Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Douglas Unchained

August 11, 1841 Frederick Douglass, an escaped slave, spoke before an audience in the North for the first time. During an anti-slavery convention on Nantucket Island, he gave a powerful, emotional account of his life as a slave. 
What language do they speak in Massachusetts!

Frederick Douglas, the John Shaft of Ex Slaves. A man who not only escaped slavery, but spent a large number of years within the reaches of slavers telling audiences how wrong it was. See there was still a fugitive slave law on the books that said that slave catchers could travel into northern states to reclaim the property which had escaped. Even though at one point he changed his last name to Johnson  to be safe, he still gave a speech about his life to the anti slavery society. It probably wasn't hard to piece together who he was after that.
Some of the highlights included learning to read in secret, teaching other slaves to read in secret which was totally illegal. He even beat the stuffing out of a man known as a slave breaker he was sold to for trying to escape, who whipped him every day until the day Frederick went Django all over him. The man never whipped Douglas again.
You don't even wanna know where I'm gonna put this.
So on August 11th 1841 he spoke before an audience in the North, during an Ani-Slavery Convention. It wasn't an informal book club in the basement of the Barnes and Noble, is was the comic-con of Anti-slavery Conventions. He gave such an amazing speech about the terrible lives of those in slavery and his daring escape that he was immediately asked to become the Full Time lecturer for the Massachusetts Antislavery Society. 
Slavery is wrong, did I stutter?


Saturday, August 15, 2015

The Voyage of the Kon-Tiki

Just when giant fish monsters thought it was safe for them to go back in the water

This Week In History
August 7th, 1947 The Voyage of the Kon-Tiki ends after is struck a reef and was beached on an uninhabited islet. Explorer Thor Heyerdahl and a crew of six ended their Pacific Ocean Rafting Trip when the raft struck the reef after traveling a mere 3,770 Nautical miles.

Heyerdahl believe that ancient peoples from south America could have settled the Polynesian islands. So he built a raft out of period materials and which means “Things I found on the ground that float for 500 Alex” and went further than I've ever gone in my whole adult life. I've turned down sex from women because they lived in a Geographically inconvenient part of Brooklyn I LIVE IN BROOKLYN, and honestly do I look like I can afford to turn down sex?
If she's in the yellow, Ima let her mellow

Most people would write an academic paper and let it ride. But Thor Hyerdahl did the equivalent of Galileo building a giant slingshot to launch himself to the moon just to make sure his lunar calculations were correct. Or Gregor mendel breeding terrible half man-beasts like some kind of Island of Dr Morue to prove that his gene theory was correct.
No wonder he was interested in genetics, he looks like a cat person in a wig

The best of this story was that he FLOATED ACROSS A PORTION OF THE PACIFIC THAT WASN'T EVEN MAPPED. Remember the old maps that said Thar be monsters here, because we hadn't explored that part yet? In 1947 he floated across Poseidon's taint. It's often forgotten but still important part of the eco system.
Yeah, thats right, sail your boat riiiiiiiight there

The o Kon-Tiki  is now on display in the Kon-Tiki museum in Bygdøy, near Oslo, alongside Thor's Giant Bronzed balls.

Hey did I just name the best cover band ever? 

Move over King Oscar, 

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Slavery Free Jamaica

August 1, 1838 - Slavery was abolished in Jamaica. 


But there's a price for every party

Jamaica didn't just politely cough and motion towards the chains on their wrists and hope the british got the hint, well they may have in the beginning but that clearly wasn't working. And the british are far too polite let on that, yes, they understand your subtlety, but they are just going to pretend they don't.

 Tea's not going to make itself. Wait I have slaves, so yes, yes it is.

Thus began the Baptist War, the 16th Slave revolt in Jamaica. After rudely revolting 15 times before the Jamaicans decided that 16th times the charm. Yet the plantation owners were still like "Hey what is in this sandwich? Ah nevermind I trust you completely, you whom I've enslaved like your father, and his father before him son on and such, now I've got to take a nap on the veranda, please remember to lock up the sharp farm implements after you've finished creating my fortune."

The rebellion was planned as more of an extended christmas vacation where the slaves would refuse to work until paid or the sugar crop was lost. But sometimes you tell yourself "I'll just have one piece of cake, but then before you know it you've mobilized 60,000 slaves, attacked 200 plantations and 1million british Lbs worth of sugar cane.

If there were memes in 1838 they would have featured a side by side comparison of America's rebellion where peaceful patriots waited in line to courteously throw tea into the river while Jamaica's rebellion showed overturned horses and the charred remains of several Jamaican Walgreens locations.
White people were so classy they even dressed up as another race to avoid those awkward questions at dinner

When the rebellion finally ended the final death score came out to a baker's dozen for the british and Jesus wept for the rebels. The rebel leader Samuel Sharpe's final words before his execution were "I'd rather die upon yonder gallows than live in slavery". This was the first and saddest recorded version of the game Would You Rather in history.


May I still choose yon gallows?

The fears of another slave revolt were a major concern since they were becoming as regular as Jamie Lee Curtis in an Activia commercial. So the british decided that perhaps it was best to give in to abolition with an eventual transfer to a Sandals Resort and Casino based economy rather that suffer more economic losses.


Wait, why does everything feel the same?

So on August 1st, 1838 Slavery was finally abolished in Jamaica...sorta.