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J Nagarya
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Comments by "J Nagarya" (@jnagarya519) on "Christian Nationalist Realizes He's The BAD Guy... Can't Deal" video.
Washington did no such thing. The leaders of the movement for independence were from Massachusetts. Opposed were the slave-owning states. Washington was so "Godly" that he OWNED SLAVES, while saying, "ALL men are created equal"!?
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@easyenetwork2023 There were slaves who were men. The "Declaration of Independence" was a PROPAGANDA document -- it doesn't withstand comparison with the facts on multiple points -- and applied EXCLUSIVELY to ENGLAND. And it has never been law. During the 17th century the property requirement was also tied to having the "right" "religion" in Massachusetts-Bay -- not only to voting but also to running for public office. And one can go back further: The "American" (named for ITALIAN explorer Amerigo Vespucci) colonies were established on lands given to the colonizers by the king of England. The problem is that the king didn't own the lands he gave them: in both English and US law that is STEALING. But what matters is that the Constitution -- see especially the First Amendment -- changed that. The Constitution is by its own express terms the SUPREME Law of the Land. There is no higher, or alternative, law; and any "law" inconsistent with it is null-and-void.
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@easyenetwork2023 And it was not Washington who said. Copeland is so lost in his corrupt racist "religious" fantasy that he is totally abandoned by the actual history. Jefferson wrote the first draft of the "Declaration". Then it was edited by a subcommittee of three, which included Franklin and John Adams. Then it was debated and edited by the Continental Congress as Committee of the Whole. That is when the issue of freeing of the slaves was excised at the behest of the wealthy slave-owning aristocrats from the salve-owning states. See the film "1776". John Adams was the only founder totally opposed to slavery. Franklin was a master of compromise, and not always to the good. And see the mini-series "John Adams" to see the enormous amount he achieved for the country while Franklin and "populist" Jefferson were hobnobbing with the decadent aristocracy in France.
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