I feel that various fortune 100 companies may have to finally face the light as more dots are being connected. I wonder if those board members of those companies worry about any of this type of stuff..

For example... the textile company Hanes.
It started as a tobacco company. What would their liability be if the DNA companies where to trace indivdual black people that are alive today, all the way back to the slaves that worked the 1000 acre Hanes family farm (plantation)?


Pleasant Henderson Hanes
16 Oct. 1845–9 June 1925
https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/ha...sant-henderson

In 1774, his ancestors purchased 1,060 acres in the North Carolina for farming (plantation).

Pleasant Henderson served in the first two years of the war as first lieutenant in the*Home Guard, but volunteered in 1863 to join the Confederate Cavalry at Richmond, enlisting in Company E, Sixteenth North Carolina Battalion. He soon earned a position as special courier to General Robert E. Lee, with whom he served until the surrender of Appomattox.

In 1870, he became a tobacco salesman for Dulin and Booe, tobacco manufacturers in Mocksville.

In 1872, Hanes organized P. H. Hanes and Company to manufacture tobacco.*

Under pressure from*James B. Duke's*American Tobacco*trust, the Hanes brothers sold their company in 1900 to*RJ Reynolds.

The Hanes brothers could have retired on the income from the sale of the company, but instead they entered the textile business. Pleasant Henderson joined with his sons*Pleasant Huber*and William Marvin to set up the P. H. Hanes Knitting Company in 1902 to manufacture knitted underwear for men and boys.*