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That’s why biblically God called them devils
761,098 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)
10 Comments

Sounds like 100% bullshit to me. Never trust a call center worker

Ignore: East Indians. They promulgate racism against Black Americans. It gives them some sick as pleasure. The nerve of them to try to preside over us. The heavens will fall into the sea before any Black Americans allow them to have that much power over our Nation. Let them be as racist as they are and ignore them. They cannot beat any of us; Black Americans ever, under any circumstances. Period.

Oh shut the fuck up 😂🖕🏼

Nigga shut the fuck up. You don't know what you talking about and frankly nobody cares. Your ancestors sold black people into slavery does that make you a bad person now? Dummy.

The connection between "Jingle Bells" and escaped slaves is a topic that has stirred some debate and misunderstanding. Here's what we can conclude from the available information: - **Direct Connection to Song**: There is no direct evidence from historical or scholarly sources that "Jingle Bells" was originally written about or intended to reference escaped slaves. The song, written by James Lord Pierpont in 1857, primarily deals with the fun of a winter sleigh ride. - **Minstrel Show Performance**: "Jingle Bells" was first performed in a setting associated with blackface minstrelsy, which raises questions about its cultural context. The song was debuted by blackface performer Johnny Pell at Ordway Hall in Boston. This performance context does tie the song to a troubling history of racial stereotypes and minstrel shows, but this doesn't directly link it to the narrative of escaped slaves. - **Controversial Interpretation**: Some discussions and posts on social media platforms like X have suggested a connection between the bells in "Jingle Bells" and the practice of forcing escaped slaves to wear bell collars to alert slave catchers of their movements. However, these claims lack solid historical backing within the context of the song's lyrics or Pierpont's intentions. - **Slave Bells**: While it's true that some slave owners used bells on collars as a means to track escaped slaves, this practice does not appear to be directly referenced or connected to "Jingle Bells" in historical texts or by Pierpont's known motivations for writing the song. - **Modern Misinterpretation**: The notion that "Jingle Bells" refers to slave bells seems to stem from a misunderstanding or conflation of the song's minstrel show origins with the separate historical fact of bells used on slaves. This interpretation has been criticized by scholars like Kyna Hamill, who has researched the song's history extensively, noting there's no connection to the song's lyrics or Pierpont's known intent. In conclusion, while "Jingle Bells" has a controversial history due to its association with minstrel performances, there is no credible evidence to suggest it was written about or specifically tied to the narrative of escaped slaves. The song's origins are more about celebrating winter sleigh rides, though its initial performance context does reflect the racial attitudes of the time.

Unintelligent people don’t want to hear unfiltered truth. However, this is true. I research this years ago for a college paper. . Old facts.

LOL of course not......it's too white. We must make whites evil

I see the comments talking about livestocks and it’s not racist, Xmas was long before the USA, etc. Bruh lookup how the stock exchange started! What a live stock was before today. Lookup how Christmas became a holiday and why. Time to reboot this world for real!

Now make your word salad taste good by adding some facts to it 🤓

Dumbest thing I ever seen
