Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 23, 2015
An awesome educational video game designed to teach Blacks how to be slaves is being attacked for not being hardcore enough. Critics say slavery simulation game should be more similar to the 50 Shades of Gray simulation game, which is also marketed to children (note: this isn’t true).
If they wanted it to be miserable, they should have had Zoe Quinn design it (note: this is true).
RT:
A computer game simulating the experiences of a US slave girl in the 19th Century has sparked outrage across the country. Critics believe the game doesn’t depict the true brutality of slavery and students should look to other resources to learn about it.
The educational learning program in question is called ‘Flight to Freedom’ and chronicles the experiences of a 14-year-old black slave called Lucy King, who works on a slave plantation in Kentucky. Users have to try and help her escape to the north of the country, where slavery has been abolished.
Upon learning about the game, after she received an email, recommending its use to coincide with Black History month, Rafranz Davis, who is an Instructional Technology Specialist for Schools, took to social media to vent her disgust.
“You would like to be a slave? The idea that a game could give a person a sense of what it felt like to fear for your life, to know everything that could possibly happen to you, which could be rape, a beating, death, mutilation is preposterous,” she told RT.
The game has been available for use for a number of years and has received positive reviews from teachers and parents. Kid-Tech columnist for USA Today said it was“realistic,” “brilliant,” “ingenious” and “fascinating.”
“From hearing spirituals being sung in the beginning of the game to Lucy’s haunting voice at the end recalling her journey, this is a powerful game that all kids should experience,” Jinny Gudmundsen wrote.
Speaking to Education Weekly, Kellie Castruita Specter, the senior director of communications and marketing for WNET television station, which helped to produce the game, said that she stands-by the project as being a positive educational tool to help learn about slavery.
The fact of the matter is that slavery was fun for Blacks, they all enjoyed it.
For documentation proof of this obvious fact, please read my article “Blacks Loved Slavery and Regretted Its End.”
I’m sure some of them got abused, but it would have been the exception. Most Whites don’t have any drive to abuse people generally, and certainly they would have no reason to abuse their own workers. What would be the point?
I don’t argue for bringing back slavery, mind you, but it seems to me this is something that Blacks should be arguing for, as their lives were much better, objectively.