The people in Florida who wrote the standards for African American studies had a challenge: how to write them to satisfy Governor DeSantis’ hatred for anything that speaks about racism and injustice. Admitting that whites who enslaved Blacks were racist might make whites today feel “uncomfortable” and would be “woke.” So how is it possible to paper over the brutality and inhumanity of slavery?
Heather Cox Richardson explains how they did it.
The Florida Board of Education approved new state social studies standards on Wednesday, including standards for African American history, civics and government, American history, and economics. Critics immediately called out the middle school instruction in African American history that includes “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” (p. 6). They noted that describing enslavement as offering personal benefits to enslaved people is outrageous.
But that specific piece of instruction in the 216-page document is only a part of a much larger political project.
Taken as a whole, the Florida social studies curriculum describes a world in which the white male Founders of the United States embraced ideals of liberty and equality—ideals it falsely attributes primarily to Christianity rather than the Enlightenment—and indicates the country’s leaders never faltered from those ideals. Students will, the guidelines say, learn “how the principles contained in foundational documents contributed to the expansion of civil rights and liberties over time” (p. 148) and “analyze how liberty and economic freedom generate broad-based opportunity and prosperity in the United States” (p. 154).
The new guidelines reject the idea that human enslavement belied American principles; to the contrary, they note, enslavement was common around the globe, and they credit white abolitionists in the United States with ending it (although in reality the U.S. was actually a late holdout). Florida students should learn to base the history of U.S. enslavement in “Afro-Eurasian trade routes” and should be instructed in “how slavery was utilized in Asian, European, and African cultures,” as well as how European explorers discovered “systematic slave trading in Africa.” Then the students move on to compare “indentured servants of European and African extraction” (p. 70) before learning about overwhelmingly white abolitionist movements to end the system.
In this account, once slavery arrived in the U.S., it was much like any other kind of service work: slaves performed “various duties and trades…(agricultural work, painting, carpentry, tailoring, domestic service, blacksmithing, transportation).” (p. 6) (This is where the sentence about personal benefit comes in.) And in the end, it was white reformers who ended it.
This information lies by omission and lack of context. The idea of Black Americans who “developed skills” thanks to enslavement, for example, erases at the most basic level that the history of cattle farming, river navigation, rice and indigo cultivation, southern architecture, music, and so on in this country depended on the skills and traditions of African people.
Lack of context papers over that while African tribes did practice enslavement, for example, it was an entirely different system from the hereditary and unequal one that developed in the U.S. Black enslavement was not the same as indentured servitude except perhaps in the earliest years of the Chesapeake settlements when both were brutal—historians argue about this— and Indigenous enslavement was distinct from servitude from the very beginning of European contact. Some enslaved Americans did in fact work in the trades, but far more worked in the fields (and suggesting that enslavement was a sort of training program is, indeed, outrageous). And not just white abolitionists but also Black abolitionists and revolutionaries helped to end enslavement.
Taken together, this curriculum presents human enslavement as simply one of a number of labor systems, a system that does not, in this telling, involve racism or violence.
Indeed, racism is presented only as “the ramifications of prejudice, racism, and stereotyping on individual freedoms.” This is the language of right-wing protesters who say acknowledging white violence against others hurts their children, and racial violence is presented here as coming from both Black and white Americans, a trope straight out of accounts of white supremacists during Reconstruction (p. 17). To the degree Black Americans faced racial restrictions in that era, Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans did, too (pp. 117–118).
It’s hard to see how the extraordinary violence of Reconstruction, especially, fits into this whitewashed version of U.S. history, but the answer is that it doesn’t. In a single entry an instructor is called to: “Explain and evaluate the policies, practices, and consequences of Reconstruction (presidential and congressional reconstruction, Johnson’s impeachment, Civil Rights Act of 1866, the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, opposition of Southern whites to Reconstruction, accomplishments and failures of Radical Reconstruction, presidential election of 1876, end of Reconstruction, rise of Jim Crow laws, rise of Ku Klux Klan)” (p. 104).
That’s quite a tall order.
But that’s not the end of Reconstruction in the curriculum. Another unit calls for students to “distinguish the freedoms guaranteed to African Americans and other groups with the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the Constitution…. Assess how Jim Crow Laws influenced life for African Americans and other racial/ethnic minority groups…. Compare the effects of the Black Codes…on freed people, and analyze the sharecropping system and debt peonage as practiced in the United States…. Review the Native American experience” (pp. 116–117).
Apparently, Reconstruction was not a period that singled out the Black population, and in any case, Reconstruction was quick and successful. White Floridians promptly extended rights to Black people: another learning outcome calls for students to “explain how the 1868 Florida Constitution conformed with the Reconstruction Era amendments to the U.S. Constitution (e.g., citizenship, equal protection, suffrage)” (p. 109).
All in all, racism didn’t matter to U.S. history, apparently, because “different groups of people ([for example] African Americans, immigrants, Native Americans, women) had their civil rights expanded through legislative action…executive action…and the courts.”
The use of passive voice in that passage identifies how the standards replace our dynamic and powerful history with political fantasy. In this telling, centuries of civil rights demands and ceaseless activism of committed people disappear. Marginalized Americans did not work to expand their own rights; those rights “were expanded.” The actors, presumably the white men who changed oppressive laws, are offstage.
And that is the fundamental story of this curriculum: nonwhite Americans and women “contribute” to a country established and controlled by white men, but they do not shape it themselves.
One senses the hand of advisors from Hillsdale College in this prettified version of U.S. history.
To read the standards, open the link and see the footnote.

Let’s hope in prison DJT may develop skills which could be applied for his personal benefit.
Arbeit Macht Frei, Anybody?
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I know that you are joking, Jon, because of the idiocy of the Flor-uh-duh “standard” and because Jabba the Trump has never done any work, unless you think of crushing up Adderall tablets to be snorted as work.
We are actually quite fortunate that he never worked and doesn’t have a clue how to do so. Yes, during his maladministration, hundreds of thousands of Americans died needlessly due to his lack of management of the Covid Crisis. Yes, our allies were discouraged and, in some cases, abandoned. But things could have been so much worse if not for Trump’s refusal to work and his utter ineptitude.
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I believe that the authors of this paper are Black and that they have refused to retract anything the learned have demanded. I wish you all would stick to issues on education and not politics—it is far more interesting to me, a non-educator to know what is going on from your perspective.
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The battery of insults and creative name calling leveled at DJT populists can also be leveled at progressives. “We The People” are not in charge and have had little power over the obvious corruption, lawlessness and moral decay in our society. We can hardly manage our own families and if lucky, our communities. It is not just a problem of one party over another. It is the ruthless, power-hungry egotists who want to rule (and possibly ruin) our society and even the world. I support anyone who can see the problems in our government and has the courage to act. Many of our long-respected institutions are in a mess. We must clean up our house in order to preserve the democracy we were granted.
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Do you mean by “This paper” the new Florida African-American History standards? They were created by a working group under the direction of Manny Diaz. I have no idea what people were assigned to that group. The standards are actually pretty decent, surprisingly. Here they are:
Click to access 6-4.pdf
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DJT populists
Our country is undergoing dramatic change. The young people of today do not accept the nonsense believed by their elders in pockets of the Midwest and Deep South. They do not subscribe to Bronze Age superstitions. They recognize that gender is fluid. They believe that adults should be free to love other adults regardless of their sex or gender. They believe that the government doesn’t belong in those people’s bedrooms. They believe that we should learn from the existence proof of all the other member countries of the OECD, which have national, single paper medicine with better outcomes at half the cost. They abhor racism and freely made friends and date across racial lines. They can see that the happiest countries of the world are, in every poll, year after year, the social democratic countries of North Europe and understand that we need to tax the wealthy more heavily to provide a better social security net for everyone else, as those countries do. They are waiting for the elderly morons in the Deep South and Midwest who think that Donald Trump cares about anything or worships anything except Donald Trump to die off and let us move forward into the freaking 21st century.
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Oh, and btw, only 19% of US families are nuclear families consisting of Mom and Dad and the kids, if that’s one of those “institutions” that you are talking about, and the nuclear family living an isolated life in a house in the suburbs is a contemporary aberration. People never lived like that because it’s extraordinarily unhealthy. People respected (as in idolized in TV shows like Leave It to Beaver and Ozzy and Harriet) something that barely existed and was actually totally crazy making. See Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique for info on that.
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So, people like Cruz and Trump and Hawley and MTG have their panties in a wad because the world is changing dramatically for the better and they and their narrow-minded prejudices are being left behind.
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I know that it’s hard for you, April. There are things going on that you can barely comprehend, that are not under your control. You belong to a previous era, and that must be difficult.
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You must love to vilify, insult and defame people you do not know. I feel sorry for you. You are a very sad man and an excellent example of one who’s opinion means nothing to me. April
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April, you are supporting for president a man who was just determined by a court of law to have committed rape.
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A person adjudicated to be a rapist who is promising if elected again to “go after” all his enemies. His main campaign platform. A sick, twisted person.
Oh, remember when the evangelical leaders did the laying on of hands and prayer in the office? After they left, your boy Trump told Michael Cohen that they were “full of shit.”
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Make sure to send Donnie some money “to save America during this darkest hour.”
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April,
Heather cox Richardson is not Black. The authors of the Florida African American history standards are not Black. I am not sure which “paper” you referred to.
As for the insults “hurled” at Trump, aren’t you just a bit embarrassed that the President of the United States refused to accept his loss and instead encouraged rioters to storm the Capitol by force? Aren’t you embarrassed the the former President was convicted of paying hush money to a porn star? Aren’t you embarrassed that the same person was judged by a jury to have defamed a woman who accused him of rape and was ordered to pay her $5 million in damages? Embarrassed that this sane man refused to return highly secret documents, hid them, and lied about having them (first, he said the FBI planted them; then, he said he never took them; then, he said he took them because they belonged to him; then, he said he declassified them before he took them. I don’t know what he says now.)
This is disgraceful behavior. The man has no sense of dignity, no sense of right and wrong.
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Heather Cox Richardson is White, but she is not the author of the Florida Curriculum. I am sure I heard on a radio interview that the author is Black, and he refused to change the material. Personally, I think the study could be quite educational on the topic of racism in general. Ms. Cox gave plenty of page numbers, but I could not find the names of the authors. She alluded to Hillsdale College being a possible advisor. she should have asked them.
You gave a number of references to DJT’s character flaws. Again, I can give you quite a few examples of Progressive flaws as well. Hillary Clinton and Stacy Abrams refused to accept the results of elections and we still hear about it. January 6 “rioters” are a matter of opinion–compare them with the actions of BLM and Antifa “peaceful protestors” where buildings were burned, businesses destroyed, police and innocent bystanders were murdered and billions in damages occurred. Kamela bailed some of the guilty out of jail. J6 political prisoners (a discusting miscarriage of justice) were fired up by FBI instigators, millions in damage to the Capitol and 2 women supporters killed unnecessarily by police. Trump said to march peacefully to the capitol and confront the lawmakers (something like that). How about Sen Schummer threatening the supreme court justices on the steps of the Court House or Sen Waters telling people to go after Republicans wherever they are? What about the rioters at the Kavanaugh hearings? There were marchers for days at the homes of the justices (illegal) and a man arrested for an attempt on the life of Justice Kavanaugh.
So, let’s talk about DJT and hush money. We knew he was a playboy with multiple wives and lovers. You cannot change that fact. This woman was a well-paid prostitute who capitalized on the Trump name. DJT had his life laid out before us before the election. He did not practice this behavior while in the White House as many other presidents did. Kennedy, Johnson and Clinton were no angels. What about Biden’s assault on an aide (she is in hiding out of country now) and losing the report she made? I have heard from reliable agents that Biden regularly paraded around nude in front of female secret service agents. That is pretty disgusting. Now we have cocaine in the White House that is being covered up. I don’t think DJT holds the title of reprobate all on his own—at least he was not doing it on our dime!
Trump defames a woman who he “raped” and lost $5 million in a court case. Just consider the NY prosecution and the “evidence”…no date or police report, public place, and by a woman who got Gov Hochel to declare a one-year moratorium on the statute of limitations laws. She was the first to apply to file. This whole story stinks.
Mishandling of secret information. Yes, the story has changed but the documents could have been reviewed and turned in without a raid of Mar-a-Lago. Biden still has outstanding boxes–many more than Trump and they have not been given up. How is that “on going report” being handled–not like Trumps! Biden’s were never declassified. The documents were not secured by secret service agents covering the mansion as DJTs were. The FBI even warned Hunter of an inspection in one of the houses! They found stuff in the unlocked closet office in DC and there are many boxes still at the U of Delaware that have not been inspected. I wonder what he plans to save for his presidential library.
DJT has “no sense of dignity or sense of right or wrong”. He definitely has had his share of issues–man is not perfect. But we have seen many news clips of Biden lying about his education, employment, travels and accomplishments. He also blabs secret information ie. Seal Team that took out Bin Laudin, state of arms and using cluster bombs. So far, the Comer Senate commission (IRS and FBI report) has identified $17.3 million coming in from foreign nations through shell companies. Isn’t that called money laundering and being a foreign agent? He has threatened to take people out (poor Corn Pop and regular audience attendees) like some tough guy so often that it is comical. This “Lying Dog face Pony Soldier” gives a poor name to Calvery Pony soldiers.
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April,
The documents “could have been reviewed and turned in,” but Trump refused to turn them in. He stashed them in unlocked rooms and a bathroom. He moved them around to conceal them. He broke the law. Others, like Pence and Biden, retained classified documents. But he refused to return them.
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I saw Dr William Allen the co-author of the Florida Curriculum on Jessie Watters show tonight. The gentleman is Black and mentioned Ms Richardson’s comments. Congratulated her on getting the topics correct but he respectfully disagreed with her. He would not change a word.
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Dianne,
I saw an interview on Jessie Watter’s show tonight by Dr William Allen. He mentioned Ms Richardson’s comments and congratulated her on getting his work on the Florida Curriculum correct but respectfully denied her accusations and would not alter his views. Yes, he is a Black man!
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I find it hard to believe that a Black man would write about the benefits of slavery. But there are Black Republicans so anything is possible.
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April,
You are right. Dr. William Allen was on the committee that wrote the standards for Black studies, and he defended it. He is a Black man.
This was in the New York Post:
““The only criticism I’ve encountered so far [on the new curriculum] is a single one that was articulated by the vice president, and which was an error,” Allen, who is black, told ABC News in footage touted by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ press secretary.
“As I stated in my response to the vice president, it was categorically false. It was never said that slavery was beneficial to Africans,” said Adams, who was on the working group that helped devise the curriculum.”
But this is simply wrong. I have read the standards. They say that “slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” So a slave might learn to be a blacksmith while he was owned as a piece of property.
I find that deeply objectionable. Don’t you?
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April, you really need to start reading the news outside of just your little right-wing bubble. The “Biden papers” that slimeball Jabba the Trump keeps referring to are the papers from his office when he was a Senator, which were turned over to the University of Delaware. The Trump papers are among the most sensitive top-secret documents related to our war plans and intelligence means and methods. Hiding those and storing those carefully violates a bunch of laws and is extraordinarily dangerous. That’s why we put people in prison for doing that.
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Bob—Did you read any of the Biden documents? Of course not, because it is said that they are top secret. They have not been released to the public. Why would a senator have TS documents unless he stole them? I read a large number of articles (even some that you post!) they are not all in my conservative bubble. One thing that must be done is to review all TS documentation rules. Lots of things that are coded are simply not and they sit around beyond their importance.
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April, educate yourself:
https://apnews.com/article/fact-check-biden-trump-delaware-1850-boxes-446929353071
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April,
Did you read any Biden documents? They are all stored in the library at the University of Delaware. They are not classified. He was a Senator, not the President.
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Trump has been credibly accused of rape by 27 women. One, a minor assaulted by him numerous times at parties hosted by Jeremy Epstein, withdrew her rape case against Trump after having received numerous death threats. A jury decided that Trump had, in fact, raped E. Jean Carroll, as Judge Kaplan’s memorandum last week testifies.
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This is the piece of slime that you hold up as a hero. The guy who thought there was a book of the Bible called Two Corinthians. The guy who couldn’t name a single Bible verse that was meaningful to him. The guy who thought we should try injecting disinfectants. The guy who got three quarters of a billion from Daddy to go into business with and told everyone that he “started with a small loan from my father.” The guy who was back in 1987 flown on a KGB jet to Moscow for meetings arranged by the Russian Ambassador to the US and who has been a Russian asset ever since. A traitor. A career criminal. The guy who started and then stole from a children’s charity, who bilked ignorant innocent people of tens of thousands of dollars with a get-rich-quick scam “university.” What a piece of filth.
Yeah, the Bidens are a piece of work, but they don’t even come close to Trump, who is as dirty as they get.
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And, April, the aide you refer to who made the sexual assault charge against Biden turned out previously to have published on Medium what was basically a love letter to Vladimir Putin, and where did she go when her story proved to have no legs and the story about her pro-Russian advocacy broke? To Russia. She went to Russia to live, like such Russian agents as Maria Butina and Anna Chapman.
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Again, April, try reading outside your bubble so you can find out what is actually going on.
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My recommendation is the following, that Trump henceforth be referred to as follows:
Donald Trump, adjudicated to be a rapist and now again a candidate for the U.S. presidency, . . .
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Come on, April. This IS education. Politics are making education sub-standard by forcing history to be white washed (pun completely intended). If we cannot teach accurate history, what happens to our nation? You are probably fine with authoritarianism, but many of us aren’t.
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April
Americans died fighting for democracy. Your description that they were “granted it” reflects a poor understanding.
Jefferson wrote, in every age, in every country, the priest aligns with the despot. Those who believe in the founding of this nation would call for a resounding “no” to right wing religion taking away our rights. Lincoln feared that we would not be able to keep a democracy because of those who demand “to eat the bread for which others toil.” The Republican Party of today is the party of right wing religion and the one that robs labor of the gains from their productivity. During the great hunger in Ireland when 1,000,000 Irish died of starvation, the cause was the economic policies of men like Koch and a Church that facilitated their rule. Today, right wing Catholic power brokers have joined with Koch to create the same situation.
Trump will soon be hosting a viewing of the film, Sound of Freedom, which critics have described as “QAnon adjacent.” One-half of the people who believe in QAnon believe Jews are plotting to rule the world. The allies fought in WWII to stop the persecution of Jews and to enable the democracies of Western Europe to survive.
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Threatened Out West
The problem is we may never have taught history. It was always White Washed. Yes pun intended.
Now that we are trying to teach something a bit closer to the actual events. The majority of those taught a fairytale are up in arms Again pun intended.
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I can’t speak for others, but I can say straight up that the stuff I was taught in history class in high-school was utter bs. Mythology. And boring mythology at that. Later, while in college, I figured out that history was everything that ever happened to people and that a lot of it was really excited and that it went a lot deeper than the nice Puritans inviting the nice Indians over for pie.
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April,
The devastation caused by climate change is on you and other Republican voters. Charles Koch began expressing skepticism about climate change in 1991 and he has thrown millions at denial in order to stymie action. The Republican party is the only major political party in the world that denies the problem. The misery inflicted is now well known and you and people like you are responsible. Koch should be held accountable for the economic and human costs.
The AFP blocked expansion of Medicaid and it cost 15,000 lives. When you watch reports about families with a child whose medical costs have bankrupted the family to the point that they need Medicaid, take ownership for your part in their sorrow.
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Waste of time to talk to Republicans about this, Linda. It doesn’t matter how many wildfires we have. How much coastal flooding. How many more hurricanes. How many more years of record heat. How many grandmas and grandpas dying of heat stroke. As long as Hannity and Donnie keep telling them it’s some sort of hoax, they will continue, as a matter of principle, to not look up.
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Bob,
That’s the saddest part of our current politics: science denial. Denial of objective reality. Wishful thinking replacing rational thought. Trump didn’t cause it but he legitimized it. Vaccine resistance, which he encouraged even though every member of his family got the vaccine. Climate change denial.
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It’s horrifying. You and I are both old enough, Diane, to remember a time when the average person was more than a little in awe of science, of actual knowledge arrived at via scientific processes. Remember that?
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Honestly, I can’t recall a time in my life when large numbers of people weee hostile to science. Maybe they existed but were embarrassed to speak up for fear of sounding stupid. Now their ignorant views are echoed back to them by their favorite media.
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yup
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And Republicans care about children only before they are born.
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Suggested reading for a unit on race in America:
https://watermark.silverchair.com/2-sa26%20hartman%20(1-14).pdf?token=AQECAHi208BE49Ooan9kkhW_Ercy7Dm3ZL_9Cf3qfKAc485ysgAAA18wggNbBgkqhkiG9w0BBwagggNMMIIDSAIBADCCA0EGCSqGSIb3DQEHATAeBglghkgBZQMEAS4wEQQMOLrFrmOCdUZ3U3TKAgEQgIIDEnUOzSfaBnnE4uRHx_Pqgn09g4VSZY4pssDoV_fKXv8QaLIPqO8ABHvkT9_xWH4kCYcIwQWR-prl6kj4CGM6rRnX_3fFZcbZdTbGdsi3FY–16J5oSBfk8nqiE2DuWrOyxQHivNROfYo7I8ChQmLmrBsENCtBU1T4w8V57wlCky442A9o641uRNdjiwdkSFOqlsb49oKxyK6mTCu-ikiJ2OjcS55U5Eit6tJ40sRHBqCWGj24D7D0EzMY7oCWgBsBhqzhS24g7TIJ3pS8TSClwZ8MMyr86SMkqYVAa8Gtqqj89EM-_wLIiMmXepG7mJKIAl9A_LO4uBL8yakgEmMJ4q8Lii5ZN5G3JW_V41UjSloOvDud_GpX0SiWGE-pBbf_FPEa9SSi3JVgcOF3ZMMY-W-SNA3hcnPqU2P6UUi68K9JpB6yjN5ZYvJv9KJRMEtwiJ9Dc3gPVRHdyrVa5MVu0YaMN3m6UzaOAmTwyqERZFZTpyQhBSU-aBfpEFvnKR0xC5EjkdFZT1CD9X0OpgqbIDfJRtGd8gCfs92DwwQ2aqq3tvAl2HUWRbEOXKlMkIbhG8kNElcomRkutG8mzscxBteyjY03XqmEtSKJkYpAH-ZKc2yauxAzLuv_lMOX_2Fygp4WYDMimc2QndRKHc_S5ny_p6VTXh2w6_IPo5MpQh4_VdqK-JKathfAxEBBHkFCNo1wqcFEpuPlijbeXZH2F5WxJnd2CchbxS_k1_xXH0XwRiKgnMMWSEbV4FrNMpCMie2pUF-GEuIt2BwmtFZE1hHWNMY1n-dqJ_tO1c1w8v0cf5Y_37vXyutYu20vL9AGDy7md5JJZ4frwBAhXgns0QZ8Fmj0bKzFJz4wLiVxcBsnRQlJ39GD8q6j6nHZ0_fRjWs1qb7MtHXK_BG8JvzSD3mSvfopJ6aU3UT6wszVWrNTGi4cUEf_ky8NRV5aznCcOzGtXCqhqBlqateZarepr2Be_lgCuki4AlHL-0cm4G5EaeJyuorudQxLIAczYQ5NZgYuiVf-cL_Yyts_R5UMvbATA
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Suggested reading?
Unfortunately I couldn’t understand a word of that after “.pdf?”
Maybe I should ask ChatGPT?
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What? Seriously, take another stab at it.
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Suggested reading for a unit on race in America:
Sorry. That link was bad. Go to this one and click on the PDF icon:
https://read.dukeupress.edu/small-axe/article/12/2/1/32332/Venus-in-Two-Acts
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More suggested reading:
https://oag.ca.gov/ab3121/report
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Sounds to me a lot like what has been taught in Southern schools all along. Reconstruction, for example, was a time when carpet baggers and scallywags came from the north to take advantage of the south’s loss. My mother taught South Carolina history and a lot like what is written here. Slaves were occasionally mistreated, but mostly were treated well, at least as well as a good farmer would take care of his mule.
Mostly what I remember about learning history in the South was ignoring it. When I went along with my mother with her classes to museums in Charleston, it was to see the memorabilia of Civil War heroes and visit Fort Sumter, where the war for southern independence began. If people like me from the south ever learned the true history of slavery and reconstruction, it was later in life by reading books.
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Well said, Mr. Jordan. I was taught this nonsense in elementary school in Southern Kentucky many years ago. Mythological, racist history.
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Sounds like something that would come out of ALEC.
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I read a recent piece about who the real Robert E Lee was. It wasn’t a pretty tale. The man was a monster, not some sort of saint that led the south’s armies valiantly.
“The legend of the Confederate leader’s heroism and decency is based in the fiction of a person who never existed.”
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/06/the-myth-of-the-kindly-general-lee/529038/
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yup
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We have had no end of officially lauded historians whitewashing Lee and Truman, who murdered many hundreds of thousands of civilians unnecessarily. Lee was an evil ___k.
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Not only are the new Florida education standards an affront to civil rights activists who contributed to the changes in equality under law, they also wreak of colonialism as if enslaved Africans had no skills to begin with.
How dare they frame the worth of individuals this way?
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“Teach the facts and only the facts, not some ‘woke’ ideology,” these people shriek. But teaching the facts is not really what they want, as evidenced by these ludicrous “standards.” I am sure other states will also pick up these awful ideas, which is infuriating.
It is a really terrible time to be a social studies teacher.
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Trump will soon host a viewing of the film, Sound Of Freedom. The movie is filled with distortions and is described as “QAnon adjacent.” Since its debut on July 4, it’s made $100 m in revenue in theaters. Considering that 1/2 of QAnon believers believe that Jews are plotting to rule the world, it appears the fight of WWII to stop the persecution of Jews is no more over, than the fight to prevent slavery and exploitation of Black people. The principals involved in the film are from two right wing religious sects. And, no, not everyone in those sects are right wing.
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Now more than ever, precisely because of bullshit like these “standards,” teachers must teach the truth, whatever the consequences of doing that. This is your duty.
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The part I really don’t approve of in these standards is the attempt to provide apologia for slavery by saying, basically, well, everyone was doing it. Where’s the American exceptionalism there?
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https://mathstodon.xyz/@georgetakei@universeodon.com/110760749119864072
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Ah, yes. Quite valuable.
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When I was a kid, my friends and I used to sing a parody of the United States using the famous Woody Guthrie song. I still remember it.
This land is my land, it isn’t your land;
I got a shotgun, and you don’t got one.
You’d better get off before I blow your head off,
This land was made for me not you!
I had no idea I was singing a serious introduction to future state learning standards approved by the Florida Board of Education.
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This Land is my land
It isn’t Disney Land
It isn’t migrant land
It isn’t gay land
It isn’t woke land
It isn’t trans land
This land was made for Ronny D
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Haaaa! Perfect.
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One of the aspects of slavery that I had to learn piecemeal along the way is the degree to which all aspects of plantation life were divided among the enslaved. Slaves were bought sometimes due to their expertise. Rice producers from the West Coast of Africa were targeted by slave traders specifically due to their understanding of rice agriculture, due to the higher price they would bring based on their knowledge. Soon slaves were in charge of horticulture, engineering houses and barns for processing specific crops, and animal breeding. The importance of this is that these sorts of jobs slaves did were the jobs that would have produced a middle class in a society without slaves.
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Very interesting.
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Of course, the enslaved who brought the biggest prices were the young women. At auctions, the auctioneers saved these to the end of the day, thus ensuring that the audience would stick around.
The chivalrous Christian knights of the Old South.
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If we want to get really dark (things can always get darker when talking about slavery), this relates to why a relatively small percentage (10%? Going off memory) of enslaved Africans in the Atlantic slave trade went to North America as opposed to the Caribbean and Brazil. In North America, slave owners relied mainly on “domestic” sources for slaves—i.e., slaves who were born to slaves on US soil—and the property interest was more long-term. In the Caribbean and Brazil, slaves were more of a “disposable” resource—worked to the death with very low birth rates.
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Exactly so, Flerp!
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The Chivalrous Knights of the old south (eg, Thomas Jefferson) were just trying to protect the on her of the slave girls
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Girls. Freaking girls. It’s sickening.
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Every Knight undoubtedly protected the on her of his slave girls every night
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Quotidian evil/terror visited upon children by the Good Christian Whites of the Noble Southland
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Definition of a “An offer for on her” : A bid for a slave girl at auction
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The Missionary Position
Position of the mission:
To honor girls and boys
In secret room addition
Which dampens out the noise
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I suggest AP US History student read the forward to “The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism,” by Edward E. Baptist (2014). It’s an excellent book that I highly recommend.
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“The people in Florida who wrote the standards for African American studies had a challenge: how to write them to satisfy Governor DeSantis’
hatred for anything that speaks aboutracism…”Fixed.
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They did not succeed. If DeSantis ever actually reads these new standards, he will not be happy about a lot of what’s in them. Oh, he will love the “everyone was doing it [slavery]” part of these “standards,” but there is much here that he and other racists will be appalled by.
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Click to access 6-4.pdf
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That link is to the actual new standards. It is almost impossible to find in the so-called “news” stories about these standards, which seem interested only in what controversy there might be about them (i.e., in understanding them through the lens DeSantis good or DeSantis bad.
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Biden is a decent man who has been a great president. He is a brilliant negotiator, a man of deep faith, and a man who is trying to improve the lives of all. His son Hunter is a recovering addict who struggled in the shadow of his very accomplished older brother Beau.
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