1. He was kind of an impulsive retard with a string of failed businesses and a bankruptcy. 2. As much as he was an abolitionist, he was also a crazed idiot. 3. When he went into Harper’s Ferry, he was essentially going into a place where Blacks were already 75% free and the other 25% were more like indentured house niggers. 4. His goons ended up shooting and killing a free Black guy who was looking for the Sheriff to warn of Brown and his band of ne’erdowells because they came into a quiet town and started rioting and acting crazy. 5. Before Harper’s Ferry, he slayed 5 White people whom he accused of being pro-slavery (they may not have been) with swords.
You would probably want to gather all arguments against race realism that liberal AI gives you, and write a book debunking it as myth and legend.
For example, post this quote into a liberal AI like Microsoft Copilot and it argues for Black History Month-type propaganda:
“I would say colonialism is a wonderful thing. It spread civilization to Africa. Before it they had no written language, no wheel as we know it, no schools, no hospitals, not even normal clothing.” -Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Douglas Smith
---- AI says:
🏥 Evidence of Advanced African Medical Knowledge
Below are documented, pre‑colonial African medical practices that demonstrate surgery, pharmacology, and public‑health systems.
🗡️ 1. Surgery — including antiseptic techniques and bone‑setting Uganda (Baganda surgeons) performed cesarean sections with banana‑wine antisepsis, cauterization, and clean surgical tools.
In 1879, British physician Robert Felkin directly observed a successful C‑section performed by a Ganda surgeon. The mother and baby survived — at a time when European C‑sections often resulted in the mother’s death.
Bone‑setting was highly developed across West and Central Africa.
The Yoruba, Akan, and Kongo had specialized guilds of bone‑setters who used splints, traction, and herbal anti‑inflammatories.
African surgical traditions
🌿 2. Pharmacology — hundreds of documented medicinal plants African healers used complex pharmacopeias based on empirical testing over centuries.
Examples:
Willow bark (East and Southern Africa) — contains salicin, the precursor to aspirin.
Prunus africana — used for prostate conditions; today it is the basis of pharmaceutical treatments.
Artemisia afra — used for respiratory illness; modern studies show antimicrobial and anti‑inflammatory properties.
Kinkeliba, neem, iboga, khat, cola nut, and devil’s claw were all used medicinally long before colonial contact.
European doctors in the colonies regularly adopted African herbal remedies when European drugs failed in tropical environments.
African pharmacology traditions
🧼 3. Public health systems — sanitation, quarantine, and community health The Kingdom of Ethiopia had written medical texts (e.g., Mashafa Mestawet) describing hygiene, disease prevention, and environmental health.
The Sahelian empires (Mali, Songhai) used quarantine practices for smallpox and leprosy.
Great Zimbabwe and other Bantu cities had planned drainage systems and waste‑management zones.
Many societies practiced vaccination‑like inoculation for smallpox.
The technique was brought to the Americas by enslaved Africans such as Onesimus, whose knowledge helped end a Boston smallpox epidemic in 1721.
African public health systems
🧭 How colonial medicine depended on African knowledge Colonial doctors were often unprepared for tropical diseases. They relied heavily on African expertise:
Examples: Quinine use for malaria was adopted from Indigenous knowledge (in Africa and South America).
European doctors in West Africa used African antimalarial plants when quinine was unavailable.
Colonial medical officers routinely hired local healers as guides, interpreters, and diagnosticians.
African midwives continued to deliver the majority of babies because their outcomes were often better than colonial hospitals.