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Paul Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
On a more practical level, the speech is filled with references that are questionable if not completely inaccurate. Lynch makes reference to an invitation reaching him on his "modest plantation in the West Indies." While this is theoretically possible - the plantation system was well established in the Caribbean by 1712 - most plantation owners were absentees who chose to remain in the colonizing country while the day-to-day affairs of their holdings were run by hired managers and overseers. But even assuming that Mr. Lynch was an exception to this practice, much of the text of his "speech" remains anachronistic. Lynch makes consistent reference to "slaves" - which again is possible, though it is far more likely people during this era would refer to persons in bondage simply as "Negroes." In the first paragraph, he promises that "Ancient Rome would envy us if my program is implemented," but the word "program" did not enter the English language with this connotation until 1837 - at the time of this speech it was used only to reference a written notice for theater events.

Two paragraphs later he says that he will "give an outline of action," for slave-holders; the word "out-line" had appeared only 50 years earlier and at that time was only used as an artistic term meaning a sketch - it didn't convey its present meaning until 1759. Even more damning is his use of the terms "indoctrination" and "self-refueling" in the next sentence. The first word didn't carry its current connotation until 1832; the second didn't even enter the language until 1811 - a century after the purported date of Lynch's speech. More obviously, Lynch uses the word "Black," with an upper-case "B," to describe African Americans more than two centuries before the word came to be applied as a common ethnic identifier.

In some popular citations, Lynch has also been - inexplicably - credited with the term "lynching," which would be odd since the speech promises to provide slave-holders with non-violent techniques that will save them the expense of killing valuable, if unruly, property. This inaccuracy points to a more basic problem in understanding American history: the violence directed at black people in America was exceptional in the regard that it was racialized and used to reinforce political and social subordination, but it was not unique.

Posted on Open Season by Daniel Gwynn Open Season
Paul Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Is Willie Lynch's Letter Real?

May 2004

Q: Is Willie Lynch's letter real? If it is real it is one of the most important documents related to African Americans.

-- Gloria Jenkins, Big Sandy, Texas

A: There are many problems with this document - not the least of which is the fact that it is absolutely fake.

I long ago stopped listening to sentences that begin with "The problem with black people is," or end with "and that's why black people can't get ahead now," which partly explains my initial indifference to the now-famous William Lynch Speech.

In the few years since the speech on how to train slaves first appeared, it has been cited by countless college students and a black member of the House of Representatives, along the way becoming the essential verbal footnote in barbershop analysis of what's wrong with black people. The rapper Talib Kweli laments on the song "Know That," "blacks are dyin'/how to make a slave/by Willie Lynch is still applyin'," and one professor at a Midwestern university made the speech required reading for her class. Of late, the frequency of its citations seems to be increasing - at least three people have asked me about it in the last month.

According to the speech's preface, Master Lynch was concerned enough with the fortunes of his slave-holding brethren in the American colonies to present a lecture on the bank of the James River, explaining how to keep unruly servants disunited. The old, he argued, should be pitted against the young, the dark against the light, the male against the female and so on. Such disunifying tactics "will control the slaves for at least 300 years," he guaranteed. And that, it seems, is why black people can't get ahead now.

As a historian, I am generally skeptical of smoking guns. Historical work, like forensic science, isn't some flashy field - it depends on the painstaking aggregation of facts that lead researchers to the most likely explanation, but rarely the only one. Slavery was an incredibly complex set of social, economic and legal relations that literally boiled down to black and white. But given the variation in size of farms, number of enslaved workers, region, crops grown, law, gender-ratios, religion and local economy, it is unlikely that a single letter could explain slave policy for at least 151 years of the institution and its ramifications down to the present day.

Considering the limited number of extant sources from 18th century, if this speech had been "discovered," it would've been the subject of incessant historical panels, scholarly articles and debates. It would literally be a career-making find. But the letter was never "discovered." Rather, it simply "appeared" on the Internet - bypassing the official historical circuits and making its way directly into the canon of American racial conspiratoria.

Posted on Open Season by Daniel Gwynn Open Season
Paul Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Daniel...it seems that you believe that everything that has happened since 1700 is a conspiracy to keep the black race down. You have swallowed the race-baiters narrative hook, line and sinker. The idea that black failure is caused by white racism is out-dated and a cop out.

The fact that 72% of black children are born to single mothers is a major concern. Dropping out of high school bars that person from 90% of jobs. This is equally true for all races with Hispanics having the largest percentage of dropouts by far and Asians the least. With manufacturing jobs decreasing all the time it leaves minimum wage service jobs or crime. 75% of crime is committed by high school dropouts.

Staying in high school till graduation, having children only when they can afford to support them and having them in a family unit of mother/father would go a long way to improving prospects.

Since I know you don't have direct access to the internet I am including a text on Willie Lynch's Letter from the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University. It is authored by William Jelani Cobb. He is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Institute for African American Studies at University of Connecticut in Storrs, CT. Cobb specializes in post-Civil War African-American history. I trust you will find it interesting.

Paul

Posted on Open Season by Daniel Gwynn Open Season
Daniel Gwynn Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
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Posted on Open Season by Daniel Gwynn Open Season
Daniel Gwynn Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
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Posted on Justice Denied by Daniel Gwynn Justice Denied
Rechell Williams Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
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Posted on Our Thoughts by Rechell Williams Our Thoughts
gypsyrose54 Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Tim I am going to print this whole series so far it is excellent! Lynette

Posted on There's The Rub (Chapter 7) by Timothy J. Muise There's The Rub (Chapter 7)
gypsyrose54 Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Tim, A very depressing and sad state when people suffering from this kind of illness are kept in prison. Makes no sense..I hope people read this and contact their legislators I am going to post this on our CURE-ARM page..keep strong Tim! God bless you! Lynette

Posted on Crisis In The Gulag by Timothy J. Muise Crisis In The Gulag
raymondoeichelberger Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Gods Garden
God looked around his garden
And found an empty place,
He then looked down upon the earth
And saw your tired face.
He put his arms around you
And lifted you to rest.
God's garden must be beautiful,
He always takes the best.
He knew you were suffering
He knew you were in pain.
He knew that you would never
Get well on earth again.
He saw the road was getting rough
And the hills were hard to climb.
So he closed your weary eyelids
And whispered, "Peace bethine".
It broke our hearts to lose you
But you didn't go alone,
For part of us went with you
The day God called you home.



You take care Rayban

Posted on Hello To You All!! (03/08/14) by Raymond Alderman Hello To You All!! (03/08/14)
lulumartinez Posted 11 years ago.   Favorite
Chuy te quiero mucho and I have alottt of letter I had made if u can send me your adress and this is my new number call me when you can 210-608-7191 we need to talk I feel like its been 100 years without you :/ but never forgotten

Posted on LIvin' by Jesus Andrade LIvin'
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