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Matt Walsh's "The Real History of Slavery" documentary is pretty solid...

Posted on 2/19/26 at 3:08 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
70587 posts
Posted on 2/19/26 at 3:08 am
It was released yesterday on The Daily Wire's YouTube page. He doesn't touch the whole history of slavery but he definitely goes in depth about how it wasn't strictly-speaking a problem or practice unique to America. He talks about the Kingdom of Dahomey, the Barbary Pirates, and more!

Posted by TrueTiger
Chicken's most valuable
Member since Sep 2004
81246 posts
Posted on 2/19/26 at 3:43 am to

Slavery is like war.

It's a terrible thing that all human cultures have engaged in.
Posted by RohanGonzales
Member since Apr 2024
9113 posts
Posted on 2/19/26 at 4:47 am to
There was a kingdom of da homies?
Posted by sledgehammer
SWLA
Member since Oct 2020
6904 posts
Posted on 2/19/26 at 4:51 am to
A few points that stood out:

You were far better off being a slave in North America than anywhere on earth especially Africa.

White European nations were responsible for the abolition of slavery. Go white men!

The largest slaveowner in South Carolina at the time of the civil war was a black man who donated to the confederacy.

And the part where those ruthless people floated their canoes in the blood of murdered slaves. Yep, you don’t hear that in school.
Posted by lake chuck fan
Vinton
Member since Aug 2011
22317 posts
Posted on 2/19/26 at 5:45 am to
I've watched similar videos. The mooslums were the biggest slavers in history. It's like they told white slavers:

This post was edited on 2/19/26 at 5:48 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
70587 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 7:35 am to
quote:

The largest slaveowner in South Carolina at the time of the civil war was a black man who donated to the confederacy.



The documentary didn't say he was the largest, just one of the largest. And what I really liked is how he was considered a respectable member of South Carolina society despite being a black man.

A bump for those who want to watch this on their Saturday morning.
Posted by Bass Tiger
Member since Oct 2014
54988 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:09 am to
Watched the show earlier this week, pretty good. Walsh says he is going to do a series of real history shows in an attempt to educate the young skulls full of mush who are not being taught real American history anymore.
Posted by Marciano1
Marksville, LA
Member since Jun 2009
19934 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:10 am to
Nah bruh, slavery only existed in America and every white dude owned about 500 of them. Half of our income should go to reparations!
Posted by TigerV
Member since Feb 2007
2890 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:12 am to
I listened to the Hard Core History episodes on slavery and it’s insane how far back the practice went and how brutal it was in the med-east. If you listened to that how does this compare? I’ll add this to my list of things to watch the next two weeks.
Posted by Bass Tiger
Member since Oct 2014
54988 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:14 am to
quote:

Slavery is like war.

It's a terrible thing that all human cultures have engaged in.


Any reasonably informed person understands this^^^ but the public school system has taught 3-4 generations that the US is unique with regards to slavery. The leftist school system has taught generations of Americans that slavery built the US and it was white people who were capturing Africans for the global slave trade.
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
70587 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:16 am to
I'm fairly certain Dan Carlin's podcast goes into more depth than Matt Walsh does. His is a multi-hour podcast series, whereas Walsh is more focused on slavery from the last 300 years or so. The farthest back he goes is the 17th century with the Barbary Pirates raiding Ireland and other European countries to take whites back as slaves with them to North Africa.
Posted by Cuz413
Member since Nov 2007
10378 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:18 am to
quote:

The documentary didn't say he was the largest, just one of the largest. And what I really liked is how he was considered a respectable member of South Carolina society despite being a black man.


Antebellum South could elevate a free Black man to the social status of a White man. They could also devalue a white man for what they deemed just reasons.

Also in the South, integration was real. Many slaves attended church with their masters, ate and slept in the same house. Most slave owners had less than 5 slaves and they worked side by side in the fields together. Not the master standing over them with a whip.

The image that the entire South was just sprawling plantations with hundreds of thousands of slaves was not the norm.
Posted by Bass Tiger
Member since Oct 2014
54988 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:18 am to
quote:

There was a kingdom of da homies?


Yeah. I have to admit for a brief moment I thought Walsh was making a joke with the Dahomey tribe. Imagine a culture so brutal they sacrificed enough human bodies, bled them out and floated their king in a canoe floating on blood. Walsh said the captured Africans who ended up in America and other nations as slaves had a much better outcome than those who were used for blood sacrifices.
Posted by Cuz413
Member since Nov 2007
10378 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:20 am to
quote:

You were far better off being a slave in North America than anywhere on earth especially Africa


It is noted that after the slave revolts in Haiti, many of the freed Blacks said there were better off in bondage in the US than free in Haiti.
Posted by Bass Tiger
Member since Oct 2014
54988 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 8:23 am to
quote:

I'm fairly certain Dan Carlin's podcast goes into more depth than Matt Walsh does. His is a multi-hour podcast series, whereas Walsh is more focused on slavery from the last 300 years or so. The farthest back he goes is the 17th century with the Barbary Pirates raiding Ireland and other European countries to take whites back as slaves with them to North Africa.


Indentured servitude was how my great, great, great, great .....grandfather arrived in the US in the late 1600's, he was a musician, was essentially kidnapped, put on a boat and ended up in the US as an indentured servant for several years.
Posted by Pragmatist2025
Member since Jun 2025
813 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 9:01 am to
As slavery is most often identified with the Civil War, historians often leave out some important facts about a large group of southerners who fought.

It is often written that the only (or main) participants were the leaders of the military, destitute whites doing the bidding of wealthy plantation owners to preserve slavery, and slaves who had to obey their masters. However, history seldom mentions the middle class farmers and tradesmen who owned no slaves, and the free blacks who fought alongside them.

Their motivations were very different than the historical narrative suggests but they suffered the same horrors of defeat and reconstruction as anyone else.
Posted by Willie Stroker
Member since Sep 2008
16190 posts
Posted on 2/21/26 at 9:37 am to
quote:

You were far better off being a slave in North America than anywhere on earth especially Africa.

They really should be more grateful.

Best slavery EVER!!!
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