Only in the sick perverted racist mind of the Misinformation Voter could the slave love the slave master!
And yet, we have countless millenia of history showing that many slaves did love the slave masters.
Take the Israeli Exodus from Egypt. Records indicate only 20% actually left slavery. 80% prefered to remain in Egypt. Of those 20% that left, Most wanted to go back to the life they had Egypt and were terrified of obtaining what they could have, which is why they had to wander 40 years in the wilderness until the generation that was enslaved had died off until they could truly be free and obtain the land.
This is hardly the only example of history. During the revolution against Great Britain, there were a large member of people who prefered their subservient status to Great Britain over the Founder's vision of Liberty and self determination.
Stockholm Syndrome very much exists. Why do you think it would be any less prevelant when the captured person is a slave and the captor is a slaveholder than it would in any other situation?
The Jews were not slaves of Egypt, there is no Egyptian record that matches the myths of the bible. The Tories were not slaves of England, they were profiting from their dealings with Great Britten. But the Stockholm Syndrome could certainly explain the behavior of black CON$ like Carson, except the SS has nothing to do with love which was the claim of the post I replied to.
1. While the Bible may or may not be absolutely historically accurate, it does serve, by far, as the best account extant of some historical periods. Case in point, the Exodus. Is there any doubt that a slave population, the Jews, were present in large numbers in Egypt sometime during the second millennium BC?
a. It is accepted that they came in conflict with their Egyptian masters, and fled in the exodus, led by a man they called Moses.
b. But there is no Egyptian account of any such exodus. On the other hand, it wasnt anywhere near as significant for the Egyptians as it was for the Jews
merely the flight of a group of slaves.
2. A clue of the veracity of the tale can be found in Genesis, in which Joseph brings the Hebrews to Egypt. It is more than passing interesting that chariots are mentioned, not once or twice, but three times in Josephs story. And the Egyptians didnt have chariots before the Eighteenth Dynasty, which means that Jews cannot have arrived in Egypt before the mid-sixteenth century, BC.
a. Genesis 41:43; 46:29; and 50:9.
BibleGateway - Quick search: chariot
3. The Merneptah Stele records a victory over the tribe of Israel in Canaan, so the Exodus must have taken place by the time it was inscribed, which was around 1225 BC.
Merneptah Stele - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
a. "The Merneptah Stelealso known as the Israel Stele or Victory Stele of Merneptahis an inscription by the Ancient Egyptian king Merneptah (reign:1213 to 1203 BC) discovered by Flinders Petrie in 1896 at Thebes, and now housed in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.[1][2] The text is largely an account of Merneptah's victory over the Libyans and their allies, but the last few lines deal with a separate campaign in Canaan, then part of Egypt's imperial possessions, and include the first probable instance of the name "Israel" in the historical record."
Merneptah Stele - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
4. Therefore, we have a timeframe of 1550 to 1225 BC, or sometime during the Eighteenth Dynasty.
Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
5. The Ptolemys commissioned Manetho, a high priest, to write a history of Egypt, and his King List is the basis for our understanding of the ancient dynastic structure.
Osarseph - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
a. Manetho used the records at the temple of Amun in Heliopolis.
6. Manetho identified a man called Osarseph, high priest to the pharaoh Amenhotep, as the biblical Moses.
a. It seems that Osarseph built up a following among outcasts and lepers, a following so large that the gods came to Amenhotep, and ordered him to drive Osarseph from Egypt.
b. But Osarseph drove Amenhotep out instead, establishing a 13-year reign before he was expelled!