I said whites being oppressed by other races.
Obviously whites have oppressed other whites throughout history, but not many cases of non whites oppressing whites. Enslaving them, succesfully invading them, or using them as cheap labour etc.
You may want to review your
European World History books involving what happened outside of the United States or long before the United States. Whites have oppressed other Whites, invading them, enslaving them, raping, and using them as cheap labor.
Yet, if you're only talking about the United States...there was
no invasion that resulted in Whites enslaving other Whites. In contrast, cheap labour has occurred but
not to the extent of White history against Blacks.
Regardless, Whites oppressing other Whites has primarily been about religion, language and/or gangs
within the United States (e.g. KKK terrorizing White Catholics)...a lot of history I learned in Europe about the United States in comparison to not learning about it in the U.S. education system.
The phrase "white slavery" was used by Charles Sumner in 1847 to describe the slavery of Christians throughout the Barbary States and primarily in Algiers, the capital of Ottoman Algeria.[2] It also encompassed many forms of slavery, including the European concubines (Cariye) often found in Turkish harems.[3]
The term was also used by Clifford G. Roe from the beginning of the twentieth century to campaign against the forced prostitution and sexual slavery of girls who worked in Chicago brothels. Similarly, countries of Europe signed in Paris in 1904 an International Agreement for the suppression of the White Slave Traffic aimed at combating the sale of women who were forced into prostitution in the countries of continental Europe.
P.S. I spent some years growing up near Chicago. Military soldiers near U.S. military bases often talked about
Chicago brothels in my grandfather's and great-grandfather's journals...white slavery and native american slavery...
Also learned in World History class in Europe but not in school in the United States.
Today, we have the internet or Google, a lot easier for kids to learn about it even though it is not taught in the U.S. education system. Understandable that its not a suitable topic for high school but they eventually learn about it in college.
wrbtrader