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Not Convinced The 1619 Project Lies About History? Look At This Professor’s Forced Confession
The Federalist ^ | 09/06/2022 | Mary Grabar

Posted on 09/06/2022 2:32:32 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

The 1619 Project’s Nikole Hannah-Jones does not accept correction. Instead, she attacks every critic as a racist or race traitor.

In August, history professor James H. Sweet wrote that the 1619 Project illustrated the problem of  “presentism” in history. In an American Historical Association essay, “Is History History?”  he argued The New York Times’s 1619 Project looks at “the past through the prism of contemporary social justice issues—race, gender, sexuality, nationalism, capitalism.”

Sweet almost immediately found himself attacked by a mob of historians for not adhering to the standards of “presentism.” He quickly groveled with a public apology and a walkback of his gentle initial observations.

Yet he wasn’t wrong at all. To make the case that all white people should pay black people for what the 1619 Project calls (white) America’s “Original Sin” of slavery, one needs to present all white people as complicit in the enterprise and all black people as innocent and blameless victims. Certainly, the false idea that slavery was unique to America and practiced only by white people is a commonly held belief.

1619 Project creator Nikole Hannah-Jones is not a historian, but a journalist specializing in race issues. So she might be excused for not knowing about the African role in the slave trade, the ubiquitous nature of slavery throughout history (in which no ethnic groups, races, or faiths are exempt), and the fact that many free black people also owned slaves. But Hannah-Jones does not accept correction; she attacks every critic as a racist or race traitor.

As I’ve learned from researching for my new book, “Debunking The 1619 Project,” Hannah-Jones knowingly presents falsehoods about American history and slavery, such as that all white people are morally culpable for slavery and that all black people are blameless. In this episode, she helped the Twitter mob pile onto Sweet, while making the very same point for which he was being attacked.

Hannah-Jones revealed in a Los Angeles Times interview that her favorite novel was “The Known World” by Edward Jones, which is about a black slave-owning family in antebellum Virginia. So she’s aware black slave ownership happened. Yet she insulted and then blocked me on Twitter when I pointed out the racially inconvenient fact that a significant percentage of free black Americans owned slaves. That was one of two lies I have caught her in.

After she blocked me, she scolded another tweeter who complained that the left sees American “exceptionalism” in the practice of slavery as “uniquely or distinctly American.” “You should do more reading,” she lectured. “Because there is a difference between a society that permits slavery and engages in slavery, and a slave society, where the entire society is organized around slavery.”

She pointed out that what made American slavery “exceptional” was that “American slavery took place in the only country FOUNDED on the God-given equality and rights of mankind.” She mocked the idea of “using 1,000-year-old history to justify downplaying 150-year-old history”—an admission that American slavery is deliberately being presented in isolation and therefore distortedly.

One of Sweet’s thought crimes had been criticizing the claim of the forthcoming movie, “The Woman King” that “Dahomey’s female warriors and King Ghezo fought the European slave trade.” Sweet, a specialist in African history, pointed out that, on the contrary, “they promoted it” (emphasis added).

While Hannah-Jones was retweeting attacks on Sweet, she was also commenting on “The Woman King.” She noted, “It will be interesting to see how a movie that seems to glorify an all-female military unit of the Dahomey deals with the fact that this kingdom derived its wealth from capturing Africans for the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.”

Some commentators on Hannah-Jones’s thread mentioned Zora Neale Hurston’s “Barracoon: The Story of the Last ‘Black Cargo,’” which was based on Hurston’s interviews in 1927 and 1928 with Cudjo Lewis, one of the last survivors of a cargo of slaves brought to American shores illegally in 1860. He had been captured at the age of 19 in a raid employing female warriors from Dahomey—the very subjects of “The Woman King.”

As I discuss in “Debunking The 1619 Project,” Cudjo, of “the Isha subgroup of the Yoruba people of West Africa,” then known by his native name, Kossola, had been undergoing initiation for marriage when his town of Bantѐ was raided in the early morning hours “by Dahomey’s female warriors, who slaughtered [townspeople] in their daze.’”

As Hurston recorded, Cudjo Lewis’s account tells of seeing the severed and rotting heads of family members and being “yoked by forked sticks and tied in a chain” with other villagers on a three-day march to the stockades at Abomey. He was then incarcerated in the barracoons at Ouidah. She commented, “Kossula was no longer on the porch with me. He was squatting about that fire in Dahomey. His face was twitching in abysmal pain…”

As Alice Walker said in her foreword to the book, which was published in 2018, “many black people, years ago, especially black intellectuals and political leaders,” had a problem with the book, which “resolutely record[ed] the atrocities African people inflicted on each other, long before shackled Africans, traumatized, ill, disoriented, starved, arrived on ships as ‘black cargo’ in the hellish West.” She asked, “Who could face this vision of the violent cruel behavior of the ‘brethren’ and the ‘sistren’ who first captured our ancestors?”

Such questions, which defy the facile and false categorization of people as evil or good based on race or ideological inclination, also occupied the novelist Jones in his resonant and beautifully written “The Known World,” which is also a favorite of mine. Good novelists present characters realistically, as having both good and bad characteristics.

Good historians similarly recognize the complexity of human beings. All are all capable of good and evil. Historians do not alter the evidence to make it appear differently.

Historians do not make sweeping, incendiary statements like this one from Hannah-Jones’s lead essay in both the original and book versions: “In response to black demands for [their] rights, white Americans strung them from trees, beat them and dumped their bodies in muddy rivers, assassinated them in their front yards, firebombed them on buses, mauled them with dogs, peeled back their skin with fire hoses and murdered their children with explosives set off inside a church.”

As professor Lynn Uzzell noted, out of the 77 times the term “white” appears in Hannah-Jones’s 1619 Project, 35 times white people are presented as holding “some kind of power or privilege (almost always unearned or illegitimate)” and in 32 cases, “the word is associated with oppression, injustice, or cruelty.”

Kindergartners are being read the 1619 Project picture book, “Born on the Water.” They will be told that people in Africa were “kidnapped” exclusively by “white people,” who “traded another’s child / another’s momma and daddy” whom they viewed as “not human” and to be “bought and sold … alongside horses and chairs.” That is not an accurate depiction of this complex situation, and simplifying in this way encourages racial bitterness.

We know Hannah-Jones knows that white people are not all to blame and that black people also participated in the horrors of slavery, but she pushes such lies anyway. With Hannah-Jones revealing herself to be a liar over and over, there should be no more doubts about the need to take the 1619 Project propaganda out of our schools.


Mary Grabar, the author of "Debunking Howard Zinn," earned her PhD from the University of Georgia and taught college English for 20 years. She is now a resident fellow at the Alexander Hamilton Institute for the Study of Western Civilization in Clinton, New York. She is also author of the "Debunking The 1619 Project: Exposing the Plan to Divide America" (Regnery, September 7, 2021). Her writing can be found at DissidentProf.com and at marygrabar.com.


TOPICS: Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: 1619project; blackkk; blackliesmanors; blackliesmatter; blacklivesmatter; blm; criticalracetheory; crt; education; godsgravesglyphs; history; lies; presentism; racism
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1 posted on 09/06/2022 2:32:32 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Bkmk


2 posted on 09/06/2022 2:33:43 PM PDT by sauropod (Unbelief has nothing to say. Chanece favors the prepared mind.)
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To: SeekAndFind

later


3 posted on 09/06/2022 2:38:22 PM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Covid Is All About Mail In Ballots)
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To: SeekAndFind

Based on the1619 Project, the DNC should be outlawed and it’s leaders banned from public life.


4 posted on 09/06/2022 2:40:34 PM PDT by marron
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To: SeekAndFind

The DNC is a party with a bad conscience and a despicable history. It’s no wonder they insist on rewriting history.


5 posted on 09/06/2022 2:42:42 PM PDT by marron
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To: SeekAndFind

bkmk


6 posted on 09/06/2022 2:51:20 PM PDT by Sergio (An object at rest cannot be stopped! - The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight)
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To: SeekAndFind

Look At This Professor’s Forced Confession


Hot irons? Thumb screws? Cat of nine tails?


7 posted on 09/06/2022 2:52:08 PM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: marron

Agreed. Life in the U.S. would be a lot nicer if the Dims quit trying to make everybody else feel guilty for what the Dims are guilty of.


8 posted on 09/06/2022 2:52:39 PM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: SeekAndFind; marron; PIF; Tell It Right
I have sent the bellow letter to papers for years now and never seen it published anywhere.

The 1619 Project begun August 2019 never possessed merit.

Before the French and Indian War, the New World contained thirteen commercial colonial corporations in which Great Britain demanded slavery. All initiatives to abolish the practice had been prohibited by the Crown and Parliament, which mandated this worldwide system of bondage for their charters, so colonial economic activities would support the mercantile policies of the mother country.

After the Treaty of Paris in 1768, the consequences of that struggle caused to emerge the distinct attributes of an American identity associating the colonies with each other; an identity separate from and antagonistic to Crown and Parliament initiatives.

Following the beginning of the rebellion, the country had seen six of thirteen colonies free slaves and two others abolish the international slave trade.

At the Constitutional Convention. George Mason of Virginia said, “This infernal traffic originated in the avarice of British merchants…. Slavery discourages arts and manufactures….Every master of slaves is born a petty tyrant….They bring the judgement of heaven on a country. As nations cannot be rewarded or punished in the next world they must be in this”.

Slavery was retained but delegates only agreed to suspend initiatives by Congress until 1808, when the expectation of building moral outrage should vanquish the institution. The philosophical doctrines consulted for founding this country placed master and slave on the same natural plane of existence and only postponed the free exercise of conscience. The Declaration of Independence and Constitution are the first founding documents by a country which doomed slavery.

Partial Bibliography:

Miracle at Philadelphia by Catherine Drinker Bowen

James Madison: His notes to the Constitutional Debates of 1787 by Publius Marcus

History of the United States by John Clark Ridpath, LLD

Constitutional Convention (United States)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutional_Convention_(United_States)

Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787: Thursday, May 31 by James Madison

http://teachingamericanhistory.org/convention/debates/0531-2/

The Federalist Papers

https://www.thefederalistpapers.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/The-Complete-Federalist-Papers.pdf

The Virginia Slavery Debate of 1831-1832

https://www.encyclopediavirginia.org/Virginia_Slavery_Debate_of_1831-1832_The

Declaration of Independence: A Transcription

https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/declaration-transcrip

Constitution

https://constitutioncenter.org/interactive-constitution/full-text

9 posted on 09/06/2022 2:58:36 PM PDT by Retain Mike ( Sat Congfwdude)
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To: Tell It Right

Sort of like the Dems endlessly prattling on about gun crime, 99.9% of which is committed by Democrats. :)


10 posted on 09/06/2022 2:59:43 PM PDT by marron
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To: SeekAndFind
1619 Project creator Nikole Hannah-Jones is not a historian. She is, however, a hyphenated woman. Such creatures are always to be viewed with suspicion.
11 posted on 09/06/2022 3:04:51 PM PDT by NorthMountain (... the right of the peopIe to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: SeekAndFind
So this colored lady is concerned with the slaves of 400 years ago. Today in September 2022 there are slaves in China. We can't do anything about 400 years ago, but if she gave a rats ass she would devote her allotted time to campaigning for the rights of present day slaves.

12 posted on 09/06/2022 3:08:46 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie (LORD, grant thy people grace to withstand the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil.)
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To: SeekAndFind
James H. Sweet is the President of the AHA. The September 2022 issue of the AHA's Perspectives on History has his 2-page essay "Is History History?" Since this just came out, maybe his critics were attacking an earlier version--I don't know if the September version is identical. He does criticize the distortions of history in The 1619 Project and in the film The Woman King but goes on to attack Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito for their Supreme Court opinions on gun laws and abortion, and praises Stephen Breyer.

I'm not a member of the AHA but my department receives the Perspectives.

13 posted on 09/06/2022 3:13:24 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: SeekAndFind

Here is a good interview about the 1619 project. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYdhm6XfTVQ The interview is about 75 minutes.


14 posted on 09/06/2022 3:25:58 PM PDT by EvilCapitalist (81 million votes my ass.)
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To: SeekAndFind

15 posted on 09/06/2022 3:26:10 PM PDT by Chode (there is no fall back position, there's no rally point, there is no LZ... we're on our own. #FJB)
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To: SeekAndFind

Hannah Jones has an agenda to push


16 posted on 09/06/2022 3:40:37 PM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds )
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To: marron

It’s the party of rebellion, slavery, and Jim Crow


17 posted on 09/06/2022 3:41:22 PM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds )
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To: marron

‘The atrocities African people inflicted on each other” are obvious to people familiar with grammar and vocabulary. Reading African history for thirty minutes proves that Original Sin is alive and well around the world.


18 posted on 09/06/2022 4:00:58 PM PDT by Falconspeed ("Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others." Robert Louis Stevenson.)
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To: Governor Dinwiddie
So this colored lady is concerned with the slaves of 400 years ago.

Not really... This "colored lady" is only interested in reparations for a wrong she and modern day American blacks never suffered, and she wants people to pay reparations who aren't at all responsible for the stated offense. No one in the world is less deserving of reparation windfalls than American blacks. Paying them money is only the start of the reparations they will demand if we start going down that road.

19 posted on 09/06/2022 5:21:14 PM PDT by Bullish (Rot'sa Ruck America. )
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bump


20 posted on 09/06/2022 5:27:59 PM PDT by foreverfree
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