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Well, Juneteenth, we did not get the day off. Maybe government workers do, but not us. And I still can't figure out what the hell that holiday is, to be honest with you. But I'm just looking it up. Thanks. June 19th, 1865, the Bay Union general, according to Granger, arrived in Galveston, Texas and announced general order number three declaring that all enslaved people in Texas were free. This was more than two years after the immaculation proclamation in 1863. Interesting. I get to know that. That is interesting. But that's for their freedom. But they still in the next, that's still, that was only Texas. I still say African Americans weren't free until the 1970s, 1980s, it got better, 1990s. Now in the year 2025, I think they're equal to us. You know, on all rights and everything else. But we can't, if we let it go, and I thought about this, this is, you know, is Trump trying to move everything back? You know, women have to be in the kitchen and barefoot and pregnant. Black people have to put themselves in their place. All this stuff. We are reverting back to yesteryears, the not so good years because of our current government.

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