I do get your point, I'm just agreeing we should explore it much later in the future.
I mean philosophically. I just want you to understand that, to me, the similarities outweigh the differences. At the end of the day, we're all just human beings. All those things in history didn't just happen to black people or poor people or native people, they happened to people. And it's still happening. And we're still inhuman to one another. And it makes me cry to think that we humans are all that each of us has. We're a raft of ants in a flood, so busy stepping on one another and climbing over one another and holding one another's heads underwater and at the same time clinging to each other and linking arms with each other and keeping the whole damn thing afloat just one moment longer because the plan is to outlast the water no matter how long it takes. Do you get me? Do you grok it? Because I have looked into the eyes of the dead and seen our entire history. I have seen all of the agony and all of the suffering and really there isn't much to it, it just repeats over and it repeats over and it repeats over and again. And all those moments are crystallized in time they will forever trail behind us like a rattlesnake's skin it doesn't matter who we become or what we turn into our sins are eternal and no matter what we do we will always have done it.