The only aspect of the Shirley Sherrod controversy that I find interesting is related to a phrase she used in explaining her dealings with
the poor white farmer.
Not exact matches
The treaties promised First Nations farming equipment and instruction, but it was often of
poor quality, and Indigenous
farmers could not sell their produce without the approval of Indian agents, who were sensitive to the concerns of
white settlers who resented the competition.
Set in hard - times Mississippi just before, during and after World War II and based on a 2008 novel by Hillary Jordan, Mudbound focuses on two
poor families: one
white farmers (the McAllans); the other black sharecroppers (the Jacksons) who work the former's land.
If you know anything about native americans from the southern tip Argentina to the northern tip of Canada, (both which are farther in either direction then Chile and Alaska,) there's two things that are striking very few city civilization like ancient Egypt or ancient India, and very few
farmers up until the
white men descended upon their
poor ar — .
Lumping «Americans» as a label into the «fat
white and lazy» category is just as shallow as lumping WoW
farmers into the «
poor, unethical, and Chinese» category.