tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3863150118752822448.post8948622579467538899..comments2023-06-29T07:24:40.855-05:00Comments on Ain't I a Feminist Legal Scholar Too?: Remembering the Victims of the Transatlantic Slave TradeProfessor Lolita Buckner Innisshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07465730656581820893noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3863150118752822448.post-23081468863219696052011-03-26T00:40:10.684-05:002011-03-26T00:40:10.684-05:00Its funny how there is not one comment on this art...Its funny how there is not one comment on this article. We as black Americans still feel the anguish,resentment. And unequal treatment that our forefathers felt. Yes we have come a long way since then but unfortunately not long enough. Slavery was the start of many injustices that the darker people of the world has had to indure. In the states we have only come out of Jim crow and being able to vote for a little over 50 years. That's long enough to change laws but not long enough to change mindsets. Yes the thought is definitely still there and black people are still treated differently throughout the world. The slave trade did not only impact people of that time but it has had a profound economic, mental and societal impact. I don't know how we can get over this treatment when we are still dealing with inequality. As the great great grandchild of a slave I long for a time that my brethren can feel what it is like to not be plagued by all that the slave trade has caused!Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17263165617237386739noreply@blogger.com