[quote poster=Fooglmog; 19139; 422478]
Originally
posted by
Klown:
South Africa might be the worst possible country to cite as an example of the success of black rule.
How so? South Africa may not have the stability of, say, Holland, but it's certainly on par with Turkey, or Mexico. I won't argue that it has a number of issues -- but in order to disqualify it from a list of successful nations, you'd have to disqualify all but a handful of nations around the world.
Originally
posted by
Klown:
As for Egypt, I have never heard Arabs considered as black unless I'm missing something?
I was going to write a long response explaining my basis for including Egypt on my list of "black nations"*. But instead, I'm just going to laugh at the fact that you think Egyptians are Arabs (a view supported by no one).
(Effectively, there's a lot of debate over whether or not Egyptians are part of the larger black racial identity [
http://en.wikipedia.org/...ation_Statement_on_Race-2] but since the American Anthropological Association rejects the view that racial identity has any validity in the study of human biology [
http://www.aaanet.org/stmts/racepp.htm], I chose to interpret "black" as meaning "of African descent").
Originally
posted by
Klown:
I don't agree with Watertowers but I didn't want Fooglmogs silly post to go unchecked.
Right back at you.
-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue. [/quote]
Wrong again...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabs
http://english.alarabiya.net/...ws/2012/09/10/237140.html
"I spent the next couple of days interviewing hundreds of Egyptians– not just academics and researchers but also laymen and women in different districts in Cairo — asking how they view themselves. My question raised a few eyebrows among people on the streets, the majority of whom replied ” I’m a Muslim Arab, of course ” or “an Arab Muslim .” They shrugged their shoulders and looked perplexed as they responded for wasn’t it an already-known fact that Egyptians are Arabs and that Egypt has a majority Muslim population ?
A few of the interviewees said that they “were descendants of the Pharoahs” but surprisingly, none in the sample interviewed thought of themselves as Africans."