As a matter of fact, my slave ancestors probably did pick cotton. They lived in Georgia. They ended up emancipated after the civil war, and through some twists of fate, my family line ended up in Omaha in 1886. Through yet more fate, we ended up in Lincoln.
Any more questions on my genealogy?
She could be Sister Mary Maria, considering she was making quite the tantrum about the mythological "stolen generations".
It is difficult to determine for sure because in my interactions, all those darkies look the same.
YIC,
WS.
No, I'm not. I'm of african blood myself, and proud to be. Actually, I've traced my family tree right back to slaves stolen from africa and taken to the United states. The trail goes cold there, though.
Mrs Wintersnow After reading your response I am smiling ear to ear (so to speak) and certainly the prospect of coming together for the Lord via social intercourse is something that I find myself thinking about constantly and very fondly.
Your delightful apple pie sounds like it will satisfy me immensly and is something I look forward to savouring and knowing that it will be served with a "pinch of love" will make it all the more memorable.
I will advise you of my future travel plans in order for you to procure the neccesary items so as to ensure that your pie is the sweetest and juiciest that can be possibly experienced
Perhaps not to toot my own horn, but all my pies are good! The secret is in the pastry, as there is always a little "pinch of love" from The Lord in every one I bake. At the moment however as it is chillier here, my apple pie is a requested delight. God does make certain fruits for certain seasons for a reason and as such, I tend to use his given provisions as par for the course.
I do look forward to an intercourse with you, Mr Davidson. Coming together for The Lord; gosh... there is no greater experience.
Well Mrs Wintersnow thank you for the kind invitation.
As it has been sometime since I have had a piece of pie that has not been had at home this is a delightful prospect so if I get the chance to sample yours I would be most grateful (BTW What is your speciality??)
If I am up on the Gold Coast I will drop you a line and catch up for some prayer & pie
If you ever do head up this way, I would be more than pleased if you would visit and taste a piece of my pie. The Pastor has said that mine is the best he has ever had.
Very kind of you to say but there is no way I could ever compete in the political arena with the likes of Bronwyn Bishop! She was class, sass and good True Christian values all rolled into one and honest to a fault, and her hairstyle was to die for, if I may gush just a little.
As for my late husband.. oh no I was a lucky woman and he did what he loved doing right to the end. Spending time with many a young Homer, showing them the way.
As to the darkies. No I pay them no mind in the main but living in QLD, it is very difficult to ignore them! They run around like they own the place!
YIC,
Mrs.P.Wintersnow.
Oh god. This is hilarious. Wintersnow, will you just admit to your husband already that you're cheating on him?
Perhaps not to toot my own horn, but all my pies are good! The secret is in the pastry, as there is always a little "pinch of love" from The Lord in every one I bake. At the moment however as it is chillier here, my apple pie is a requested delight. God does make certain fruits for certain seasons for a reason and as such, I tend to use his given provisions as par for the course.
I do look forward to an intercourse with you, Mr Davidson. Coming together for The Lord; gosh... there is no greater experience.
YIC,
Mrs.P.Wintersnow
Mrs Wintersnow After reading your response I am smiling ear to ear (so to speak) and certainly the prospect of coming together for the Lord via social intercourse is something that I find myself thinking about constantly and very fondly.
Your delightful apple pie sounds like it will satisfy me immensly and is something I look forward to savouring and knowing that it will be served with a "pinch of love" will make it all the more memorable.
I will advise you of my future travel plans in order for you to procure the neccesary items so as to ensure that your pie is the sweetest and juiciest that can be possibly experienced
Well Mrs Wintersnow thank you for the kind invitation.
As it has been sometime since I have had a piece of pie that has not been had at home this is a delightful prospect so if I get the chance to sample yours I would be most grateful (BTW What is your speciality??)
If I am up on the Gold Coast I will drop you a line and catch up for some prayer & pie
Perhaps not to toot my own horn, but all my pies are good! The secret is in the pastry, as there is always a little "pinch of love" from The Lord in every one I bake. At the moment however as it is chillier here, my apple pie is a requested delight. God does make certain fruits for certain seasons for a reason and as such, I tend to use his given provisions as par for the course.
I do look forward to an intercourse with you, Mr Davidson. Coming together for The Lord; gosh... there is no greater experience.
If you ever do head up this way, I would be more than pleased if you would visit and taste a piece of my pie. The Pastor has said that mine is the best he has ever had.
Very kind of you to say but there is no way I could ever compete in the political arena with the likes of Bronwyn Bishop! She was class, sass and good True Christian values all rolled into one and honest to a fault, and her hairstyle was to die for, if I may gush just a little.
As for my late husband.. oh no I was a lucky woman and he did what he loved doing right to the end. Spending time with many a young Homer, showing them the way.
As to the darkies. No I pay them no mind in the main but living in QLD, it is very difficult to ignore them! They run around like they own the place!
YIC,
Mrs.P.Wintersnow.
Well Mrs Wintersnow thank you for the kind invitation.
As it has been sometime since I have had a piece of pie that has not been had at home this is a delightful prospect so if I get the chance to sample yours I would be most grateful (BTW What is your speciality??)
If I am up on the Gold Coast I will drop you a line and catch up for some prayer & pie
Ignore the satanic ramblings and fabrications of jennabenna
You are wise indeed Mrs Wintersnow...If it were not your duty to bake pies and tend to the home you would possibly make an inspirational politician.
The late Mr Wintersnow was a lucky man.......I do hope that is not too forward
.
Gosh Mr Davidson,
If you ever do head up this way, I would be more than pleased if you would visit and taste a piece of my pie. The Pastor has said that mine is the best he has ever had.
Very kind of you to say but there is no way I could ever compete in the political arena with the likes of Bronwyn Bishop! She was class, sass and good True Christian values all rolled into one and honest to a fault, and her hairstyle was to die for, if I may gush just a little.
As for my late husband.. oh no I was a lucky woman and he did what he loved doing right to the end. Spending time with many a young Homer, showing them the way.
As to the darkies. No I pay them no mind in the main but living in QLD, it is very difficult to ignore them! They run around like they own the place!
Surely you jest, jennabenna! We never stop hearing about the myth!
Perhaps I should educate you on the realities.
This phrase "stolen generations" was coined by Professor Peter Read, who suggested some 100,000 children may have been taken from their families. But in a speech in London in 1996, he named just two of them -- former ATSIC chairwoman Lowitja O'Donoghue and Aboriginal leader Charlie Perkins.
Only problem with his theory is, neither of the two he mentioned were stolen at all. Perkins was the son of an Alice Springs woman who was deserted by her husband after giving birth to her 11th child, and who begged a priest to at least give her brightest boy (Charlie) an education. O'Donoghue, it was found, was sent with her siblings to South Australia's Colebrook Home by her white father when he'd decided he no longer wanted them or his Aboriginal wife. He too wanted a better education for them.
Professor Peter Read later cut his estimate of stolen children to 50,000, consistent with the guess of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission's Bringing Them Home report of 1997. But that infamous report relied on anonymous and unchecked claims which collapsed whenever they were tested. It has been criticised as "greatly exaggerated" even by Professor Robert Manne, a stolen generations propagandist who was given a $50,000 grant to "expose" our great crime. Manne, in his book In Denial: The Stolen Generations and the Right, now claimed the true figure of "stolen" children was no more than 25,000. But he could find and name just four. If that.
In fact, only one of his four cases seemed to involve the tragic theft of a girl, but it occurred back in 1903. His other examples included a boy who was actually taken from his widowed father with that drunk's consent, after a court heard the boy was running wild. And then there was Lorna Cubillo.
Cubillo had by then begun a test case in the Northern Territory with Peter Gunner, asking the Federal Court to compensate them for having been stolen. That hearing cost at least $10 million and ran for a year, talking to all kinds of witnesses. It was, Manne said early on, the best investigation we'd get into the worst area for child stealing.
But the findings? That Peter Gunner's mother had in fact signed a form to permit her son to go to a home in Alice Springs and get some schooling. That Cubillo couldn't be said to have been stolen either, not least because her mother and grandmother had died, her father had vanished, and it was hard to tell who in the hard bush was actually looking after the little girl. But more than that, the court said it hadn't found anyone who'd been stolen in the NT, and the "evidence does not support a finding that there was any policy of removal of part-Aboriginal children such as that alleged by the applicants".
It was the same story in Victoria when the Bracks Government's Stolen Generations Taskforce last year admitted it couldn't find any real "stolen" children, either, adding there had been "no formal policy for removing children" from Aboriginal parents here.
On to Western Australia, where a royal commission in 1936 had already heard from the Protector of Aborigines that children weren't taken unless they were in danger. Manne has claimed this protector, A.O. Neville, had "genocidal thoughts", but last year finally conceded "it didn't affect the outcomes for the children". I know, the film Rabbit-Proof Fence, set in WA, insists that it tells the "true story" of three girls being stolen but, as has been revealed, the records of that incident show this true story is false.
Then to New South Wales. Only one "stolen generations" child has gone to court there -- activist Joy Williams. But her case, too, failed, after the court found she'd been willingly given up by her deeply troubled mother. In fact, it's odd that no high-profile example of a "stolen" child has ever been proved genuine.
Cathy Freeman's grandmother was not stolen. Our first Aboriginal author, academic Mudrooroo Narogin, was not stolen either -- and is also not really Aboriginal. Nor were the four "stolen generations" Aborigines who gave evidence for Peter Gunner truly stolen, as they admitted to the Federal Court. One said his family paid to send him away to school, and he'd called himself "stolen" because "we're going to get compensation".
These aren't claims. They are facts that cannot be dodged if we're honest. And so the "stolen generations" is a myth, and a lethal one. White children are robbed of their history, and black children of faith in the only society that can help them. White children are told these lies and made feel guilt over something that never happened, and black ones are spoonfed these lies to feel resentment toward white Australia.
If anything, it seems that the $$ is the aborigines god, no doubt too a pagan god named HADES, and they will do anything, including lie, cheat and steal to be closer to it.
Now, jennabenna, considering the last thing we good white Australians need is a foreign darkie perpetuating the lie, how about you zip your lips, Missy!
Ignore the satanic ramblings and fabrications of jennabenna
You are wise indeed Mrs Wintersnow...If it were not your duty to bake pies and tend to the home you would possibly make an inspirational politician.
The late Mr Wintersnow was a lucky man.......I do hope that is not too forward
And you've obviously never heard of the stolen generation. It's even worse than what my people endured.
Surely you jest, jennabenna! We never stop hearing about the myth!
Perhaps I should educate you on the realities.
This phrase "stolen generations" was coined by Professor Peter Read, who suggested some 100,000 children may have been taken from their families. But in a speech in London in 1996, he named just two of them -- former ATSIC chairwoman Lowitja O'Donoghue and Aboriginal leader Charlie Perkins.
Only problem with his theory is, neither of the two he mentioned were stolen at all. Perkins was the son of an Alice Springs woman who was deserted by her husband after giving birth to her 11th child, and who begged a priest to at least give her brightest boy (Charlie) an education. O'Donoghue, it was found, was sent with her siblings to South Australia's Colebrook Home by her white father when he'd decided he no longer wanted them or his Aboriginal wife. He too wanted a better education for them.
Professor Peter Read later cut his estimate of stolen children to 50,000, consistent with the guess of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission's Bringing Them Home report of 1997. But that infamous report relied on anonymous and unchecked claims which collapsed whenever they were tested. It has been criticised as "greatly exaggerated" even by Professor Robert Manne, a stolen generations propagandist who was given a $50,000 grant to "expose" our great crime. Manne, in his book In Denial: The Stolen Generations and the Right, now claimed the true figure of "stolen" children was no more than 25,000. But he could find and name just four. If that.
In fact, only one of his four cases seemed to involve the tragic theft of a girl, but it occurred back in 1903. His other examples included a boy who was actually taken from his widowed father with that drunk's consent, after a court heard the boy was running wild. And then there was Lorna Cubillo.
Cubillo had by then begun a test case in the Northern Territory with Peter Gunner, asking the Federal Court to compensate them for having been stolen. That hearing cost at least $10 million and ran for a year, talking to all kinds of witnesses. It was, Manne said early on, the best investigation we'd get into the worst area for child stealing.
But the findings? That Peter Gunner's mother had in fact signed a form to permit her son to go to a home in Alice Springs and get some schooling. That Cubillo couldn't be said to have been stolen either, not least because her mother and grandmother had died, her father had vanished, and it was hard to tell who in the hard bush was actually looking after the little girl. But more than that, the court said it hadn't found anyone who'd been stolen in the NT, and the "evidence does not support a finding that there was any policy of removal of part-Aboriginal children such as that alleged by the applicants".
It was the same story in Victoria when the Bracks Government's Stolen Generations Taskforce last year admitted it couldn't find any real "stolen" children, either, adding there had been "no formal policy for removing children" from Aboriginal parents here.
On to Western Australia, where a royal commission in 1936 had already heard from the Protector of Aborigines that children weren't taken unless they were in danger. Manne has claimed this protector, A.O. Neville, had "genocidal thoughts", but last year finally conceded "it didn't affect the outcomes for the children". I know, the film Rabbit-Proof Fence, set in WA, insists that it tells the "true story" of three girls being stolen but, as has been revealed, the records of that incident show this true story is false.
Then to New South Wales. Only one "stolen generations" child has gone to court there -- activist Joy Williams. But her case, too, failed, after the court found she'd been willingly given up by her deeply troubled mother. In fact, it's odd that no high-profile example of a "stolen" child has ever been proved genuine.
Cathy Freeman's grandmother was not stolen. Our first Aboriginal author, academic Mudrooroo Narogin, was not stolen either -- and is also not really Aboriginal. Nor were the four "stolen generations" Aborigines who gave evidence for Peter Gunner truly stolen, as they admitted to the Federal Court. One said his family paid to send him away to school, and he'd called himself "stolen" because "we're going to get compensation".
These aren't claims. They are facts that cannot be dodged if we're honest. And so the "stolen generations" is a myth, and a lethal one. White children are robbed of their history, and black children of faith in the only society that can help them. White children are told these lies and made feel guilt over something that never happened, and black ones are spoonfed these lies to feel resentment toward white Australia.
If anything, it seems that the $$ is the aborigines god, no doubt too a pagan god named HADES, and they will do anything, including lie, cheat and steal to be closer to it.
Now, jennabenna, considering the last thing we good white Australians need is a foreign darkie perpetuating the lie, how about you zip your lips, Missy!
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