This part.
Many folk in the USA know about the Nuremberg trials after World War 2, for crimes against humanity. But most US folk don't know about the German Nuremberg laws passed before the war, that were disgustingly racist, anti-Semitic laws. And almost no Americans know that the Nazi authors of those laws, based them on US Jim Crow laws. šš
We literally made it a "crime against humanity" to treat white people like the USA treats its Black people. š¤”
of course, we _did_ have a closure/accountability process -- it was called "Reconstruction", but revanchists across the South undermined it from before the Civil War even ended, and it ultimately collapsed and was replaced by Jim Crow and the prison-industrial complex.
Even today schoolbooks across the South talk about Reconstruction as a time of "corrupt carpetbaggers"; but the real story is "the Union won the war but lost the Occupation".
@patrickgillam @paninid @mekkaokereke @seldo
I might label the kneeling dude in khakis as "legacy of white supremacist chattel slavery"
there's a few of america's problems that go back _before_ reconstruction -- like "why is the capital in a swamp" -- but even those can point to "legacy of slavery".
@paninid @pianoblack @mekkaokereke @seldo
Likewise, i grew up in Atlanta; statewide history curricula largely ignored Reconstruction (and a major street was literally renamed from Forrest (KKK founder) to MLK _in the late 1980s_)
if my high school teachers hadn't been hippie weirdo radicals I'd have learned that the Stone Mountain generals were just "famous Georgians"
@trochee @paninid @pianoblack @mekkaokereke @seldo I failed the AP American history exam in Nashville my senior year (1992) because our AP history teacher just⦠didnāt talk about the civil war, or reconstruction, or Jim Crow. I vaguely knew Lincoln was president during it?
AP teacher. At a magnet school. Whose principal was a black woman.