Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

New Hampshire GOP Legislator Claims 'Owning Slaves Doesn't Make You Racist' On Facebook

New Hampshire GOP Legislator Claims 'Owning Slaves Doesn't Make You Racist' On Facebook
Change Politics/YouTube

People were horrified this week at blatantly racist tweets from President Donald Trump, which ultimately led to even more racist chants from his supporters at a recent rally.

If you find yourself asking, "How can lawmakers think this is acceptable?," then you probably don't want to see this recent Facebook comment from a Republican New Hampshire state representative.


Werner Horn represents Merrimack, District 2 of New Hampshire.

While we're not exactly familiar with the constituency there, we imagine most Merrimackians would have a problem with their representative claiming slavery wasn't rooted in racism.

But that's exactly what Horn did.

Dan Hynes/Facebook

On a former New Hampshire state representative's Facebook post mocking criticisms of Trump's racism, Horn commented:

"Wait, owning slaves doesn't make you racist..."

His reasoning?

Economics.

"It shouldn't be surprising since owning slaves wasn't a decision predicated on race but on economics. It's a business decision."

The Western slave trade, after the Indigenous peoples of the Americas proved to be an insufficient slave labor pool, relied on kidnapping Africans, who were considered by White colonists to be subhuman, and forcing them on a treacherous journey to the Americas, where they would then be put to work as property. It was illegal to teach them to read or write or any other skill that didn't serve the sole purpose of performing labor for their masters.

It's estimated that millions died as a result.

"My comment specifically was aimed at a period of time when that was how you survived, that's how you fed your family," Horn told the Huffington Post.

"It wasn't 'I want to own a Black person today.' It was, 'I need to feed my family; I need five guys who can work stupidly long hours in the sun without killing themselves."

While Horn is correct in the assertion that slavery as a global practice throughout humankind's history hasn't always targeted Africans, to say that racism experienced throughout American history isn't rooted in slavery, or that slavery—especially in America—wasn't dictated by one's melanin is an inaccurate, reckless assertion.

During slavery, Black people were only considered three fifths of a person by the government. Segregation continued for a century after, in an effort to cement America's subjugation of Black people that began with slavery.

People were quick to call out Horn's ignorance.





What a mess.

The issue for Werner Horn and many others with similar views are an ignorance of United States history based on a biased education that focused on myths and lies to preserve an attitude of American exceptionalism. But the truth of US history can only help people not make the same mistakes or make ignorant comments.

The critically acclaimed, award-winning book A People's History of the United States, available here, covers the unvarnished truths of American history based on extensive research and documentation.

More from Trending

The Duffer Brothers
Jerod Harris/Getty Images for Netflix

The Duffer Brothers Just Made A Surprising Comment About The Future Of 'Stranger Things'—And Fans Are Cringing

Fans haven't exactly been overjoyed about the final season of Stranger Things, and they're not thrilled about the show's potential future either, it seems.

After the show's creators, brothers Ross and Matt Duffer, gave Entertainment Tonight an unusually candid take on what the Netflix series means to them, fans are crying foul.

Keep Reading Show less
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Meidas Touch Network

AOC Epically Shuts Down Fox News Producer's Request That She Go On Jesse Watters' Show

A video filmed Wednesday night outside the Capitol Building, by Meidas Touch Network correspondent and Migrant Insider editor Pablo Manríquez, caught New York Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) holding Fox News personality Jesse Watters accountable for his past words and actions.

The video quickly went viral.

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Trump Was Asked If There Are Any Limits To His Power—And His Response Should Alarm Everyone

President Donald Trump gave a chilling answer when asked, in an interview with the New York Times, whether there are any constraints on his power in the wake of his invasion of Venezuela and ouster of the country's dictator Nicolás Maduro.

Trump spoke to the publication amid heightened concerns that the United States could take control of Greenland. Earlier this week, the White House said it was not ruling out military action to acquire Greenland from Denmark, a NATO ally.

Keep Reading Show less
Lost and Found center
Photo by Jonny Gios on Unsplash

People Who Work In Lost And Found Share Surprising Things No One Came Back For

Perhaps one of the greatest rushes of dopamine we can experience is running over to a lost and found location, and discovering that some kind person dropped our misplaced item off there.

So it's hard to imagine why a person wouldn't try to be reunited with their lost items.

Keep Reading Show less
Michelle Obama; Screenshot of Laura Ingraham
Marcus Ingram/Getty Images; Fox News

Laura Ingraham Just Admitted That Michelle Obama Was Right About Something—And Hell Is Officially Frozen Solid

Fox News personality Laura Ingraham stunned viewers by taking back remarks she made about former First Lady Michelle Obama, who'd claimed that poor neighborhoods are often "food deserts."

Ingraham spoke with Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins as the Trump administration on Wednesday released updated dietary guidelines for Americans, emphasizing whole and minimally processed foods, reduced consumption of refined carbohydrates, and what officials described as a “war” on added sugars.

Keep Reading Show less