Day633HRAfterChat

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Humanity Rising Day 633 After Chat   –   Wednesday February 15, 2023

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Chat from AfterChat Zoom from HR Day 633:

aka ChatPeople Chat



...

00:08:17    moses stevens: Thanks for allowing me to be in silence without vidio  I enjoy the chat but not  wanting to offend anyone and will go if  you  want me to!!I hae my reasons   Please  Trust me at this time Please  LOVE TO ALL!

00:08:55    Shannon McArthur: All good, Mo. Nice to have you “over my shoulder”.

00:09:31    moses stevens: THANK  YOU!!!HUGS!!

00:09:54    Stanley Pokras: Mo, please stay and be with us if even just to listen. We know you love us…

00:10:00    Stanley Pokras: And we love you.

00:11:06    Shannon McArthur: Welcome, Felicity!! Great to have you join us…

00:13:03    Felicity Crawford: Thank you. I joined for about a minute now - do have another starting shortly. For anyone who is interested, here is my contact information: Felicity Crawford, fcraw@bu.edu.edu

00:13:30    Bob Hayes: The Clement A. Price Institute invite you to join us for the 43rd Annual Marion Thompson Wright Lecture Series,  "Beans, Greens, Tomatoes: Food, Accessibility and Justice in the Black Diaspora"

In the wake of increasing environmental disasters, housing crises, and food insecurity, Black communities across the world raise new questions about the importance of equitable access to land, water, and food. Spanning a broad cross-section of age, ethnicity, faith, and nationality, Black liberation activism and thought, in this century, emphasizes renewed concern with equitable food systems through land stewardship and culinary practice. Revived attention to the foodways and practices of African descended people underscores the celebration of and return to farming practices and culinary traditions that sustain Black history and culture from one generation to the next. Collectively, Psyche Williams-Forson, Lolis E. Eric, Jessica B. Harris, and Edda L. Fields-Black remind us that food and foodways are vital elements of justice, equality, and community identity. Through their writing, research, teaching, and creative productions they highlight a powerful means of looking to our future by re-examining our past.

How to join on the day of the conference:

Please complete the registration via Eventbrite and select from In- Person Attendance or Virtual attendance. For the In-person attendance register at:

https://sasn.rutgers.edu/43rd-annual-marion-thompson-wright-lecture-series::

00:19:07    Bob Hayes: Beans, Greens, Tomatoes: Food Accessibility and Justice in the Black Diaspora

The 43rd Annual Marion Thompson Wright Lecture Series

February 18th, 2023, Newark Museum of Art, 9:30AM - 3:00PM

00:19:16    Katie Augustine: I have another meeting at 1:15 Est - glad I could join for a few moments. Be here another 5 !

00:19:22    Shannon McArthur: Thank you, Bob!!

00:19:40    Shannon McArthur: Thanks, Katie! Good to see you.

00:20:43    Felicity Crawford: So sorry that I do have to leave. I hope to stay in contact with you. Peace

00:20:49    Katie Augustine: Felicity, thank you for joining us today - please do any time!

00:21:11    Shannon McArthur: And Iya is here!!

00:21:54    Tahirah Abubakr: Good afternoon!

00:22:23    Katie Augustine: Good afternoon!

00:23:56    Katie Augustine: Have to go - love to each of you ❤️

00:30:55    Shannon McArthur: 4th Ward Publications = Harriet

00:31:44    Shannon McArthur: Thank you, Harriet /Victoria <3 thank you

00:35:58    Shannon McArthur: We are the mitoc

00:36:11    Shannon McArthur: Mitocondria of Mother Earth

00:38:10    Shannon McArthur: Thanks for the Passion, Sarah Sue

00:43:56    Bob Hayes: ::https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/taxpayers-still-paying-british-slave-12019829::

" ... In 1833, Britain used £20 million, 40% of its national budget to buy freedom for all slaves in the Empire.  The amount of money borrowed for the Slavery Abolition Act was so large it wasn't paid off until 2015.  ..."

I'm ignorant of so much.  But, I'm curious, who lent this huge amount and weren't the banks who provided this - also collecting interest for this too?

In the US we let the civil war set the settlement terms?

00:52:05    Bob Hayes: From 1 month ago:

Watch "Church of England pledges £100 million after discovering investment fund with slavery link | 5 News" on YouTube 2min

https://youtu.be/LLKspOgEbyU::

00:56:11    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: That is not victimized that is just discrimination apples and oranges.  Discrimination is wrong and needs to be corrected.

00:56:19    Iya Tahirah: Can we response to these incidences differently Harrett?

01:05:30    Hyacinth Oesterlin: have to go now.  Thanks Shannon for your dream.

01:06:38    Hyacinth Oesterlin: We are all one RACE; the HUMAN, with different Ethnicities and Customs.:  BLESSINGS AND LOVE

01:07:57    Shannon McArthur: Sometimes Joy looks like learning, and it hurts.

01:08:40    Bob Hayes: ::https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/project/context/::

" ... The compensation records also provide us with a snapshot of slave owners in 1834, in Britain as well as the Caribbean, Mauritius and the Cape. From Nick Draper's initial research, The Price of Emancipation (Cambridge University Press, 2010), it is clear that approximately half of the £20 million stayed in Britain

It is the £10 million paid in compensation money in Britain, and the slave owners who received it, that our first project was focused upon. We know that in addition to the many absentee planters, bankers and financiers directly concerned with the business of sugar and slavery, there were many other types of claimant: clergymen, for example, or the widows and single women, some of whom had been left property in the enslaved in trust. Slave ownership was spread across the British Isles, by no means confined to the old slaving ports, and included men and women of varied ages, ranging from the aristocracy and gentry to sections of the middle classes. Despite the popular enthusiasm for abolition, slave owners had no compunction in seeking compensation - apparently totally unembarrassed by this property that had been widely constructed by abolitionists as a 'stain on the nation'. We have been investigating these people and tracking, in so far as it is possible, what they did with the money. Eric Williams believed that the slave trade and slavery provided not only essential demand for manufactures and supply of raw materials but also vital capital for the early phases of industrialisation. So far his hypothesis has been partially substantiated, for example through the histories of particular family firms. ... "

01:11:37    Shannon McArthur: Welcome, Mabel. Glad you could join us.

01:12:48    Bob Hayes: More from The Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery :

" ... Our work is also of concern to banks and legal firms which were not previously aware of having received compensation payments or of the extent of their predecessors' involvement in the slave compensation process. We believe it is our task to provide not only the empirical evidence of linkages to slavery but also appropriate and responsible contextualisation of that evidence, and we are ready to share our findings with interested firms and institutions as with other audiences. ... "

01:14:27    Bob Hayes: Iya - thanks.  What a great suggestion

01:18:00    Iya Tahirah: Thank you Mabel for your voice.!

01:18:13    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: Love your dream and feeling the Joy!  There is only one energy and that is Joy!  If it doesn't appear to be joy it is just compressed joy.  Learn to see the Joy in everything all day long.

01:33:46    mabel: Replying to "Love your dream and …"

Thank you Sue

01:34:15    mabel: Replying to "Thank you Mabel for …"

Thank you Iya

01:35:02    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: www.slaveryfootprint.org

01:36:31    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: Please join me for a planning meeting on www.meetn.com/Angelhair  We can decide on a time now and start the ball rolling and approach Jim to put it on the calendar and ask for a week not just a day.

01:37:06    mabel: I am so sorry.  I have to leave to lead a meditation Blessings

01:37:08    Harriett (H. Victoria Hargro Atkerson): I have enjoyed the discussion and thank each of you for your expressions of hope. I must go to work now. BLESSINGS TO ALL!

01:43:35    Iya Tahirah: What time on Friday Stanley?

01:50:01    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: ::https://drbuttar.info/::  Please sign up and come tonight

01:54:32    moses stevens: THANK  YOU forthis beautiful conversation!!!!

01:58:39    Carol Sue Engleman on Facebook: Mark of the Macaw by the Salisbury

01:59:32    moses stevens: You are AMAZING with so much knowing

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