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President Trump welcomes Liberian President Joseph Boakai to the WH

The Barbarian

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"Liberia is a longtime friend of the United States, and we believe in your policy of making America great again," Boakai told the president, according to Reuters.

"Well, thank you, and such good English," Trump replied. "That's beautiful. Where did you learn to speak so beautifully? Where were you educated? Where? In Liberia?"

 

The Barbarian

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Yeah, they hate when people laugh at him, but then this stuff happens. I can get him not knowing that part of American history, but shouldn't his staff at least bother to prep him before he goes into a meeting like this?
 
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I think I knew they spoked English in Liberia. Isn't that where many former slaves went after the civil war, if memory serves?
 
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The Barbarian

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I think I knew they spoked English in Liberia. Isn't that where many former slaves went after the civil war, if memory serves?
Yes. After the Civil War, there was a "back to Africa" movement. But most black Americans preferred to remain Americans. A substantial number of people, did choose to move to Africa.
 
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RileyG

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Yes. After the Civil War, there was a "back to Africa" movement. But most black Americans preferred to remain Americans. A substantial number of people, did choose to move to Africa.
Thank you for the response.
 
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Bob Crowley

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I knew that former American slaves had been part of the formation of Liberia, although they were always a small minority compared to the indigenous population.

It's had a painful history and one of the ironies is that the former slaves set up their own cultural elite and suppressed the indigenous people. They took the same attitudes to Liberia that had oppressed them in the USA


Americo-Liberian rule (1847–1980)

Between 1847 and 1980, the state of Liberia was dominated by the small minority of African-American colonists and their descendants, known collectively as Americo-Liberians. The Americo-Liberian minority, many of whom were mixed-race African Americans, viewed the native majority as "racially" inferior to themselves and treated them much the same as white Americans had treated them. To avoid "racial" contamination, the Americo-Liberians practiced endogamous marriage.[citation needed] For over a century the indigenous population of the country was denied the right to vote or participate significantly in the running of the country. The Americo-Liberians consolidated power amongst themselves. They, but not the natives, received financial support from supporters in the United States. They established plantations and businesses, and were generally richer than the indigenous people of Liberia, exercising overwhelming political power.[29]
 
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