WILDER: What do you know about the Georgetown sale of the 272 slaves? Outside of the family tree. How does it make you feel?
CLAYTON: [18:33] To be honest, it's kind of . . . I hate to say . . . You don't want to say hate. But, it just give you a bad feeling to know this is what happened. But then it's not just the Georgetown. I mean, this was worldwide. It was everywhere. But the slaves that they were selling them—you hate knowing that. Okay, this is a Christian institute, that they would do something like that. But then I try not to be angry because that's life. But sometime when you think about it, you just get . . . I'm fixing to say pissed, but [laughs] you get . . . you really kind of just get angry. But I mean, the older you get, you just come to: Okay, that's life. This is what happens. Nothing you can do about it. Now that's really . . . That's irritating because you cannot go back. I can't go b Looack and say, “Okay, I know where my people . . . my great-great grandfathers and stuff come from,” because I really don't. You just have to kinda shake it off and go on.
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