I
have never owned a slave. I do not personally know anyone who has ever
owned a slave. My history books tell me James Madison, Thomas Jefferson,
and George Washington owned slaves, but I have never owned a slave. I
have had black employees and black supervisors, but I have never had a
slave of any color or nationality. In fact, had I lived during the slave
period in this country, it is far more likely that I would have been a
slave than I would have owned one. The reason I am pointing this out is
that I feel zero guilt about slavery. I wasn’t there, period.
Because
I have no guilt, I do not owe any special considerations, reparations,
or, in fact, anything to black people or any other group who feels the
need to have special privilege or identity. All legal citizens living in
this country have the same opportunity to succeed and to fail. To those
among you who would say, but Ron, you have never had to travel through
life as a black man. That’s true but, let me tell you of an experience I
had with a friend who happened to be black. He was an accomplished
sales manager who made a very good living. I asked him if he, with his
very important position in life, ever found racial discrimination
directed at him. His answer was perfect. He said he found discrimination
everywhere he looked for it. That pretty much says it all.
The
reason for this essay is that the other day I was in a large store here
in the south. The store was the one which was owned by a fellow named
Sam from Benton, Arkansas. You know the one. Anyway, in the store was a
multitude of black women shopping, many together. Most had several young
children running around them. Virtually all of them had a cell phone
connected to their ear. In their carts was junk food from soda pop to
sugary cereals. So far none of this was my business, right? At the
checkout stand, virtually all of them paid for their groceries with the
famous EBT card (food stamps). That is when it became all of our
business.
This
occurred in the middle of the day during a normal work week, so it is
easy to assume none of them were employed. Most were stylishly dressed. I
didn’t see what sort of car they got into.
What
I just described is no mystery to anyone. It happens everywhere, not
just here in the south. We have a class of people who are living off the
system, period. I would bet you that none of these young women had a
husband and most probably don’t even know who the father of their
children is. The practice of pumping out babies has become their career.
Sadly many of these babies will grow up to be the next generation of
criminals and welfare mothers.
The
media never talks about this. This has become “The Elephant in the
Room.” My question is does the media not know about this problem, or do
they know and not think of it as a problem? Is their guilt about
perceived past injustices so great that they ignore this serious
problem?
One
thing is crystal clear, you are paying for these excesses. You are
financing these generations of dependents on the system. You are funding
the next generation of thugs and criminals growing up in our inner
cities. Another thing is also clear. It is not going to change until you
see it as a problem and demand it come to an end.
Nobody
seems to want to publicly speak about this. They seem to want to ignore
it. I say that unless and until the black community chooses to deal
with this and change it, their lot in life in this great country will
continue to decline. How sad.
Ron Scarbro October 17, 2012
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
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2 comments:
To become dependent on the government is just another form of slavery.
Tommie,
All I can say is my favorite preacher saying, "AMEN"
Ron
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