People Getting Married on Plantations is an Example of American Apathy Towards Slavery - People are Apathetic to Something that has been over for 200 Years

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

In 2012, actors Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively got married at Boone Hall, a former plantation in South Carolina. In a recent interview, Reynolds stated that they are both “deeply and unreservedly sorry for” it. While I think Black folks, individually, should be the ones to decide how we feel about the apology from the couple, what is more important is the bigger question it opens up: Why would people get married on former plantations?


You can see a little bit of the reason in Reynolds’ statement about the location: “What we saw at the time was a wedding venue on Pinterest,” he said. “What we saw after was a place built upon devastating tragedy.”


He added: “A giant fucking mistake like that can either cause you to shut down or it can reframe things and move you into action. It doesn’t mean you won’t fuck up again. But repatterning and challenging lifelong social conditioning is a job that doesn’t end.”


Last year, Buzzfeed interviewed several couples that got married on plantations, one of them being Boone Hall itself. Getting married there costs an average of $25,000, and if you go on the site Women Getting Married, it has a disclaimer saying, “We’ll preface this venue review by saying that getting married at a location with a troubled past is obviously a tough decision that every couple has to make on their own.”


“A troubled past” is a really weak hand-wave. Boone Hall was a slave plantation that was made beautiful on the forced labor of enslaved Black people. There are nine of the original slave cabins still on the property, yet despite that tangible evidence of a flagrant human rights violations, people still want to get married there.


In the Buzzfeed article, Brandon Lata, a wedding photographer, says that people usually don’t want to have the slave cabins in their photos because they feel it is “disrespectful,” as if those cabins are the only evidence of slavery. The whole place is!


What it shows us that people don’t take slavery seriously. They do not take it seriously as an act of violence, as a crime against humanity, or as something that needs to be taught properly. It’s a “dark moment,” as if, with the end of slavery, everything was automatically fixed for the descendants of enslaved people.


With the 1619 Project from the New York Times, we have been able to have more conversations about how slavery has been whitewashed by history, and these plantation weddings are part of that. If we have them, then their purpose should be as educational tools that help teach people about slavery. They should be institutions that give back to the Black American community, not just charge $25,000 for weddings where people can drink and pretend that they aren’t actively celebrating among the ghosts of slavery.


Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively are just one example of the problem. The root of it is the mythology that slavery is just a part of the past and not an active part of the way Black Americans (and white Americans!) live today—that it is just something to be painted over with antebellum parties and “Southern charm.”
 
Deadpool is now racist for getting married on what was once a plantation.

When will cotton swabs be considered racist?
 
Naturally he's a giant cuck and gets on his hands and knees to beg for forgiveness for the awful crime of... booking a wedding venue? Can current year fucking end already.
 
What it shows us that people don’t take slavery seriously. They do not take it seriously as an act of violence, as a crime against humanity, or as something that needs to be taught properly.
It might just be my non-native english, but it kinda sounds like they want to sell me "proper slavery 101".

I'm game. I take slavery very seriously, it's not a job - it's a calling.
 
This is getting a little ridiculous. Next thing you know they'll want get rid of the whole country because slavery......
 
This happened eight years ago, by the way. People are bringing this up now when the black activist mob hadn't even really started getting attention back in 2012. But it doesn't matter, they will hold everyone accountable to the insane standards they raise now.
 
Plantation weddings are a bit weird though. Scarlett O'Hara was a cleverly drawn portrayal of a female sociopath, not someone I would want to LARP as on my wedding day.
 
I wonder if people are racist then for visiting Africa, which was the biggest plantation in the world?
 
Where is it OK to get married?
The courthouse, because you are property of the gubbmint.

Wait, courts are white supremacist patriarchy, because the idea of a court presided over by a judge came about from monarchies; kings could not hold court over legal disputes in every corner of their kingdoms, so judges were established to do it for them.
 
The only proper venue for a wedding is at Uncle Rastus' Chicken and Waffle Hut.

These plantation venues are generally booked solid for months and even years ahead of time. The kind of people who will spend 25 large on a venue want a large, stately, beautiful and beautifully maintained setting. Very few of them will be scared off by some hyper-woke dipshit writing for the Mary Sue, and there are plenty of people who'll jump at the chance.

This is the author, btw:
2020-08-05 08.37.47 www.themarysue.com b9a0d07e7f8f.jpg


She doesn't have to worry about where she gets married, because no one is asking.
 
The only proper venue for a wedding is at Uncle Rastus' Chicken and Waffle Hut.

These plantation venues are generally booked solid for months and even years ahead of time. The kind of people who will spend 25 large on a venue want a large, stately, beautiful and beautifully maintained setting. Very few of them will be scared off by some hyper-woke dipshit writing for the Mary Sue, and there are plenty of people who'll jump at the chance.

This is the author, btw:
View attachment 1497212

She doesn't have to worry about where she gets married, because no one is asking.
Isn't Pokemon both slavery AND cockfighting?
 
Any place that has stood for long time will have horrible connotations. Death, disease, natural disasters, mistakes, accidents, crime or just once common values that no longer holding up, something will stain the story. That doesn't mean that place will loose all of it's beauty or potential be used for good. If a plantation is a nice place for a wedding then it's a nice place to hold a wedding, regardless if slavery happened. Plus many plantations had no slaves ever, that practice wasn't as common as many people seem to think.
 
Back
Top Bottom