I can't believe you just outlined the goodness of slavery and aren't ashamed of what you said. (Even though, you at least agreed with him with the cover of anonymity).
I guess I understand your support of Moore in spite of his boneheaded defense of the days of slavery. You actually agree with him.
That's very disturbing.
VERY disturbing.
(btw, if Moore were a smart racist, he would have just mentioned the damage LBJ did and not made the idiotic public support he gave for the days of slavery. I guess that just makes him a dumb racist).
What I find disturbing is that you cannot see that my comments were not racist, just a comparison.
They were not about Moore, but the socioeconomic situation both then and now. Your implication that he is a "dumb racist" is noted, but I think it is crap and just reads in what you may desperately want to find as another excuse to vilify the man.
That lack of comprehension is surprising to me considering your past posts, and indicates you may be emotionally entangled with the racism issue and Moore himself, and not in a constructive way.
I am not advocating slavery, either. Far from it--I find the institution abhorrent. As I said, I am just comparing.
If you see my comparison as a 'defense', then perhaps you should take another look without the emotional baggage and at least see what the man was saying.
If you find that I have painted a slightly better picture of healthy families inhabiting humble quarters in an agrarian setting compared to the dysfunctional dystopia of America's drug and crime ridden inner city slums, well, maybe that's because when you look at it that way, Moore had a point, and Moore having a point would be incompatible with your feelings about him.
Now, aside from the CPS coming in, those families aren't broken up and 'sold down the river', they are broken up at funerals, sent 'up the river' (to prison), or never even bothered to become a family except for the deposit of some bodily fluids. (Check out the babies born out of wedlock for the demographic). Is that so much better?
No employer, regardless of what they pay, will intentionally make employees unhappy. Happy employees mean higher productivity, better results, less broken equipment, better maintenance, even a feeling of pride in their work and where they do it. Breaking up families in that situation would be conterproductive.
You see racism and 'Moore support' into what I said because that is what you wanted to see so you could ignore what I said, dismissing it as 'one of those' supporting Moore or as racist, or both, because facts are just too inconvenient.
Keep in mind that Moore is no fan of most of the Amendments to the Constitution after the Bill of Rights, and you find yourself back in the era before the war of Northern Aggression.
History isn't the smooth-complected made-up face you want to see, it's covered with scars and warts and moles and errant hairs, because such is human existence. If you think, really, honestly, think that overall things are better today (not counting technological gizmos and advances in medicine and the often unused freedom to leave a bad situation where such exist), feel free to state your case.
There were a host of social ills not present in that agrarian society which had not yet dismantled the Constitution to impose the Union with torch and shot, which was (despite slavery) still largely practicing, not just nominally Christian*, and which had not reduced the Federal Government to a National one, which, for good or ill, has produced the mess we have today.
(*Yes, if you look in your copy of The Holy Bible, you will find slavery in there, too.)
Those, for all their faults, were simpler times. We Americans freed the blacks and other slaves and by 100 years later had all become slaves. If you don't think so, try not filing your taxes, paying your property taxes, conforming with your HOA or just the zoning laws. You aren't any more free than your masters in DC and the Statehouse give you the illusion of being.
As Mr.T said when asked why he wore so many gold chains, "We are all slaves, I just come at a higher price."
I love my country, warts and all, and still think it the best on the planet, but it won't stay that way if people won't see its flaws as well as its good points. The festering rot in our social structure is going to destroy it along with the corruption in high places. But if we spend our time being distracted by awkward historical comparisons, we won't fix the problems we have, if we even acknowledge them.