@Aviva_Gary @mekkaokereke We U.S. students in white schools were fed a carefully pruned set of half-truths by white teachers from white books. Some measure of white supremacy, some measure of willful ignorance.
I remember being taught about Black Panthers feeding kids lunches. I remember that being closely followed by strong implications around FBI investigations and at least as many carefully selected pictures of Black Panthers carrying weapons or marching stoically (framed against the police as 'law and order is good'). You can almost see it in Getty Images if you imagine these pictures next to text that almost bleeds "be afraid of these people targeted by the FBI" rather than "these people want an end to police brutality, wage theft, redlining, [etc]". They all but said "Black supremacy" while in reality planting the seeds of white supremacy.
I'm embarrassed that I fell for that and didn't think critically until years later about the selective half-truths of white supremacy. I knew I was surrounded by racism, but I didn't question the textbooks themselves, even as they peddled scientific racism. "It's rational, here's the superficial, poorly controlled evidence that we cherry picked."
I read precious few books written by people of color until my college education opened me up to amazing fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by people of color both in and outside of coursework.
https://www.gettyimages.com/photos/black-panther-party