Dan Rather and his associate Elliot Kirschner explain here why it is important to teach the truth, no matter how unpleasant it is.

They write:
I was born 66 years after slavery was legally abolished by the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution. Not exactly ancient history. Today, that’s how long ago the Eisenhower administration was, or Elvis Presley’s first number one hit.
And the legacies of slavery — lynchings, Jim Crow, disenfranchisement — were woven tightly into the American tapestry of my youth. They still echo with us. Loudly and persistently. No matter how much some would want us to ignore the clamor of justice.
As much as we wish American history were different, tragedy is part of our reality. We do a grave disservice to future generations if we sanitize the truth. People can behave horribly. Societies that profess noble values can countenance violent bigotry. We can either look back from whence we have come with clarity, or we can try to muddy the roots of the present and weaken ourselves in the process.
This week, the Florida State Board of Education reworked its standards for teaching Black history. The changes come in response to the state’s so-called “Stop W.O.K.E. Act.” Passed last year, it limits training and education around issues of race, sex, and other criteria for systemic injustice. At its heart is a core belief that has animated right-wing culture warriors: that people alive today should not be made to feel bad or even uncomfortable by the sins of the past. The thinking goes, that was a long time ago.
But of course it really wasn’t. And the legacies of the past live on. And if we don’t learn from history, we are bound to repeat it.
Proponents of these new standards, especially their biggest cheerleader, Governor Ron DeSantis, say they promote teaching positive achievements of Black Americans in history. No problem there. It’s when it comes to the other side of the coin that we have a big issue — the new lessons seem intent on downplaying the horrors of the Black experience. In other words, once again, the truth. The truth revealed by hard facts.
One passage that has gotten a lot of attention is for middle schoolers. It states they should learn that “slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” The danger of this narrative is striking. A system that brutalized, raped, and killed human beings while stealing their freedom and denying their humanity is rotten to its core. That enslaved people were able to find resilience and build lives in some form is a testament to their courage and spirit. There is no “other side” to the story of slavery.
It is true that these new standards, as horrific as they are, would have been a great improvement over what I learned in my segregated middle school. We have come a long way. But that was because of the bravery of civil rights leaders and activists who fought, sometimes with their lives, for a full realization of American values. Any receding from progress — as this surely is — represents a threat to our democracy. We have been strengthened as a nation, all of us, by a national movement to right the wrongs of our past.
It is tempting to try to ignore DeSantis. He is a bully. He wants a reaction. He uses cruelty and disingenuity to garner headlines. He feeds off the anger of his adversaries.
But he also has power. And the lessons of history tell us that we should not ignore would-be autocrats.
The generation that lived through the fights over civil rights in the 1950s and ‘60s is passing away, much as the generation that remembered the Civil War did during my own youth. The loss of the earned knowledge of living through and fighting for change is profound.
This makes it all the more important that when we teach history, we teach the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Or as close to it as is humanly possible.

Step back further, the journey into slavery. Kidnapped (most at a young adolescent age), torn from you family, your friends, your life, chained below decks for weeks at a time with low headroom crowded among hundreds surrounded by misery, fear, disease, death, sea sickness, underfed, treated ruthlessly.
What’s really horrible is this goes on today without the long voyage into slavery that took place centuries ago. The only difference is the transit from kidnaping to being sold into slavery is a lot faster.
Slavery is a system which requires workers to work against their will for little to no compensation. In modern-day terms, this practice is more widely referred to as human trafficking.
The next link is to the US State Department, a link that may vanish if MAGA Republicans take the White House.
https://www.state.gov/what-is-modern-slavery/
First Paragraph:
“Trafficking in persons,” “human trafficking,” and “modern slavery” are used as umbrella terms to refer to both sex trafficking and compelled labor. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-386), as amended (TVPA), and the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (the Palermo Protocol) describe this compelled service using a number of different terms, including involuntary servitude, slavery or practices similar to slavery, debt bondage, and forced labor.
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Excellent article. One point of contention: the enforcement mechanism of the abolition of slavery conveniently left out of the 13th Amendment. It is not until June 1941 though Executive order 8802 that the intent of the 13th amendment started to be enforced thus ending chattel slavery.
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the enforcement mechanism of the abolition of slavery conveniently left out of the 13th Amendment
excellent point
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truth
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One of the reasons The National Memorial for Peace and Justice was built in the South was to remind future generations of the reality of our past injustice. This monument reminds visitors of the reality of our brutal past. It is a reminder that should be taught, not forgotten.
The right wing with all their moral outrage is inspiring more division and acts of hate against groups that have been the recipients of discrimination and violence in the past. Their twisted agenda wants to sanitize our history. Knowledge is not always comfortable or easy to accept. It is important for young people to know that slavery was a crime against humanity and so was The Holocaust. I am happy that the media is finally discussing Florida’s attempt to scrub our violent past mistakes, and it is important that Kamala Harris took a public stand on the matter.
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What a wonderful read. Thank you for posting this. Call me crazy but it’s usually the people screaming “MORALITY” the loudest who have the most to hide. The governor from Florida doth protest too much, methinks.
I sure would like to know “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth” about ol’ Gitmo Ron’s military career, ’04-19. We know he was at Gitmo during the Cheney years, and if that don’t give you chills, well…Think about it, we have a governor of a state whose meteoric rise through JAG was during America’s dirtiest wars around the planet. Black sites in Iraq, Yemen, and Afghanistan. Bush deployed ghost militias and Obama expanded their growth combined with people like DeSantis that gave it all legal cover and legitimacy. To see these people revered instead of in jail (or at least vilified) is a disorienting experience to say the least. And this dude in particular! At the very least he oversaw enhanced interrogations and, at worst, defended torturers and legitimized their crimes across the globe.
His rise to fame parallels the exponential growth in public and private wars across the planet during the Bush (W), Obama years. All those private little wars in places no one can name. Well, Jeremy Scahill did in Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield (2013). The stuff this guy has authorized and defended as a liar, oops, lawyer. No wonder he advocates for a sanitized and redacted version of history.
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“slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”
This is without a doubt true. They were taught to be scared of confrontational white folks. In the years of white supremacy, this would be very life-sustaining. They were taught to avoid sounding too assertive, which might anger the “good people.” They learned their place, which helped the ones who were not deliberately and capriciously dispatched by the dominant society. Oh, sure. They learned a lot.
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slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.”
Slavery was a jobs training program, doncha know?
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Broadening the subject of truth vs. propaganda-
Trump will soon be hosting a viewing of the movie Sound of Freedom which was released on July 4. The film has made $100 mil. at the box office. Critics describe it as “QAnon adjacent.” Catholic News Agency (EWTN) appears to be a fan of the movie and described it as an “anti human trafficking film made by Catholic film makers, Verastgui and Monteverde,” and starring, devout Catholic, Jim Caviezel. The Harmon Bros, who publicly talk about the significance of their Latter Day Saint beliefs, were integrally involved in getting the film into theaters.
Newsweek reported that “1/2 of QAnon followers believe Jews are plotting to Rule the World” (6-8-2021).
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Linda, sound like idiots there is no QANON its Q and there are anons who research. What in gods name is so wrong with Trump hosting sound of freedom? Movie should have been out 5 years ago and all of hollywood is silent and the peopel attacking the film clearly agree with trafficking.
Making the movie out to be a left vs right issue or religious you are long gone and need some serious help.
500 billion business and 90,000 kids are missing because of Bidens border which is allowing cartels to make billions.
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In other news, DeSantis has a new video out today bragging about being “more extreme than Donald Trump.”
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The video comes from something called the DeSantis War Room (taking the threatening military naming from Steve Bannon), which also bills itself as “Ron DeSantis’s Rapid Response Team.”
This is not a person who should be entrusted with power.
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Yes Bob but Biden the most corrupt, racist, senile old man is trusted lol!!! BOb bahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh sheep brain bahhhhhhhhhh
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When you start reading actual news about actual stuff done by the administration, oh-so-big Mikey, you will perhaps have something substantive to add here.
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“slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” Every state educator should be outraged that this statement is part of their state standards and refuse to teach it. Instead, the standard should read, There is never any personal benefit to being bought, sold, and owned forever by another human being.
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Political Research Associates- “Growing Mormon-Catholic Alliance- Quiet Partners Behind Christian Right’s Religious Discrimination Agenda.”
Glenn Youngkin visited an LDS temple and said, Virginia is, “The first state to forge religious freedom into the fabric of our nation.” What Youngkin means by “religious freedom” is robbing people of their rights and imposing his version of God’s law which promotes a White patriarchy.
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What is truth?
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Governor DeSantis continues to try to white wash the ocean history of slavery here in America. He does us all a disservice, which will do nothing to improve the systemic racism in America.
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