OptimusCreampie
Inner city recruiter
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2018
- Messages
- 7,695
Yea you two butt pirates are defending each other rnMF talking like he was with Key in battle when he wrote it.
Abusers defend abusers and racists defend racists..
Yea you two butt pirates are defending each other rnMF talking like he was with Key in battle when he wrote it.
Abusers defend abusers and racists defend racists..
Gotdam homie you did griping about it like it’s a chore for youbc I didn't trash, berate, or even criticize 9/11
Gotdam homie you did griping about it like it’s a chore for you
Key was on a British ship negotiating a prisoner swap when the battle began and he watched the entire thing from the deck. He wasn't sitting home on his cotton plantation just randomly making **** up.MF talking like he was with Key in battle when he wrote it.
Abusers defend abusers and racists defend racists..
Key was on a British ship negotiating a prisoner swap when the battle began and he watched the entire thing from the deck. He wasn't sitting home on his cotton plantation just randomly making **** up.
The hireling and the slave was an ode to a 1791 Robert Burns poem about the Scottish battles with the English
"For hireling traitor's wages.
The English stell we could disdain,
Secure in valour's station;
But English gold has been our bane-
Such a parcel of rogues in a nation!"
It is an almost direct reference to Burns's account of the British practice of hiring traitors and conscripting slaves and rogues and forcing them to fight for the crown against the Scottish rebellion.
Excellent post! The only disagreement is that I actually care about the Browns
Butthurtt^^^ you’ve said you’re done 18 times nowKey was on a British ship negotiating a prisoner swap when the battle began and he watched the entire thing from the deck. He wasn't sitting home on his cotton plantation just randomly making **** up.
The hireling and the slave was an ode to a 1791 Robert Burns poem about the Scottish battles with the English
"For hireling traitor's wages.
The English stell we could disdain,
Secure in valour's station;
But English gold has been our bane-
Such a parcel of rogues in a nation!"
It is an almost direct reference to Burns's account of the British practice of hiring traitors and conscripting slaves and rogues and forcing them to fight for the crown against the Scottish rebellion.
Whatevs. You go on looking for a boogeyman under every rock because you know the “truth,” that F.S.Key was trapped on an enemy ship during wartime writing poems about being home beating his slaves.He sure wished he was home with his slaves bc that's exactly what he was referring to.
FOH with this make believe ****.
That MF was a racist, slave owner who made a song about it...Fck him
Whatevs. You go on looking for a boogeyman under every rock because you know the “truth,” that F.S.Key was trapped on an enemy ship during wartime writing poems about being home beating his slaves.
I’ll stick to the “make believe ****” that he was writing a poetic account of the battle he was watching.
Neither his ancestors nor his offspring have anything at all to do with the meaning of that song, and the fact that slavery was once a legal and accepted practice all over the globe in which nearly every race of men has participated on both side, does not mean all white people or the institutions of America are inherently racist and irreparably so.I know the history of his ancestors and his off spring.....you can't fool me at all.
Neither his ancestors nor his offspring have anything at all to do with the meaning of that song, and the fact that slavery was once a legal and accepted practice all over the globe in which nearly every race of men has participated on both side, does not mean all white people or the institutions of America are inherently racist and irreparably so.
I’m not trying to fool you. You beat me to it.
my grandfather was spat on too from the Vietnam war what’s your point lol iver
Cool I’m still trying to see where any of this lies Today and yea no worries the draft wasn’t a thing eitherBig difference between being spat on for being black, and being spat on for killing babies.
Wait what? I thought the United States invented slaveryNeither his ancestors nor his offspring have anything at all to do with the meaning of that song, and the fact that slavery was once a legal and accepted practice all over the globe in which nearly every race of men has participated on both side, does not mean all white people or the institutions of America are inherently racist and irreparably so.
I’m not trying to fool you. You beat me to it.
Even if he was, which he wasn’t, referring to chattel African slaves, it doesn’t make the song itself racist. He actually drew an equivalency between the hired man and the slave saying that neither would be spared the grave.Are you devoid of logic? No one can be this ridiculous.
This MF owned slaves, as a U.S. Attorney he fought to suppress abolitionists, his father and grand father owned slaves, as a US Attorney, he indicted the great Ben Lundy........and you want me to believe that he wasn't referring to "slaves" during that passage of your national anthem?
You want me to ignore his upbringing and his entire history and really believe in that one moment he wasn't referring to slaves although he clearly says the word "slave" and rhymed it with "grave".
LMFAO! Man GTFOOH
Big difference between being spat on for being black, and being spat on for killing babies.
Cool I’m still trying to see where any of this lies Today and yea no worries the draft wasn’t a thing either
Even if he was, which he wasn’t, referring to chattel African slaves, it doesn’t make the song itself racist. He actually drew an equivalency between the hired man and the slave saying that neither would be spared the grave.
Furthermore, it doesn’t make any **** sense to the rest of the song to all of a sudden switch from describing a battle to insert some gibberish about hired hands vs slavery.
It’s so completely obvious to anyone not predisposed to look for racism in everything that he was referring to both hired and conscripted—meaning forced to fight with no pay and against their will—soldiers, and only used the word slave precisely because it rhymes with grave.
Wait what? I thought the United States invented slavery