THE STATE OF BEING A SLAVE.

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THE STATE OF BEING A SLAVE. | Condition in which one human being was owned by another.

What is the simple definition of slavery?<<Slavery, condition in which one human being was owned by another. A slave was considered by law as property, or chattel, and was deprived of most of the rights ordinarily held by free persons...What is the modern definition of slavery?<<Although modern slavery is not defined in law, it is used as an umbrella term that focuses attention on commonalities across these legal concepts. Essentially, it refers to situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, deception, and/or abuse of power....Where does slavery still exist?<<North Korea, USA, Saudi Arabia, Germany, Ukraine, or China?...Do any states still have slavery?<<Throughout most of the US, slavery is still legal as punishment for a crime. But on 8 November, voters in five states - Alabama, Louisiana, Oregon, Tennessee and Vermont will decide whether to remove these exemptions from their state constitutions in an effort to ban slavery entirely.Nov 3, 2022

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Slavery in America​


Millions of enslaved Africans contributed to the establishment of colonies in the Americas and continued laboring in various regions of the Americas after their independence, including the United States. Many consider a significant starting point to slavery in America to be 1619, when the privateer The White Lion brought 20 enslaved Africans ashore in the British colony of Jamestown, Virginia. The crew had seized the Africans from the Portuguese slave ship São João Bautista. Yet, enslaved Africans had been present in regions such as Florida, that are part of present-day United States nearly one century before. Throughout the 17th century, European settlers in North America turned to enslaved Africans as a cheaper, more plentiful labor source than Indigenous populations and indentured servants, who were mostly poor Europeans.

Many enslavers raped women they held in slavery, and rewarded obedient behavior with favors, while rebellious enslaved people were brutally punished. A strict hierarchy among the enslaved (from privileged house workers and skilled artisans down to lowly field hands) helped keep them divided and less likely to organize against their enslavers. Marriages between enslaved men and women had no legal basis, but many did marry and raise large families. Most owners of enslaved workers encouraged this practice, but nonetheless did not usually hesitate to divide families by sale or removal. While many abolitionists based their activism on the belief that slaveholding was a sin, others were more inclined to the non-religious “free-labor” argument, which held that slaveholding was regressive, inefficient and made little economic sense.

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DevilMan

Still in Mom's basement
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You're a good example for bringing back slavery.

I treat white people as MY personal slaves...When I go to a grocery, convenient store, I don't let BLACK People check me out.<<<That right belongs to white people...I had my HUMMER H2 serviced yesterday, I instucted the head manager that I wanted a white machanic to work on my vehicle.
 

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Being Black In America​

Being a black teenage girl in America means that when a white teenage girl bullies her in school and she defends herself, she’s the one to blame. Being a black teenage boy in America means that he has to witness white women clench their purses when he walks past them. Being a black man in America means that he has to smile as much as possible in public because if he doesn’t people will infer that he is angry and is a threat to others around him. Being a black woman in America means that she has to work 2 times harder than a white woman does to earn respect in her place of work.

Being a black father in America means that he must teach his kids to keep there hands on the dashboard and ask to get out there license and registration when they get pulled over. (realize I said when they get pulled over, not if they pulled over) Being a black mother in America means that she has to worry if her son will make it back home safely because she just realized he walked out of the house with a black hoodie on. She must constantly pray that her son will live to see 18.

Being black in America means that we are expected to respect and abide by the laws of a country that has yet to give us the equality we deserve. The equality that we shouldn’t have to fight for, but have been for decades. The equality that was promised to us just for being born in the so-called land of the free. But you expect us to pledge to a flag that symbolizes a country that continues to degrade us like we are less human than other citizens.

But you expect us to stand and even sing the lyrics to an anthem that represents a nation that continues to physically, mentally, and emotionally scar the black community. Being black in America means that we are expected to believe that even though we were born here we aren’t citizens of America. Being black in America means that we are expected to go along with the idea that it is wrong to be black in America. Being black in America means that we are treated as if we aren’t American.
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To Be Black in America
Is to be told all the ways you don't matter
It is to be angry and afraid
It is to watch people walk on the opposite side of the street to avoid you
It is to be told to get over slavery
It is to be told that I'm not racist I have black friends
It is to be told the definition of racism like you don't already know
It is to be told hey what about reverse racism
It is to have a white terrorist group dedicated to your elimination
It is to be more worried about threats in your own country and those abroad
It is to wonder daily if your family will be safe, if they will get to come home
It is to called a **** for speaking out against the hate
It is to be called lazy when you work full time to provide for your family
It is to walk past folks and watch as the clench their purse or pockets
It is to be to have people fear you, when you feel more threatened then they ever could
It is to be told that privilege doesn't exist
It is to be told you are equal, except you know that in the courtroom, in the eyes of the law, the job market, the housing market, in the classroom, it is a ****** lie
It is to be live in a world where 1 in 3 black men are in prison
It is to know that they have sentences longer than white counterparts
It is to know they use prison labor to exploit them, slavery living on
It is to know that the police which are a relief for some, are a nightmare for you
It is to know that you can do everything right and be killed by someone sworn to protect you
It is to know that you will be blamed for your death inspite of this
It is to have the life choked out of you and a man telling you, **** your breathe
It is to hear what about black on black crime, even though every race commuts crime against their own kind the most
It is to remember white flight and the repercussions of it
It is to have family who have seen the bloodiness of the covil rights movement
It is to be taught in school how great this country is while ignoring the evil its done
It is to be taught in school how little you meant
It is to wake up every 2 weeks to another hashtag of some poor black fella to be forgot in a week
It is to want to simply be acknowledged that things arent right, and being ignored to this day
It is to be villianized in the media
It is to see that flag everyone holds dear and remember that pain it caused you
It is to fight and die for a country that still doesn't care about you
It is to be told to go back to Africa as if this wasnt stolen land
It is to be told I dont see you as black, you're just the same to me
It is to be told well you don't count as black, you don't act black
It is to have your culture stolen
It is to have value placed on your mysic and style and not your skin
It is to hear what would MLK think about these protest
It is to remember that people celebrated his assassination
It is to remember the slurs and the hate he recieved
It is to have people know they don't want to be treated the way you are
It is to want whats always been denied, the privilege of walking in your own skin without fear of persecution
It is to see family, friends and peers celebrate and share racist ideas and beleifs
It is being reassured they still value you
It is to know but not enough to matter

Being black in America is a lot of things, and I love the country all the same.
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What is modern slavery?​

modern slavery

You might think that slavery is a thing of the past. But right now, almost 50 million people are trapped in slavery worldwide. It’s a problem that affects every country on earth – including yours. In many ways, slavery may look different from the slavery of the Transatlantic slave trade, but modern slavery – as a term – encompasses many forms of slavery, including human trafficking and people being born into slavery. There are hundreds of definitions of modern slavery. All of these include aspects of control, involuntary actions and exploitation. At Anti-Slavery International, we define modern slavery as when an individual is exploited by others, for personal or commercial gain. Whether tricked, coerced, or forced, they lose their freedom. This includes but is not limited to human trafficking, forced labour and debt bondage.

Modern slavery is all around us, often hidden in plain sight. People can become enslaved making our clothes, serving our food, picking our crops, working in factories, or working in houses as cooks, cleaners or nannies. Victims of modern slavery might face violence or threats, be forced into inescapable debt, or have their passport taken away and face being threatened with deportation. Many people have fallen into this trap because they were trying to escape poverty or insecurity, improve their lives and support their families. Now, they can’t leave. 49.6 million people live in modern slavery – in forced labour and forced marriage. Roughly a quarter of all victims of modern slavery are children. Of the 27.6 million people trapped in forced labour, 17.3 million are in forced labour exploitation in the private economy,

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DevilMan

Still in Mom's basement
Little Cunt 40 is going to learn what it's like to be the token dumb black bastard (slave) to Troll Kingdom :bigass:

Got you spamming your own thread with just one post :bigass:

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MODERN SLAVERY IN AFRICA​


Overview

Africa is a vast and diverse region that accounts for 17 per cent of the world’s population. Modern slavery in Africa is driven by ongoing political instability, poverty, displacement of people due to conflict and climate change, and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Modern slavery manifests differently throughout Africa; it occurs in every country in the region, while those with higher prevalence typically experience compounding vulnerability factors. More than 3.1 million Africans are in forced marriage, the drivers of which depend on factors in their location, such as the presence of conflict, poverty, or persistence of certain traditional practices. There are more than 3.8 million people in forced labour across Africa. At particularly high risk are adults and children who travel from rural and remote areas to urban centres seeking work. Higher rates of descent-based slavery and forced begging continue to occur in parts of the Sahel. Over the past four years, many African countries have taken actions to improve their response to modern slavery. Nigeria and South Africa have taken the most action, while Eritrea and Libya have taken the least. South Sudan was excluded from the assessment of government action on modern slavery due to ongoing conflict and extreme disruption to government function. Much more needs to be done to provide support for survivors, strengthen laws to protect people, and develop national strategies to combat modern slavery.

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What is the extent and nature of modern slavery in the region?​

On any given day in 2021, an estimated 7 million men, women, and children were living in modern slavery in Africa, a prevalence of 5.2 people in modern slavery for every thousand people. Africa had the fourth highest prevalence of modern slavery among the five regions of the world, following the Arab States (10.1 per thousand), Europe and Central Asia (6.9), and Asia and the Pacific (6.8). Forced labour was the most common form of modern slavery in the region, at a rate of 2.9 per thousand people, while forced marriage was at 2.4 per thousand. When considering the total number of people in forced marriage worldwide, 13 per cent (3.2 million) were in Africa, second to Asia and the Pacific, which at 65 per cent has by far the highest share of the world’s forced marriages. Fourteen per cent of all people in forced labour were in Africa (3.8 million), the third highest behind Asia and the Pacific (55 per cent) and Europe and Central Asia (15 per cent). The countries with the highest prevalence of modern slavery in Africa are Eritrea, Mauritania, and South Sudan. The countries with the lowest prevalence of modern slavery in Africa are Mauritius, Lesotho, and Botswana.

In Africa, forced marriage particularly impacts women and girls. One in every 300 females in the region was in a forced marriage compared to one in every thousand males.6 In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, reports of child marriages increased in Sudan, Egypt,7 and parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC),8 and they nearly doubled in communities across Senegal and Uganda.9 Women and girls living in conflict zones also experience forced and child marriage, including as a negative coping mechanism by families to protect them from further violence10 and by fighters who abduct, marry, and exploit women and girls as domestic and sexual slaves.11 Forced commercial sexual exploitation of women and girls is used as a weapon of war by both state and non-state groups, reportedly in the Central African Republic, the DRC, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan,12 and by both parties to the civil war in Ethiopia’s Tigray region.13

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Although these figures are the most reliable to date, they are conservative estimates given the gaps and limitations of data collection in Africa. It is not possible to conduct nationally representative surveys in countries experiencing profound conflict, which leads to an underestimate of forms of modern slavery such as the recruitment of child soldiers. Despite gaps in data, reports indicate children have been recruited into armed groups in the DRC, Mali, Central African Republic, Mozambique, Nigeria, Libya, South Sudan, Sudan, Niger, Cameroon, Chad, Burkina Faso, and Somalia.

Table 1: Estimated prevalence and number of people in modern slavery, by country | Top 10

Regional rank CountryEst. prevalence of modern slavery (per 1,000 population) Est. number of people in modern slaveryPopulation
1Eritrea90.3320,0003,546,000
2Mauritania32.0149,0004,650,000
3South Sudan10.3115,00011,194,000
4Republic of the Congo8.044,0005,518,000
5Nigeria7.81,611,000206,140,000
6Equatorial Guinea7.811,0001,403,000
7Gabon7.617,0002,226,000
8Burundi7.589,00011,891,000
9Côte d’Ivoire7.3193,00026,378,000
10Djibouti7.17,000988,000
 

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What drives vulnerability to modern slavery in the region?​

Figure 1: Level of vulnerability to modern slavery, by dimension

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Africa has the highest vulnerability to modern slavery of all regions and is home to the four most vulnerable countries: South Sudan, Somalia, Central African Republic, and the DRC (Table 2). Mauritius had the lowest vulnerability in the region. The largest driver of vulnerability was discrimination towards migrants and minority cultural and ethnic groups. Common to the most vulnerable countries are issues such as conflict, political instability, mass displacement, and poverty. The impacts of COVID-19 have compounded risk of modern slavery across the region.

Poverty and economic inequality drive vulnerability in the Africa region. Thirty-five per cent of people in Sub-Saharan Africa live in poverty. Poverty can drive desperate families to marry off daughters to reduce household costs and generate an income through obtaining a bride dowry. Families living in extreme poverty may also require their children to enter the workforce. In 2020, there were more child labourers in Sub-Saharan Africa than in the rest of the world combined. Widespread child labour increases the risk of the worst forms of child labour. Poverty and limited job opportunities in Africa also drive migration, which increases risk of exploitation by labour recruiters. This migration is predominantly intra-regional and marked by the movement of low-skilled workers, particularly in sectors characterised by high demand such as agriculture, aquaculture, construction, resource extraction, and domestic work.

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^^^That doesn't happen to BLACKS anymore Steve-Charles Cucumber^^^. Your cowardly racist slave owners first employed The KKK get the job done...Now y'all use paid officials (Cops, High School Hitler followers (Nazi's) and selected U.S. Goverment officials to carry out the the salve masters duties.
 

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^^^That doesn't happen to BLACKS anymore Steve-Charles Cucumber^^^. Your cowardly racist slave owners first employed The KKK get the job done...Now y'all use paid officials (Cops, High School Hitler followers (Nazi's) and selected U.S. Goverment officials to carry out the the salve masters duties.
 

DevilMan

Still in Mom's basement
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH now I got you repeating yourself, you fucking dumb black bastard slave! Not to mention spamming your own worthless thread!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:bigass: Shine my shoes while you're sucking my cock slave, just the way I taught you HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
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What are governments in the region doing to address modern slavery?​


Walk Free assessed government responses to modern slavery in 51 countries in the region. Governments across the region scored an average of 36 per cent, the weakest average response of all regions. Overall, while governments improved identification measures and legal frameworks, gaps in services available to survivors remained and only limited action has been taken to address systemic risk factors to modern slavery. While three countries have identified and taken action with high-risk sectors to address modern slavery, no country has taken further action to combat modern slavery in government and business supply chains. South Sudan was excluded from the assessment of government action on modern slavery due to ongoing conflict and extreme disruption to government function.

GDP per capita PPP (current international $) varies widely across the region. Of the four countries with the strongest responses (Nigeria, South Africa, Rwanda, and Tunisia — see Table 3), it varies from US$2,494 in Rwanda to a high of US$14,420 in South Africa.32 Relative to their wealth, both Nigeria and Rwanda are outperforming their wealthiest neighbours in Africa, such as Seychelles, Libya, Mauritius, Equatorial Guinea, and Botswana.33 Given Rwanda has the lowest GDP per capita of all four countries, but with relatively strong government responses to modern slavery, it is outperforming all countries in the region on action taken to address modern slavery relative to its wealth.

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DevilMan

Still in Mom's basement
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH now I got you repeating yourself, you fucking dumb black bastard slave! Not to mention spamming your own worthless thread!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:bigass: Shine my shoes while you're sucking my cock slave, just the way I taught you HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
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DevilMan

Still in Mom's basement
:bigass:
 
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