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Frederick Douglass Versus the 1619 Project: Critical Race Theory's big lie about American history.
Frontpage Mag ^ | 07/16/2021 | Dinesh D' Souza

Posted on 07/16/2021 6:21:55 PM PDT by SeekAndFind


How amusing it is to see the advocates of critical race theory (CRT) and the 1619 Project vehemently deny that their philosophy is even being taught in elementary and secondary schools. Most recently, teachers’ union president Randi Weingarten insisted that CRT is merely a subject of discussion in law schools and the legal community, not in the public school system.

Hogwash! Parents wouldn’t be mobilizing against CRT if they didn’t witness its divisive propaganda being dumped on their children. Ironically, we have the COVID lockdowns to thank for this. Ordinarily, parents aren’t exposed to what their children are being taught in school. But with online instruction, they can pop into their kid’s room and go, “They’re teaching him WHAT?”

If CRT and its ideological cousin the 1619 Project really aren’t being taught in schools, why would the teachers unions and the left worry about them being banned by state legislators? That would be like states banning unicorns. This is absolutely no problem, since there are no unicorns. Of course, the reason the unions and the left are up in arms is because CRT and the 1619 Project are being widely taught, and the state laws would curb these forms of indoctrination.

Taking a somewhat different approach, Gillian Brockell wrote a recent article in The Washington Post implying that CRT and the 1619 Project represent the very mainstream of American history, and that the great abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass would have been on board with their core premises. “Frederick Douglass had nothing but scorn for July Fourth,” her headline reads. “The Black abolitionist spoke for the enslaved.”

The article, however, like CRT and the 1619 Project, tells only half of the story. Let’s follow its narrative in some detail. Brockell recalls Douglass’s famous July 4 address (pdf), delivered in Rochester, New York, to the Rochester Ladies’ Anti-Slavery Society. The first part of the speech does indeed support Brockell’s account, because Douglass gives a savage indictment of how American independence looks to a black man.

“This Fourth [of] July is yours, not mine,” Douglass says. “You may rejoice, I must mourn. To drag a man in fetters into the grand illuminated temple of liberty, and call upon him to join you in joyous anthems, were inhuman mockery and sacrilegious irony. Do you mean, citizens, to mock me by asking me to speak today?” Douglass here is not speaking for himself. After all, he had escaped slavery in Maryland 14 years earlier. He was not “a man in fetters.” Douglass, however, was speaking from the point of view of the slave, his former self.

“What, to the American slave, is your Fourth of July?” Douglass continues. “I answer: a day that reveals to him, more than all the other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciations of tyrants, brass fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity are, to him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety and hypocrisy—a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages.”

Already one can see Douglass’s speech as a masterpiece of rhetoric, each phrase building on the previous one, almost like a wave gathering force before crashing down on the audience. Yet as the speech moves on, Douglass makes a sharp and surprising turn. Far from denouncing the Fourth of July, far from scorning the Declaration of Independence as a charter of hypocrisy, far from blaming the Constitution for making an unholy pact with slavery—this is precisely what the critical race theorists do today—Douglass roundly affirms the founding as a “glorious liberty document” that launched “forces in operation” that “must inevitably work the downfall of slavery.”

Brockell has read Douglass’s speech. She knows about this “turn” in Douglass’s rhetoric. But she downplays it, quoting only a small part and suppressing the rest, and presenting even this tidbit as a sort of postscript, rather than the central point which Douglass was making. Why? Because the tidbit and its larger context completely undercuts her argument. Let’s probe deeper into what Douglass said.

Douglass argued in the tradition of Abraham Lincoln, who famously argued that in affirming the equality clause of the Declaration of Independence, the founders “meant simply to declare the right, so that the enforcement of it might follow as fast as circumstances should permit.” Lincoln and Douglass were both instruments of that enforcement. They helped realize the principles of 1776 and 1789.

Douglass’s point—and Lincoln’s too—is that there are two traditions in America, a tradition of enslavement and oppression, but also a tradition of emancipation and freedom. Both men regarded the Declaration of Independence and even the Constitution as part of the latter tradition. They also identified the Democratic Party with oppression and the Republican Party with freedom. Here’s a later remark by Douglass: “The Republican Party is the ship; all else is the sea.”

By contrast, CRT holds that there’s a single tradition, only enslavement and oppression, no genuine emancipation or freedom. That’s why the 1619 Project says virtually nothing about Douglass, and even Martin Luther King Jr. is barely mentioned. Its credo is that racism is built into the DNA of America not just from the founding but also from the country’s very beginning in 1619. So the deceit of the 1619 Project and CRT is that both exaggerate one tradition, conceal its association with the Democratic Party, and suppress the emancipation tradition and its inevitable association with the Republican Party.

Douglass ended his speech on a patriotic note that vividly contrasts with the way he began, and shows why he had no problem, in the end, with celebrating the Fourth of July and what it represented. Of the Constitution, Douglass later said, “Abolish slavery tomorrow, and not a sentence or syllable of the Constitution needs to be altered.” That’s because the document gives no support, no sanction, to slavery.

Douglass of course knew that the founders who approved the Constitution allowed slavery to continue beyond 1789, but his argument is that this compromise was necessary to get a union—the very union that would have the power to bring about the end of slavery. Slavery, Douglass concluded, is merely the “scaffolding to the magnificent structure, to be removed as soon as the building was completed.” Indeed, the founders delivered “the deadliest blow upon slavery” that could be practically “given at a particular time.”



TOPICS: Education; History; Society
KEYWORDS: 1619project; abrahamlincoln; criticalracetheory; crt; education; frederickdouglass; freedom; godsgravesglyphs; greatestpresident; liberty; slavery

1 posted on 07/16/2021 6:21:55 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The new negroes have to condemn the old negroes as morons....Douglass,Booker T Washington and MLK..... Of course,none of them the joy of free money,free food free everything.....They actually had the stupidity to work....


2 posted on 07/16/2021 6:39:56 PM PDT by Hambone 1934 (Dems love playing Nazis.....The republicans love helping them)
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To: SeekAndFind

The new negroes have to condemn the old negroes as morons....Douglass,Booker T Washington and MLK..... Of course,none of them the joy of free money,free food free everything.....They actually had the stupidity to work....


3 posted on 07/16/2021 6:40:36 PM PDT by Hambone 1934 (Dems love playing Nazis.....The republicans love helping them)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bkmk


4 posted on 07/16/2021 6:47:51 PM PDT by sauropod (The smartphone is the retina of the mind's eye.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The 1619 project is the work of the Devil... by all symbolic indications. 6 and 9 are inversion of each other, separated buy the 1 which is phallic and God-like. If God is the white male (that the Devil wants him depicted as) then God is the 1 or the penis, and blacks are secondary inversions that suggest a non-binary and non-reproductive sex.

I’m taking a wild guess about this, and it kind of makes sense, though I’m the last one you want to talk to about math.


5 posted on 07/16/2021 6:57:20 PM PDT by BEJ
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To: Hambone 1934

With MLK they are in my experience rather advancing his radicalism, the Marxist influences.

The Dream becomes secondary to the Marxism and they po8nt to his use of words that they use too without ever mentionin8ng that the colloquial use of them may have altered, that they are insisting he must have meant it as they do.

Now, I’m not defending King but I am point8ng out their house of cards, which I’ve characterized with a nod to the movie The Wall with this paraphrase: You can’t discuss race or racism unless you accept and use our Marxist sourced explanation of these. How can you discuss race unless you accept our Marxist sources explanation of race?

You see, whatever the radicals do or say realize they are always inherently untruthful, distorting the truth no matter what their own preferences may be, because their Critical Theory (Cultural Marxism) ideology was developed from lies, to sustain lies, and make it impossible to speak the truth … all to destroy the West for the benefit of the old USSR … though they now do their thing in service to any and all of the enemies of the West, including their own ideologically twisted collection of fellow travelers.


6 posted on 07/16/2021 7:01:17 PM PDT by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: SeekAndFind
Because Blacks were poor when Johnson's Welfare programs started they were the ones who were mostly lured in. It has since destroyed Black families by paying mother's to have babies without marriage. The surest way to raise a bad kid is to do so on welfare.

The tread now is for the other groups slowly increasing with the same cancerous issue. We must destroy the Welfare State before it destroys us .

7 posted on 07/16/2021 7:11:50 PM PDT by Nateman (If the Left is not screaming , you are doing it wrong.)
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To: SeekAndFind

An obvious white supremacist. Just look at him.


8 posted on 07/16/2021 9:03:09 PM PDT by TBP (Progressives lack compassion and tolerance. Their self-aggrandizement is all that matters. )
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To: SeekAndFind

bump


9 posted on 07/16/2021 9:56:59 PM PDT by Albion Wilde ("Let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late." —Bob Dylan)
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...Viewed from the genuine abolition ground, Mr. Lincoln seemed tardy, cold, dull, and indifferent; but measuring him by the sentiment of his country, a sentiment he was bound as a statesman to consult, he was swift, zealous, radical, and determined.

Though Mr. Lincoln shared the prejudices of his white fellow-countrymen against the Negro, it is hardly necessary to say that in his heart of hearts he loathed and hated slavery. The man who could say, “Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war shall soon pass away, yet if God wills it continue till all the wealth piled by two hundred years of bondage shall have been wasted, and each drop of blood drawn by the lash shall have been paid for by one drawn by the sword, the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether,” gives all needed proof of his feeling on the subject of slavery...

Few great public men have ever been the victims of fiercer denunciation than Abraham Lincoln was during his administration. He was often wounded in the house of his friends. Reproaches came thick and fast upon him from within and from without, and from opposite quarters. He was assailed by Abolitionists; he was assailed by slave-holders; he was assailed by the men who were for peace at any price; he was assailed by those who were for a more vigorous prosecution of the war; he was assailed for not making the war an abolition war; and he was bitterly assailed for making the war an abolition war.

But now behold the change: the judgment of the present hour is, that taking him for all in all, measuring the tremendous magnitude of the work before him, considering the necessary means to ends, and surveying the end from the beginning, infinite wisdom has seldom sent any man into the world better fitted for his mission than Abraham Lincoln.
-- Frederick Douglass | Oration in Memory of Abraham Lincoln | April 14, 1876

10 posted on 07/17/2021 9:57:48 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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