Did plantation owners ever interact with their slaves on a day to day basis?
Yes they broke them
>>538973115Plantation owners invented the high 5.It was called high because they were on a horse.Nobody ever high fived lincholn and he started a war because he was left out.
Why would the owner even be around? You think Jewlon walks around the Twitter offices every day?
>>538973115Dunno. I wasn't there.
>>538973115There sure are a lot of drawings, but you might be hard-pressed to find a real unedited pic of nog slaves in the CSA
>>538973204Thats adorable
>>538973204The Civil War was caused by deep political and economic divisions over slavery and states' rights, not a rejected high-five. In fact, the high-five wasn't even invented until the late 1970s, over a century after Abraham Lincoln's presidency
>>538973115no they usually had a Top Nigger to do thatnobody hates blackies like niggerswait until you find out how with the repeal of jim crow laws niggers basically genocided honest and down-to-earth bluegums
>>538973204*high fives you for that post*
>>538973115Yes. Plenty of female plantation owners sexually abused their male slaves
>>538973115whether they did or didn't. They still were treated better than when they were slaves in Africa. So who fuckin cares. They should all be sent back
On your knees, bucko. Someone shoulda broke you a long, long time ago.
>>538973115Have you heard the word of Brother Nasheed?
>>538973115Yes but mostly the women as the nigger slave owner, "males" peeked from the closet while sodomizing themselves with a menorah and cackling with glee.
I am a plantation owner. Most of my cotton pickers are white. I interact with them occasionally. I bring out cold lemonade and ice tea every now and then.
>>538973115Just for the fun of it.
>>538973115Plantations were huge. The owner would not have been in the fields with the staff with any regularity. Likely, he gave orders to foremen and they were the ones who camped out in the far fields, guiding the workers. Kind of like Brokeback Mountain: the owner of the sheep wasn't out there with the shepherds, stemmin' the rose.
>>538973115Bucks had to be broken every now and then
>>538973115Yes and there is plenty of written history that describes those times. Col. Joseph Buckner Killebrew was prominent author and plantation owner in the 19th century. Many of his books are available on archive.org