Yes -- Counterintuitive Man examines history denial -- no?
Korwin's new superhero idol, Counterintuitive Man, says:
Yes -- the two-day 30-nation convention sponsored by Iran to deny the Holocaust, which has yielded little serious outrage in the "news" media, is paving the way to an amazing tomorrow -- no?
Next, we could set the record straight by denying America's history of slavery before the Civil War!
Everyone knows blacks lived much better on beautiful southern farms than they ever did in the muggy African wilderness!
Sure the conditions on the voyage were less than ideal, but luxury cruise ships hadn't been invented yet -- and even they get diseases onboard!
Instead of being hunted and enslaved by other tribes, these people were protected by their new employers!
Getting eaten by wild animals came to a complete halt under the beneficial new system!
Murders and mistreatment of blacks was almost the same before the civil war as murders and mistreatment of women, children and other demographic groups!
Because the new black immigrants were economically important, they were fed, clothed and cared for by farm owners!
Despite highly publicized complaints, blacks who are here today because their ancestors were brought over long ago on ships, have no desire to go back to their so-called homeland!
So what if they weren't taught to read back then -- reading is highly overrated anyway! And many can read today!
Blacks prospered and multiplied under so-called slavery, and developed their own culture and music!
Many blacks found romantic partners of other races once they were in America and aren't even black anymore!
Even blacks in so-called poverty today have refrigerators, color TV, cell phones, fancy sneakers, furniture, beer and even cars (not available in all locations, some conditions apply)!
Yes -- everything about the so-called "slavery era" is subject to question, and who knows what the real truth is anyway -- no?
Yes -- if the world doesn't revolt against Iran's denial of the Nazi Holocaust, despite overwhelming evidence, why not deny anything -- no?
To wit:
Richard Stengel, Managing Editor, TIME Magazine: "I don't really think there is such a thing as truth." Oct. 4, 2006, Ethics in Journalism conference at the New York Society for Ethical Culture, broadcast on C-SPAN.
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