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Old-Time Slave Code…Is it still in Effect? Tonight on “Conversations Of A Sistah”


ab229_burns2-jpg-resize-710x399The oldest U.S. slave laws are found in the State of Virginia. There is a publication entitled The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of all the Laws of Virginia, volume 2 (1823) by William W. Henning. This publication contains the Virginia Slave Codes. Among these codes is a document, dated October of 1669, which is entitled “An act about the casual killing of slaves”.

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Under the 4th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, when a law enforcement officer is pursuing a suspect, the officer may apply deadly force to prevent escape if he or she has “probable cause” to believe that the suspect poses a threat. Needless to say, it is very difficult to prove that a law enforcement officer does not have “probable cause”.

Those terms, which delude to slavery, were defined as objects of commercial trade in the Law of Nations. This definition carried over into the U.S. slave laws and later on, into the various statues that are in effect today. A slave is one who is void of a nationality, as nationality determines one’s political status and a slave has no political rights. The nationality of Moors was taken away from them in 1774 and the words “negro”, “black” and “colored” were given to Asiatics, of America, who were of Moorish descent.

The conversation never STOPS!!!.

Shem El head shot photograph
Shem El head shot photograph

Join me tonight on “Conversations Of A Sistah” at 6:30 p.m. EST via blog talk radio as we kick off black history month on the topic “Is the Slave Code Still in Effect?” with my special guest, Shem El (pictured left), Assistant Grand Sheik in the Moorish Science Temple of America?

All “conversation links” in this post make it possible to access the show.

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