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Command Post What is this?
Posted on Jun 19, 2021
RallyPoint Shared Content
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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RallyPoint Shared Content awesome share and read of importance.
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SFC Michael Hasbun
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Edited 3 y ago
Weirdly enough, slavery wasn't actually abolished in the US until February 7, 2013. That's how long it took Mississippi to decide to stop hedging their bets on the slavery issue (not really, it was a clerical issue... or was it? Knowing Mississippi it could go either way).


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/after-148-years-mississippi-finally-ratifies-13th-amendment-which-banned-slavery/
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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SGT Retired
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Slavery was abolished in 1865. After 3/4 of the states ratified the 13th amendment, the ratification by the remaining states was purely symbolic, either a day, a month, or 148 years later.

3/4 ratification made it law, actually abolished.
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SGT Lorenzo Nieto
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I guess I should ask myself what did I fight for.
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On Juneteenth, recognizing freedoms won on the battlefield
SP5 Retired
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Fills in gaps in the history we have been taught. Makes a better picture of what took place. Also makes me wonder what other gaps need to be addressed.
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1LT Lewis Nelson
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Nothing but temporary ground and death is ever won on the battlefield. Like our independence, the end of slavery would have taken a little longer without war, but it would have been a more complete package with some reconciliation and stability. The civil war poisoned the environment, socially and economically and paved the way for Jim Crow and other tensions and resentments that persist, even today, while we're doing the same thing with Asians and Muslims because we see them through the lens of war.
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SGT Lorenzo Nieto
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Guess I fought and served for nothing.
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