His son Sebastian played Ben Jonson, Anonymous. Oxfordian motion picture
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felipe_Fern%C3%A1ndez-Armesto
He specialized in pre Columbian Western Exploration, way way before the 1619 Project.
The Jews of course had been enslaving and selling Slavs to mulatto Muslims and others long before Western gentiles.
This broke no Jewish law, selling an infidel white Slav to a Muslim mulatto negro.
These castrato slaves were known as Mamluks, and took over Egypt eventually.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamluk
According to Fabri, a historian had asserted that Mamluks of Egyptian origin were enslaved Christians. He believed that after they were taken from their families, they became renegades.[18] Because Egyptian Mamluks were enslaved Christians, Islamic rulers did not believe they were true believers of Islam despite fighting for wars on behalf of Islam as slave soldiers.
FOR MEDIEVAL JEWS, SELLING ONE INFIDEL TO DIFFERENT INFIDEL WAS THE NAME OF THE GAME!
THINK OF THIS AS THE VIRTUOUS CIRCLE, AND ARCHETYPAL, OF WHAT THOMAS SOWELL LOVINGLY CALLS THE GOOD AND STABILIZING WORK OF MIDDLEMAN MINORITIES EVERYWHERE!
Re Fernandez-Armesto
http://hnn.us/articles/33409.html#Day3
It was a day of news.
The morning brought word that one of the lifetime members of the AHA attending the annual convention had been arrested and tossed in jail for jaywalking.
On Thursday, just after noon, the Tufts historian Felipe Fernandez-Armesto was arrested by Atlanta police as he crossed the middle of the street between the Hilton and Hyatt hotels. After being thrown on the ground and handcuffed, the former Oxford don was formally arrested, his hands cuffed behind his back. Several policemen pressed hard on his neck and chest, leaving the mild-mannered scholar, who's never gotten so much as a parking ticket, bruised and in pain. He was then taken to the city detention center along with other accused felons and thrown into a filthy jail cell filled with prisoners. He remained incarcerated for eight hours. Officials demanded bail of over a thousand dollars. To come up up with the money Fernandez-Armesto, the author of nineteen books, had to make an arrangement with a bail bondsman. In court even the prosecutors seemed embarrassed by the incident, which got out of hand when Fernandez-Armesto requested to see the policeman's identification (the policeman was wearing a bomber jacket; to Fernandez-Armesto, a foreigner unfamiliar with American culture, the officer did not look like an officer). The prosecutors asked the professor to plead nolo contendere. He refused, concerned that the stain on his record might put his green card status in jeopardy. Officials finally agreed to drop all charges. The judge expressed his approval. The professor says he has no plans to sue. But the AHA council is considering lodging a complaint with the city.
Professor Fernandez-Armesto provided HNN with a riveting account of his day in an Atlanta jail. We have broken the interview into several parts to make the download quicker.
Update 1/8/07 In response to the news that Atlanta police had arrested Fernandez-Armesto for jaywalking, the AHA council decided to send a letter of protest to local officials who had helped stage the convention with the understanding that the AHA's concerns would be passed along to the appropriate city authorities.
(Click here to post a comment on the controversy.)
Click here for Part 2. Click here for Part 3.
On the days after the professor's ordeal, the Atlanta police were continuing to stop historians from jaywalking. Anybody caught crossing the street against the light was reprimanded. Many were asked to produce their driver's license. But police did not arrest anybody. Some historians were mildly amused by the attentiveness of the police to the crime of jaywalking.
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