• wakko@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    You were also likely taught that the genocide of indigenous Americans was a past event, too.

    I have met people who did not realize that indigenous Americans still exist.

  • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The teaching of history in US public schools very specifically focuses on peaceful protest and little else.

    They want to delegitimize the use of force and downplay state violence, which is why you probably weren’t required to read ‘Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee’ or taught about the Tulsa Massacre or the Battle of Blair Mountain. It’s why Malcolm X and Nat Turner are mostly ignored while all you hear about in your black history segments is MLK and Harriet Tubman. It’s why we’re taught about the euphemistically-named ‘Reservation’ system, when in fact, these were shitty, oppressive concentration camps for indigenous people and they were required to go there or be killed while their ancestral lands were stolen. (Which is not too dissimilar from what’s happening in Gaza right now with the support of both American ruling parties.)

    In hindsight, it’s rather shocking to me that in my fifth grade class we were taught about conquistadors and no one batted an eye when I had dead bodies in my diorama about Francisco Pizarro. There’s probably no way that would fly today.

    I’m still learning shit in my 40’s, reading history for my own enjoyment, that I should have been taught in school. Here’s another tidbit you probably never learned about: An executed slave named Mark whose body was used as a landmark after his execution, even by Paul Revere: https://www.paulreverehouse.org/mark-hung-in-chains-slavery-paul-reveres-midnight-ride/

  • atopi@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    isnt there a rule against politics in this community? It even lists a different community you could post in instead

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      3 months ago

      Born around 1985 here and…same.

      I think the biggest disservice regarding the Civil Rights era is talking up MLK every year…and not once mentioning Malcom X or the Black Panthers.

      MLK would have accomplished nothing if the alternative wasn’t them.

      It paints the picture that hippies and marches are all that’s needed. It’s not. The oppressors need to feel unsafe.

  • brownsugga@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    It is very much ongoing.

    Also, not being taught that the civil war and slavery and all that shit was fucking EVIL

    Edit: I grew up in the south

    • Lushed_Lungfish@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      It is mind boggling to me that someone, in the 21st century can say: “oh yeah, owning human beings like property, that’s a-ok!”

      • brownsugga@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I’m an older millennial- in the 90s they were legit telling us “some slaves had it really good”

        • SippyCup@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          We watched Roots in the classroom, but only the episode where LaVar Burton gets brutalized by a whip for refusing to say his name was Toby.

          We also got a foot note about John Brown, I had no idea he was a white guy and one of the coolest motherfuckers to walk this earth until I was an adult.

    • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      Ironically we did spend a lot of time on that (I went to school in the eighties) and a lot of folks knew Reagan had really done us dirty. It was probably above my head.

      Also, I went to a really good school.

  • backalleycoyote@lemmy.today
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    3 months ago

    I realized as I got older how much of our history, the parts they have to acknowledge, are treated like they’re a singular moment in the past, resolved, and somehow could never resurface in a different form.

    The push to frame the Civil Rights or Women’s Suffrage movements as the “correct” form of how American citizens call out inequality is also sanitized to the point it becomes toothless. We’re given a version where people just gather, speak out, sometimes get beaten to a pulp/jailed/killed but so long as they remain non-violent, eventually society will feel bad and someone with the power to change things will do so.

    There are times where large scale protests are beneficial because it rallies and shows the scale of opposition. Sometimes witnessing the violence of the oppressors against peaceful people shocks and horrifies. But we’re at a point where watching cops, ICE, and Proud Boys brutalize others is fetish porn for MAGAts, and mass gatherings for the sake of showing up but not networking and continuing the movement during the weeks in-between is futile. They have no reason to see us as a threat if all we do is show up for a few hours one weekend every six weeks and hold signs.

    And to my fellow dissatisfied leftists, if your aversion to anything more direct is rooted in the idea that previous protests were successful because they stayed “peaceful” and took their lumps, you’re protesting the way the machine wants you to. Just enough liberty to feel like you’re standing up to oppression but not doing anything that actually challenges the oppressor.

  • Ocean@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    I remember in high school social studies, civil rights essentially “concluded” with the death of civil rights leaders. I had a great teacher who tried to include queer rights until the lesson and I am so grateful to her for helping us understand that civil rights includes the the disabled community