian declared, by men who "seek to build up a political reputation by catering to the prejudice of a majority to exclude the property of a minority." For such men, said Davis as he looked Douglas in the eye, the South had nothing but "scorn and indignation."
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This is some really low energy spamming.
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>>132097763
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>tfw no gf
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>This debate registered the rise in rhetorical temperature during the late 1850s. Southern aggressiveness was bolstered by self-confidence growing out of the Panic of 1857. The depression fell lightly on the South. Cotton and tobacco prices dipped only briefly before returning to their high pre-Panic levels. The South's export economy seemed insulated from domestic downturns. This produced a good deal of boasting below the Potomac, along with expressions of mock solicitude for the suffering of unemployed wage slaves in the North. "Who can doubt, that has looked at recent events, that cotton is supreme?" asked James Hammond of South Carolina in his celebrated King Cotton speech to the Senate on March 4, 1858. "When the abuse of credit had destroyed credit and annihilated confidence; when thousands of the strongest commercial houses in the world were coming down . . . when you came to a dead lock, and revolutions were threatened, what brought you up? . . . We have poured in upon you one million six hundred thousand bales of cotton just at the moment to save you from destruction. . . . We have sold it for $65,000,000, and saved you." Slavery demonstrated the superiority of southern civilization, continued Hammond. "In all social systems there must be a class to do the menial duties, to perform the drudgery of life. . . . It constitutes the very mudsill of society. . . . Such a class you must have, or you would not have that other class which leads progress, civilization, and refinement. . . . Your whole hireling class of manual laborers and 'operatives,' as you call them, are essentially slaves. The difference between us is, that our slaves are hired for life and well compensated . . . yours are hired by the day, not cared for, and scantily compensated."
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>>132097783
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>>132097785
39 posts with no intention to engage with others should be considered thread jacking nonetheless.
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>>132097634
That guy was a commie.
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>>132096985
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYRmEHQpTP0
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Pro-Christian speeches sure do rile up shills.
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>>132097820
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>This mudsill theme was becoming increasingly visible in southern propaganda. The most extreme expression of it occurred in the writings of George Fitzhugh. A frayed-at-the-elbows scion of a Virginia First Family, Fitzhugh wrote prolifically about "the failure of free society." In 1854 and 1857 he gathered his essays into books entitled Sociology for the South and Cannibals All! The latter was published a few weeks before the Panic of 1857 and seemed almost to predict it. Free labor under capitalism was a war of each against all, wrote Fitzhugh, a sort of social cannibalism. "Slavery is the natural and normal condition of society," he maintained. "The situation of the North is abnormal and anomalous." To bestow "upon men equality of rights, is but giving license to the strong to oppress the weak" because "capital exercises a more perfect compulsion over free laborers than human masters over slaves; for free laborers must at all times work or starve, and slaves are supported whether they work or not." Therefore "we slaveholders say you must recur to domestic slavery, the oldest, the best, the most common form of Socialism" as well as "the natural and normal condition of the laboring men, white or black."
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>>132097217
I remember you had the best pizza and hotdogs I've ever had. Tastes completely different in a good way when compared to Aus

>>132097237
I've never actually had a burger in the US
>>
>Fitzhugh's ideas flowed a bit outside the mainstream of the proslavery argument, which distinguished sharply between free whites and slave blacks and assigned an infinite superiority to the former because they were white. But while Fitzhugh's notions were eccentric they were not unique. Some proslavery proponents drew a distinction between southern yeomen and northern workers or farmers. Southerners were superior because they lived in a slave society. Yankees were perhaps fit only to be slaves. To explain this, southerners invented a genealogy that portrayed Yankees as descendants of the medieval Anglo-Saxons and southerners as descendants of their Norman conquerors. These divergent bloodlines had coursed through the veins of the Puritans who settled New England and the Cavaliers who colonized Virginia. "The Southern people," concluded an article in the Southern Literary Messenger, "come of that race . . . recognized as Cavaliers . . . directly descended from the Norman Barons of William the Conqueror, a race distinguished in its earliest history for its warlike and fearless character, a race in all times since renowned for its gallantry, chivalry, honor, gentleness, and intellect." If matters came to a fight, therefore, one Norman southerner could doubtless lick ten of those menial Saxon Yankees.
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>>132096507
I'm still mad. delet this
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>>132097785
That's cause they broke, like the MC in typical netocuckoldry
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>>132097844
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Game over, pmurtkins

Based fashypede @coonslamer69 just fucked you, like he fucks his asian girlfriend every night

time to go back to r/donald now, this board belongs to trs now
>>
>Whether or not southern superiority resulted from "the difference of race between the Northern people and the Southern people," as the Southern Literary Messenger would have it, the vaunted virtues of a free-labor society were a sham. "The great evil of Northern free society," insisted a South Carolina journal, "is that it is burdened with a servile class of mechanics and laborers, unfit for self-government, yet clothed with the attributes and powers of citizens." A Georgia newspaper was even more emphatic in its distaste. "Free Society! we sicken at the name. What is it but a conglomeration of greasy mechanics, filthy operatives, small-fisted farmers, and moon-struck theorists? . . . The prevailing class one meets with [in the North] is that of mechanics struggling to be genteel, and small farmers who do their own drudgery, and yet are hardly fit for association with a Southern gentleman's body servant."
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Did you guys in the US try the KFC zinger burger? Its popular in Aus and I remember it was brought to the US for a short time (or maybe permanently IDK)
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Jesus Christmas what's been going on here? Nothing but chunks of greentexts and Drumpf spam?!

>>132097817
Go to church and meet a southern Belle.
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>>132097866
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>>132097785
Not much different than usual. The sad part is TRS can't even compare to some of the more veteran leaf posters, yet they probably hobble back to their headquarters thinking they were victorious.
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>Northern newspapers picked up and reprinted such articles. Yankees did not seem to appreciate southern sociology. Sometimes the response was good-humored, as demonstrated by a banner at one of the Lincoln-Douglas debates: " SMALL-FISTED FARMERS, MUD SILLS OF SOCIETY, GREASY MECHANICS, FOR A. LINCOLN ." Other reactions were angrier and sometimes unprintable. No doubt some of the soldiers who marched through Georgia and South Carolina with Sherman a few years later had read these descriptions of themselves as greasy mechanics and servile farmers. In any event, northerners gave as good as they got in this warfare of barbs and insults. In a famous campaign speech of 1858, William H. Seward derided the southern doctrine that "labor in every society, by whomsoever performed, is necessarily unintellectual, groveling, and base." The idea had produced the backwardness of the South, said Seward, the illiteracy of its masses, the dependent colonial status of its economy. In contrast "the free-labor system educates all alike, and by opening all the fields of industrial employment to . . . all classes of men . . . brings into the highest possible activity all the physical, moral and social energies of the whole State." A collision between these two systems impended, "an irrepressible conflict between opposing and enduring forces, and it means that the United States must and will . . . become either entirely a slave-holding nation, or entirely a free-labor nation."
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>>132097887
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>Southerners claimed that free labor was prone to unrest and strikes. Of course it was, said Abraham Lincoln during a speaking tour of New England in March 1860 that coincided with the shoemakers' strike. " I am glad to see that a system prevails in New England under which laborers CAN strike when they want to (Cheers). . . . I like the system which lets a man quit when he wants to, and wish it might prevail everywhere. (Tremendous applause.)" The glory of free labor, said Lincoln, lay in its open competition for upward mobility, a competition in which most Americans finished ahead of where they started in life. "I want every man to have the chance—and I believe a black man is entitled to it—in which he can better his condition." That was the significance of the irrepressible conflict and of the house divided, concluded Lincoln, for if the South got its way "free labor that can strike will give way to slave labor that cannot!"
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>>132097733
Are wolf girls the way to secure the existence of our people and a future for our children?
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>>132097910
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>>132097896
Devon probably got BLACKED by DeVon.
>>
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>Large swedish festival cancels 2018 event due to rape and multiple sexual assaults

http://www.youredm.com/2017/07/01/large-swedish-festival-cancels-2018-event-due-rape-multiple-sexual-assaults/

Many of the sxual assaults are commited by people who volunteer at the festival. This is how some of them look like. They don't look very swedish to me. Do they look swedish to you?
>>
>>132097938
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>The harshest indictment of the South's social system came from the pen of a white southerner, Hinton Rowan Helper. A self-appointed spokesman for nonslaveholding whites, Helper was almost as eccentric in his own way as George Fitzhugh. Of North Carolina yeoman stock, he had gone to California in the gold rush to make his fortune but returned home disillusioned. Brooding on the conditions he perceived in the Carolina upcountry, Helper decided that "slavery lies at the root of all the shame, poverty, ignorance, tyranny and imbecility of the South." Echoing the free-soil argument, Helper maintained that slavery degraded all labor to the level of bond labor. Planters looked down their noses at nonslaveholders and refused to tax themselves to provide a decent school system. "Slavery is hostile to general education," Helper declared in his 1857 book The Impending Crisis . "Its very life, is in the ignorance and stolidity of the masses." Data from the 1850 census—which had alarmed the southern elite itself a few years earlier—furnished Helper information that, used selectively, enabled him to "prove" the superior productivity of a free-labor economy. The hay crop of the North alone, he claimed, was worth more than the boasted value of King Cotton and all other southern staples combined. Helper urged nonslaveholding whites to use their votes—three-fourths of the southern total—to overthrow "this entire system of oligarchical despotism" that had caused the South to "welter in the cesspool of ignorance and degradation. . . . Now is the time for them to assert their rights and liberties . . . [and] strike for Freedom in the South."
>>
>>132097191
>the Krauthammer Conjecture

is this like reese's thesis?
>>
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Somebody put Alex Jones soundbites into an Amazon commercial and it's fucking hilarious.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axviNkWKyDw
>>
>>132097962
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>>132096507
>"Big brother..."

;___;7
>>
>If Helper had published this book in North Carolina or in Baltimore, where he was living when he completed it, The Impending Crisis might have languished in obscurity. Endless recitals of statistics dulled its cutting edge of criticism. But no southern publisher would touch it. So Helper lugged his manuscript to New York, where it was published in the summer of 1857. The New York Tribune recognized its value to Republicans and printed an eight-column review. This caused readers both North and South to take notice. Helper had probably overstated the disaffection of nonslaveholders from the southern social system. Outside the Appalachian highlands many of them were linked to the ruling class by ties of kinship, aspirations for slave ownership, or mutual dislike of Yankees and other outsiders. A caste system as well as a form of labor, slavery elevated all whites to the ruling caste and thereby reduced the potential for class conflict. However poor and illiterate some whites may have been, they were still white. If the fear of "nigger equality" caused most of the northern working class to abhor Republicans even where blacks constituted only 2 or 3 percent of the population, this fear operated at much higher intensity where the proportion of blacks was tenfold greater. But while Helper exaggerated yeoman alienation in the South, so also did many slaveholders who felt a secret foreboding that nonslaveowners in regions like Helper's Carolina upcountry might turn against their regime. Several southern states therefore made it a crime to circulate The Impending Crisis . This of course only attracted more attention to the book. A Republican committee raised funds to subsidize an abridged edition in 1859 to be scattered far and wide as a campaign document. The abridgers ensured a spirited southern reaction by adding such captions as "The Stupid Masses of the South" and "Revolution—Peacefully if we can, Violently if we must."
>>
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Did you guys like the new MAGA theme song?
>>
>>132097969
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>>132096699
>thinkin bout them beans
>>
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Black people sure are ugly

Glad we don't have to deal with them, outside of Alice Springs
>>
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>>132097985
wow, dank meme, fellow fashy pede

r8 mine, m8
>>
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>>132097950
>his literal face when reading that
>>
>One of them was John Sherman of Ohio, a moderate ex-Whig who later confessed that he had signed the endorsement without reading the book. Sherman's signature caused another donnybrook over the election of a speaker of the House when the 36th Congress convened in December 1859. Though Republicans outnumbered Democrats 113 to 101 in the House, upper-South Americans held the balance of power. Republicans nominated Sherman for speaker because he seemed temperate enough to attract a few votes from these former Whigs. But discovery of his endorsement of Helper's book set off an uproar that inhibited slave-state congressmen from voting for him. Through two months and forty-four ballots the House remained deadlocked on the edge of violence. Southerners denounced Helper, his book, and anyone connected with either as "a traitor, a renegade, an apostate . . . infamous . . . abominable . . . mendacious . . . incendiary, insurrectionary."65 Most congressmen came armed to the sessions; the sole exception seemed to be a former New England clergyman who finally gave in and bought a pistol for self-defense. Partisans in the galleries also carried weapons. One southerner reported that a good many slave-state congressmen expected and wanted a shootout on the House floor: they "are willing to fight the question out, and to settle it right there. . . . I can't help wishing the Union were dissolved and we had a Southern confederacy." The governor of South Carolina informed one of his state's congressmen on December 20, 1859: "If . . . you upon consultation decide to make the issue of force in Washington, write or telegraph me, and I will have a regiment in or near Washington in the shortest possible time."
>>
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>>132097845
>Tastes completely different in a good way when compared to Aus

I wonder why, is MSG allowed in Australia?
>>
>>132098008
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>>132096595
We can't go to space anymore because we're literally in debt to have blacks and Hispanics in the country.

http://thealternativehypothesis.org/index.php/2016/05/11/fiscal-impact-of-whites-blacks-and-hispanics/
>>
>>132098047
Kek
>>
>Through all this the Republicans supported Sherman, who consistently fell a few votes short of a majority. Democrats and Americans tried several combinations; a Douglas Democrat could have been elected with American support had not lower-South Democrats refused to support him. Southerners also rejected the precedent of suspending the rules to allow a plurality to elect a speaker. Having organized the Senate with sixteen of the twenty-two committees headed by southern chairmen, they were quite ready to keep the House unorganized until they got their way. "Better the wheels of government should stop [and the Union] demonstrate itself to be a failure and find an end," wrote southerners privately to each other, "than our principles, our honor be infringed upon."67 To prevent this outcome, Sherman finally withdrew, and the Republicans nominated lackluster William Pennington of New Jersey, who because of his support of the fugitive slave law a decade earlier picked up enough border-state support to win the speakership.
>>
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>>132097939
That depends on their role in society.
>>
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>>132096679
The US media would of torn Cruz apart the first mth.We are lucky we have a strong leader right now.
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>>132098052
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>>132098091
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>>132098047
Baldy in the back seems to notice it too
>>
>>132098097
Don't namefag for no reason, thank you.
>>
>>132097756
>>132097883
>>132098043

"pede" always makes me laugh, I don't know why
>>
>>132098122
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>>132098097

stop tripfagging shitskin, I can smell your melanin levels behind the meme flag
>>
>Nothing yet had so dramatized the parting bonds of Union as this struggle in the House. The hair-trigger temper of southerners is easier to understand if one keeps in mind that the contest opened just three days after John Brown was hanged in Virginia for trying to incite a slave insurrection. Brown's raid at Harper's Ferry was an ominous beginning to the fateful twelve months that culminated in the presidential election of 1860.
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>>132098170
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>>132098071
It is. I think its the pizza sauce. I was just amazed at how good it was (best one was from a small Italian-American family owned NJ pizzeria). With the hotdogs though I can't quite explain, maybe more meaty? If you visit Aus try our pizzas/hotdogs and see if you notice the difference too. I think you would because it was a pretty obvious difference flavour wise
>>
>>132096679
Ted Cruz/Ben Sasse 2024
>>
>>132098193
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>>132097564
A few weeks ago we had a guy spamming sonic the hedgehog pedo cartoons.
I got a warning for abusing the report function.
Fuck the mods.
>>
>>132096868

Should throw this pic into the anti-manspreading campaign to tap into white feminists' latent disgust for niggers.
>>
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>>132098134
Everyone's favorite deaf british ex-pat. At least when I put Stefan Moleneux on the tv, he got a kick out of him.
>>
>>132098210
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>>132098152
well then, I might make some le dank fashy memes for you, fellow fashypede

plz rate and subscribe
>>
>>132098262
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>>132098222
don't other countries put weird shit in their hot dogs, like lamb and horse and kangaroo?
>>
>>132098290
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>>132098328
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https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2017/07/01/maher_im_worried_about_a_permanent_republican_majority_trump_has_fox_news_breitbart_drudge.html

Oh noooo.
>>
>>132098294
Kangaroo meat is THE best.
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this is literally Drumpf general now
>>
>>132098347
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You know we're doing well when the shills are this angry and desperate.
>>
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>>132097142
Frogs are your friend
>>
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>>132097459
I missed it, was way too late for me, and was planning on seeing it later this afternoon.
Why did it trigger them so much?
What happened?
>>
>>132098362
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>>132098254
>deaf

Does he wear hearing aide while working?
>>
>>132098379
Kill yourself, you namefagging fuckwit. Fuck off.
>>
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>>132098235
Remember the night of the eternal /ptg/? I asked them when 4chan would be working again, they responded "when its back up."
I get the feeling they don't care for the site, but don't want to give up the power.
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>>132098398
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>>132098437
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>>132097939
We will have to see.
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>>132097952
Yeah, they do. Sweden is no longer Sweden anymore. It’s an African/Middle Eastern country. White people don’t belong there. Sorry.
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>>132097952
yeah, they look swedish to me
>>
>>132098454
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>>132098402
No, we just do our best to communicate via body language, or he writes something down real quick if its something specific. Molymeme has subtitles on tv.
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>>132098235
Well at least its not the 3dpd loli pics we had during last october.
>>
Did the mods finally come in?
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>>132098294
Probably. Our hotdogs don't taste like its 100% meat. Kangaroo is actually a quality meat though and tastes amazing when cooked properly. Crocodile isn't too bad either especially as a dip
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>>132098509
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Mods appear to be absent entirely, as we are near bump limit with no deletions. What kind of pornography do you like? Please post lots of it.

>>132098517
Nope
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>>132098517
it seems the mods have abandoned us for now
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>>132098542
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>>132098268
why Iedditors copy us all the time?
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>>132098393
>Why did it trigger them so much?
It had three major points: Christianity, supporting veterans, and uniting the country.
To TRS (and possibly /leftypol/), they took this as a supporting speech for civic nationalism, plus one veteran of World War II was praised for helping wreck German tanks.
TLDR; shills hate the USA
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Remember when Fascist Clay knocked out Moldy Locks?
>>
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>>132098549
I'm going to bed, I'm getting up in a few hours to enjoy my next three days off from work. Might go camping if the weather is nice.
Have a good night, as always MAGA.
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>>132098570
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DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
>>
>>132098537
if crocodile is anything like alligator then you gotta be trolling me
>>
>>132098549
Mods have been trying to kill /ptg/ for months now.
>>
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>>132098473
>>
>>132098351
That sucks.
>>
>>132098595
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF

DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF

DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
>>
Baking

Worry not
>>
>>132098619
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF

DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF

DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF DRUMPF
>>
Why does he Drumpf post? What purpose does it serve?
>>
>>132098537
>ywn beat a couple of frisky kangaroos with your ausbro and cook them up for a damn fine meal
>>
>>132098477

Wow, working even if he has a disability. Good for him. Is it inborn or from an accident?
>>
>>132098671
le based fashy memes xD
>>
>>132098597
I've heard its different

>>132098675
Come to Aus and it can be arranged with local aboriginal trackers
>>
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>>132098420
>Remember the night of the eternal /ptg/?
Oh yeah. That was weird. I loved the creativity of people working around the problems though.
>>
>>132098549
>What kind of pornography do you like?
Idkwhy but chav/scally does it for me.
>inb4 degenerate
>>
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>>132098724
>>132098724
>>132098724

NEW THREAD

>>132098724
>>132098724
>>132098724

FRESH BREAD

>>132098724
>>132098724
>>132098724
>>
>>132098467
>the little white girl lording over her shitskin retainers

>>132097952
Sweden is what happens when you try to recreate the last 40 years of American history in just 10 years
>>
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>>132098762
>>
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>>132098753
That was the night I linked my secret file that I wanted to get framed and mounted.
Its similar to pic related, except its more related to Monster Musume.
>>
>>132098807
No, boys mate. Boys.
>>
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>>132098671
Perhaps he's wondering why you would vote for a man based on his campaign promises and then still support him when he U turns on every single one.
>>
>>132098671

Nobody cared who he was until he posted the DRUMPF
>>
>>132098883
You could say the same for May
>>
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>>132097828
Just a bunch of leftist scum spamming this thread.
>>
>>132096507
Spooky. Give me a gestalt on that
>>132096732
How is it possible to find something so utterly un-interesting. I'm impressed at how little I care
>>
>>132098410
I know, your hoping your girl will run again. amirite!
>>
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Thread posts: 307
Thread images: 102


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