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protoman2417
United States
Приєднався 28 лис 2007
www.whistletopps-stemteam.webs.com
Відео
CHEYNEY U. BASKETBALL HISTORY. THE START OF THE "GOLDEN ERA"
Переглядів 1,2 тис.4 роки тому
15 PSAC BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS. WHERE DID IT ALL START. . ..
Quakers Complicity in Slavery: Museum of the American Revolution
Переглядів 3965 років тому
Slavery in the Quaker World: Philadelphia and Barbados Christian Slavery Conversion and Race in the Protestant Atlantic World Katharine Gerbner
U of P MEDICINE AND SLAVERY - a symposium
Переглядів 375 років тому
A Symposium given by the University of Pennsylvania About their historical duplicity in slavery. Legacy of Slavery. THE USE OF BLACK BODIES. . . . . . . . . . .
Solar Energy Community Chat and Chew. Philadelphia. . . . . . .
Переглядів 205 років тому
Solar Energy comes to moderate and low income residents of Philadelphia.' Job Training and certificates available.
History of CHEYNEY Football 1914 - 1941 (74-53-16)
Переглядів 2175 років тому
History of CHEYNEY Football 1914 - 1941 (74-53-16)
Cheyney University 4oth Anniversary NCAA Div. II BB Championship
Переглядів 2566 років тому
Cheyney University 4oth Anniversary NCAA Div. II BB Championship
Cheyney Univ vs Kutztown Univ. FootBall 2015 -1st half!
Переглядів 1,6 тис.9 років тому
Cheyney Univ vs Kutztown Univ. FootBall 2015 -1st half!
Constitution 70 Audenried 57 PUB Semis
Переглядів 2,5 тис.9 років тому
Constitution 70 Audenried 57 PUB Semis
The Institute for Colored Youth (Cheyney University): - The Civil War Years 1856-1864
Переглядів 8879 років тому
The Institute for Colored Youth (Cheyney University): - The Civil War Years 1856-1864
Michael Coard Honored! Cheyney Alum . .
Переглядів 2039 років тому
Michael Coard Honored! Cheyney Alum . .
Cheyney Alum 5th Annual M.L. King Scholarship Gala
Переглядів 3029 років тому
Cheyney Alum 5th Annual M.L. King Scholarship Gala
Lionel Simmons -Southern High Jersey Retired
Переглядів 80410 років тому
Lionel Simmons -Southern High Jersey Retired
Kevin Washington - Incoming President & CEO, YMCA of the USA
Переглядів 42010 років тому
Kevin Washington - Incoming President & CEO, YMCA of the USA
27th year anniversary! All praise the Most High!
Where is the south Philly flames chip or season 2005
That’s my boy!!!!
😅.!
Damn that was a shitty introduction
I am only just seeing this video. I read my poetry book at the march. That was a long time ago.
Men aMilley.
Many are called but few are.....😆
Did this March Really Happen Oct.25 ,1997?
Yes, it did!
Our 1st win that season.
Bia
Million women march prayer Police rapist in the prison. Illinois Prison 2,000 America Most Wanted California Prison 2,000 America Most Wanted
Am a Country Music Artist from Nairobi Kenya
Wow! Incredible!! So inspiring!!!
I recently wrote an article that includes a section on Quaker history regarding slavery. I quote Katharine Gerbner several times. I would love to hear what you think of it. Here's the section: Another book, historian Katharine Gerbner’s Christian Slavery: Conversion and Race in the Protestant Atlantic World, claims, “It was through the mouths of ministers that the brutal slave laws…were enunciated, year after year.” Anti-slavery writers belonged to a very tiny minority in church history. Their views were not adopted by groups of Christians until the 17th century Quakers. And, yet, as Gerbner notes, there were thousands of Quaker slave owners. Believers often point to the denomination of the Quakers as leaders in the abolition movement. The National Park Service explains, “The 1688 Germantown Quaker Petition against slavery was the first protest against African American slavery made by a religious body in the English colonies.” Consider the timing of this: at the beginning of the Enlightenment and at almost the same historical moment as England’s 1688-89 Glorious Revolution when the philosopher John Locke was writing about natural rights in his Second Treatise of Government. New visions of human rights were ruminating in pockets within Europe and America. PBS notes, “In 1776, Quakers were prohibited from owning slaves, and 14 years later they petitioned the U.S. Congress for the abolition of slavery.” The majority of them were pro-slavery until the mid-1700s, long after Enlightenment humanism had begun to change the ethical views of various intellectuals. Gerbner has noted that the 1688 document was written by Quakers of Dutch and German descent, but not signed by members of this sect from an English background. She clarified this in an interview by stating, “The protest was fascinating, but I quickly became more interested in the fact that it was rejected by the English Quakers in Philadelphia.” As Encyclopedia.com describes the Quaker movement against slavery: “The early history of antislavery in America consisted primarily of the agitation of certain British and American Quakers, but even in this group antislavery sentiments grew slowly because many wealthy Quakers were slave-holders. Only by the mid-1700s, when the Society of Friends faced a severe internal crisis brought on by the effects of the Great Awakening and the Seven Years War, did opposition to slavery increase measurably among Quakers. It was not until the 1780s that the major Quaker meetings could announce that their membership was free of slaveholders.” A similar conclusion can be drawn from a summary given in the interview with Gerbner mentioned above: “Some of the first ‘antislavery’ Quakers, like Morgan Godwyn, actually based their arguments on racist claims, and encouraged Friends to exclude Africans from their households completely. Conversely, slave-owning Quakers sometimes went farther than others in arguing for spiritual equality - but they did so in order to defend slavery. Recognizing the complexities of early Quaker debates on slavery helps to explain why it took a century for Friends to disown slave-owners in their meetings.” She mentions that several Quaker anti-slavery tracts from the late 17th century and early 18th century were in large part motivated by racial discomfort in that they promoted abolition as a way to exclude black people from white Quaker communities. These writings de-emphasize the point of equal human rights for all people and instead focus on the need to separate the races. Social historian J. William Frost spent much of his career dedicated to studying the history of the Quakers (Society of Friends). He remarked: "Friends have long been somewhat puzzled, perhaps even embarrassed, that the two most prominent 17th-century Quakers, George Fox and William Penn, made so slight a contribution to the Quaker-led early antislavery movement….the Penns bought and sold slaves and hired the labour of other slaves…Because Fox never addressed the morality of slavery per se, his writings on slavery could be used by conservative slave-owning Friends in Philadelphia Yearly Meeting in 1701 to silence the abolitionists….At a time when a considerable number of Pennsylvania Quakers questioned the morality of slavery, the conservatives in control of the press saw in Fox’s acceptance of slavery a means of neutralising the nascent anti-slavery movement." The full article is titled, "The Bible Clearly Supports Chattel Slavery Based On Race And Gender". It can be found by searching for "Disagreements I Have With Christianity Andy Rhodes".
My greats and grands we're proud Black 🤠
Wish i had him back in the days. He need to comeback and teach the youth
Have heard the story of James Beckwourth but he went un-named in the story. Have seen pics of James Beckwourth yet had no idea that pic was him was ..now I do .. THANK YOU NAIROBI WRANGLERS..THANK YOU protoman2417 for posting this!
My Imani, Simply The Best !!!!
There were many Native American and Black cowboys though history doesn't talk about them unless you research them. Bill Pickett is one that created bull dogging as well as using your teeth instead of hands when grabbing a Bulls horns
This band is called The Nairobi Wranglers. I think this was filmed in 1980, because here is a newspaper article from February 1980 talking about the group: cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=WHS19800229.2.19&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1
Thank You!
Who are these guys singing? How old is this video? These guys sound great?
I'm so happy to discover him
We have to admit we do it better Uptown it will always be discovered and never forgotten no matter how you try to bury it somebody's watching
Watahtah watahtah pretty dope.....
My calabar team a di best
Who are the country group?
Very good datte raho ji
Yes
My great great grandfather was a cowboy...and my great great grandmother was a Indian...on my mom's mothers side...From Louisiana...
Check out “KURIMEO ahau “ vids shows documents of the melanin natives we been here bro
The day I was born 😁
Hey subscribe my channel I sing old and new country song mostly
Where is Joshua watson
I know lots of Black Cowboys in Oklahoma, it's a Shame how they left us out ok history in certain places.
You know how it goes when certain people write the History books. A lot of unheard great stories go untold but that’s why it’s up to the people like us to enlighten a generation 👍👍
My mother’s side of the family is from Oklahoma the Leblanc’s the were cowboys and rodeo riders! I used to have old news paper clippings of them.
ah non merde
first
sexe durand-viel
I was there! (Am I that old? LOL)
SOOOO GREATLY DONE!! THANK YOU!
From #NASHVILLE with love. *tips hat*
40% of all cowboys were black just like the whalers in moby dick
#Duties
Much love from The Carolinas and Cincinnati
Carolinas baaaayyyybbiiii! Shoutouts to ya bro ~
Ok now I feel old! I was 17, boarded the bus by myself. I remember wearing a leather jacket that my father bought me and my hair was in a long, jet black, Aaliyah looking wrap! A white woman paid for my ticket and gave me spending money. She knew it was important for her black daughter to be with her "sisters." It rained most of the time. I was initially upset at seeing all the brothers there, this was a time for women, until I realized they were there to protect us, watch over and make sure we were cool 💙 I can't tell you who was my favorite speaker was because they all did a helluva job! Jada Pinkett was the MC and she aced it! What I'll never forget was the sisterly love. It was a feeling I'd never felt. Most of the time women can be kinda cold when interacting with other women, not this day! Everyone embraced you like family! Other than that only the beauty sticks out: hairstyles, faces and clothing! So beautiful!
I was there. I remember hearing Faith sing A capella and I got chills. Whenever I see her on TV I think about how special that moment was.
Wasn't there a period when Cheyney didn't play Lincoln in the 60s and 70s......after the incident involving a beat down in a dormitory and the dean of men in a parking lot confrontation? It's been a while, my memory may be failing......
After the 1960 season they stopped - until 2008!
@@protoman2417 ...OK..well before the confrontation...TY
I'm a Texas DOS cowgirl by bloodline. It's always so unbelievable how people are so stupid to the real western culture.
Just to culture period
14.94 s is faster than most "average" people can muster.
Do you have any southern 2011 football games?
Awesome!! Love the end.
John Ware came North to Canada, South Alberta, settled in the region of what is today Calgary, cowboyed for years.
you should do more. very clear video