Happy #BlackHistoryMonth !

I still haven't made it to Black history. I'm close! But I'm still on white US history. It's everywhere!

Q: Why does it seem like Black folk don't contribute much to society or science or history? Most inventions are from Europeans? Why does it seem this way? Don't cancel me!

A: Racism. The lie of white supremacy requires that we pretend that white men are the only people that ever invented anything or contributed to society.

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#BlackMastodon

(Image: nedroid.com)

Instead of just listing a bunch of Black accomplishments to try to counter that lie, I want us to look at the language that US folk use to describe discoveries or inventions. It's dripping with racism and white centering.

Non-white people are invisible. They don't even count. When we say "discovered," we really mean discovered "for white people." This is baked into our language.

This "I only see white people" impacts people of all other races, but anti-Black racism is most egregious.

If you ask a US citizen who discovered America, they will instantly respond "Columbus!" Others might argue Cabot or Vespucci. I don't know how to tell you this, but you can't say you "discovered a land" that already had people waving at you from the shore when you got there.🤡

The conversation breaks down into a pedantic discussion about the words "discovery," and "America."

You get a different answer to this question if you ask Native American people.

If you ask many folk in the US what the population of North America was in 1650, they will start counting up colonists. They have to be reminded that there were *millions* of native Americans living in North America.

They know that indigenous people were here! They just didn't realize that they mattered.

The conversation soon devolves into a pedantic discussion around the word "America."

Some of my white US friends worry about the day when white folk will no longer be the majority. But if you count African slaves, Native Americans, Mexicans, and Asian immigrants, how many years was it even true that white folk were the majority here?

Most US folk haven't even thought to ask themselves this question, let alone answer it. 🤷🏿‍♂️

If you ask people who invented vaccination and when, US medical pros will tell you "Edward Jenner!" If you ask them why it's called vaccination, they'll tell you "variolae vaccinae" (smallpox of the cow). Vaccinae basically means "of the cow" In Latin. Cow in Spanish, is Vaca. In French, Vache.

Then ask them how the earliest smallpox vaccines worked. They know. Introducing weakened variolae through the skin, rather than through the lungs. Ask them if African doctors had done this. They say yes.

Africans had been doing variolation for hundreds of years before "vaccination." Asians too.

The medical professionals know this! But they'll say, "That doesn't count!" It devolves into a pedantic discussion about the definition of vaccine vs innoculation, and attenuated virus, and cowpox vs smallpox.

If you ask, "who invented small pox innoculation," You get a different answer if you ask Nigerian or Ghanaian or Chinese doctors.

If you ask mathematicians who discovered a² +b² = c², they'll yell "Pythagoras!"

Then ask the mathematicians if Pythagoras ever traveled to another country to take a geometry class. They'll tell you yeah, he studied abroad in Egypt, and like, majored in triangles.

Egyptians had known about right triangles for thousands of years. Then ask the mathematicians if Babylonians knew about right triangles. They'll tell you, also yes.

Babylonians had clay tablets where they stored commonly useful right triangle side lengths, like (1, 1, √2), and (3,4,5). Egyptian builders even had circular ropes with 12 evenly spaced knots tied in it, so they could measure 3,4,5 triangles.

The conversation breaks down into a pedantic definition of the word "theorem," and if the Egyptians or Babylonians ever wrote it down the way that we are expecting to see it.

The discovery didn't count until Pythagoras wrote it.

Professional mathematicians genuinely convinced themselves that Babylonians and Egyptians did know that the hypotenuse of that triangle was the square root of 2, but because they didn't find a specific clay tablet or papyrus with the theorem, that they didn't really understand the relationship.🙂🙃

That would be like a future anthropologists finding a 5ft tape measure at a Philadelphia construction site, and concluding that 2023 humans could only count up to 60 inches. 🤡

If you ask psychologists who invented the "Hierarchy of Needs," they'll yell "Maslow!" If you ask them to define his theory, they tell you, "Each person has a hierarchy of needs that must be met!" Then ask if he ever studied Native American culture, they'll tell you "Yes! Blackfoot Indians!" Then ask if their culture had a theory of hierarchy of needs. They say yes. They know.

But Maslow changed the hierarchy up a lil bit (AKA, made it worse), before passing it off as his own.

If you ask people if we can reverse some of climate change by planting trees, many will tell you "No! Planting at scale doesn't work! Monoculture! Fires take all the carbon back!" Then ask them if Native Americans planted forests. They say yes. Then ask if these forests lasted more than a few years. Again, yes.

For some, the accomplishment of planting massive forests, won't count until white folk do it, even though indigenous people have been doing it for millennia.

https://youtu.be/Mby72d2Vz30

This California Tribe Is Fighting Wildfires With Fire

YouTube

We haven't even gotten to the intentional erasure of non-white contributions, from 1800s phrenologists justifying slavery, all the way to present day DeSantis.

The lie of white supremacy requires the elevation and celebration of white contributions, and the minimizing of everyone else's.

This is the environment in which we pretend that white Europeans and white Americans contributed the most to society.

It's a lie because everyone has contributed to technology and society. Everyone. ♥️👍🏿

Even today, I hear people say that (white) Americans innovate and make quality products, but (Asian) Chinese and Indians copy and make cheap knock-offs.🤦🏿‍♂️

People literally type this into their Samsung Galaxies and iPhones, knowing full well where those devices are made, and knowing what the demographics of the "American" tech companies that produce Apple, Microsoft, and Google products look like.

I've literally had to tell people "Bro, you know like 9 PMs at Apple! What race are they?"

This is the "default white" background framing in which people try (unsuccessfully) to share Black accomplishments in science, technology, and society.

For me to say that my dad is a heart transplant surgeon, feels like a magical Black accomplishment. But the first successful open heart surgery was done by a Black doctor. And the first c-sections where mothers consistently survived were done by Black doctors.

I reject the entire premise of some Black folk being medical geniuses, as surprising.

What I find more surprising, is the way that we casually accept the nonsense that passes for history the other 11 months, as "real history."

It's a fiction written by racist people centuries ago up till today, that doesn't stand up to the slightest poke of scrutiny.

The vast majority of white folk don't want the fake history. They want the real history. ♥️👍🏿

But what I don't understand, is why we all keep letting that tiny fraction of the worst, most racist people, write the history books?

@mekkaokereke I love your threads... so educational but after reading this one even though it is indeed racist as hell wouldn't framing help. The way "history" is taught (esp schools) is very white, euro centric... if instead we were taught all the ways, as you do here (vaccination, what was done in other areas of the world and when etc) wouldn't this open eyes? Fight back as it were... the racists would hate it but I was curious if that was a feasible way to try and do some real educating 🤔

@Aviva_Gary Yeah, the "racist as hell" is the interesting part. You'll see from the replies to this thread, that more people feel happiness, wonder, and connection at learning about the non-European contributions. Very few people feel less happy to know the source of these things. It's not zero sum.

The only people that want it to be taught the racist way, are the racists.

Fixing this requires us understanding the systemic leverage points that racists use to hide this history.

@mekkaokereke True, true. I want the really reals as well, I assume most people (other than the mentioned racists) would too, but I also live in a state run by very racist people with oversized clout... these leverage points might be hard to access (since they have complete control here)... if an institutional way of teaching is not accessible (for many this would be the case) could reframing help in a more informal way... like say in a thread on a website or real people doing the work. 🤔
@mekkaokereke I mean... I know it is absolutely no fix but I was amazed to learn Africa had some of the richest empires on earth and the industrial rev was not started in England... unlike what I was told in school; If they ever discussed Africa (outside of slavery... when it was discussed) at all.
@Aviva_Gary @mekkaokereke wait, the Industrial Revolution was started somewhere else?

@Savera @Aviva_Gary @mekkaokereke Look up "Senegal River" in the time frame between ... I want to say 10th to 14th centuries? ... and see what that tells you.

If tens of thousands of iron smelters isn't "industry" and if that amount of iron production doesn't count as "revolutionary" then words don't mean fuck all.

@Aviva_Gary @mekkaokereke I'm proud that my kid's 6th grade Social Studies equivalent was all built around Africa -- geography, history, before during and after imperialism, etc. Wonderful!

@mekkaokereke @Aviva_Gary If you want some fun, ask the mathematically inclined who invented Pascal's Triangle.

Then lean back and watch as they incorrect each other.