bruto
Penultimate Amazing
He seems to be a kind of roving pundit these days, not doing much that's specific.What's ol' Howard up to these days?
He seems to be a kind of roving pundit these days, not doing much that's specific.What's ol' Howard up to these days?
You seem to be under the assumption that this portrayal of Florida's curriculum is accurate. It is not.
Now, I understand why you are operating under that false assumption. What I don't understand is why Tim Scott is. He should know better than to trust the press.
(Florida’s State Academic Standards – Social Studies, 2023)SS.68.AA.2.3 Examine the various duties and trades performed by slaves (e.g., agricultural work, painting, carpentry, tailoring, domestic service, blacksmithing, transportation).
Benchmark Clarifications: Clarification 1: Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.
So, what part of "this portrayal of Florida's curriculum" is not accurate?
What's inaccurate is that this was portrayed as a benefit of slavery. Some slaves managed to benefit themselves despite slavery, not because of it, and the curriculum doesn't actually suggest otherwise.
Oh please. A distinction minus a difference.
Hardly. The difference is incredibly important. And the facts are actually true as well.
What's particularly odd is the idea that this is somehow viewed as a bad truth, that it would somehow be better if slaves never managed to benefit themselves, if they were instead only victims with no ability to alleviate their oppression in any way. Why wouldn't the alternative, that even the oppressed can sometimes overcome their circumstances at least in part, be more empowering? Why wouldn't you want stories about slaves who managed to accomplish something despite their slavery to be told?
It really depends on how its being framed:
A) Slavery was really awful, but some slaves were able to learn to read while working at a printing press and were able to better themselves after being freed or even used it to pass messages along the underground railroad.
or
B) You see slavery wasn't THAT bad. They could learn skills which their masters would reward them for by giving them better conditions since their labor was more valuable. Heck, it was if anything a better system than the hardships of sharecropping where poor black workers were at the mercy of market conditions and crop failures.
That Tim Scott is criticizing it leads me to believe its more along the lines of option "B".
What's inaccurate is that this was portrayed as a benefit of slavery. Some slaves managed to benefit themselves despite slavery, not because of it, and the curriculum doesn't actually suggest otherwise.
Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.
Hardly. The difference is incredibly important. And the facts are actually true as well.
What's particularly odd is the idea that this is somehow viewed as a bad truth, that it would somehow be better if slaves never managed to benefit themselves, if they were instead only victims with no ability to alleviate their oppression in any way. Why wouldn't the alternative, that even the oppressed can sometimes overcome their circumstances at least in part, be more empowering? Why wouldn't you want stories about slaves who managed to accomplish something despite their slavery to be told?
"We resolutely disagree with the notion that enslavement was in any way a beneficial, productive, or useful experience for African Americans," the College Board said in a statement to USA TODAY. "Unequivocally, slavery was an atrocity that cannot be justified by examples of African Americans’ agency and resistance during their enslavement."
De Santis' real gambit might be to wait until Donny runs out of money: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/donald-trump-campaign-finances_n_64c89c6be4b03ad2b89a69fa
Of all the things they can talk about regarding slavery, and the limit to how much curriculum they can include, it seems really odd to choose to include that.
When talking about the women's rights movement, do they also intend to talk about how women being kept at home taught them useful skills? How about when discussing child labor? Surely it's important to point out the valuable skills those kids learned when they weren't maimed on the job.
It could be taught in a way that is benign, but when it comes to Republicans assurances that their intent is not the deplorable one obvious to most people...
Let's just say no one would be shocked when leaked audio surfaces of Republicans behind closed doors taking about how blacks were better off under slavery and this new curriculum will highlight that.
What this is saying is that a slave could have learned cooking skills that 'benefited' her personally because it got her out of picking cotton/tobacco in the fields and into the Big House to cook for her owners. Field slave to house slave! What a 'benefit'!
It was never for the slaves' benefit: it was for the slave owners' benefit.
No. Read my other link.
Slavery was for the owner's benefit. And slave owners wanted slaves to learn certain things also for the owner's benefit. But slaves sometimes learned things the owners didn't want them to learn, and that could benefit the slaves. Or they found ways to benefit themselves which their owners may not have intended. That's something to be admired, isn't it?
Nothing about slaves learning skills that benefited them (which as a factual matter is uncontested) implies that slavery benefited them. Nothing about the curriculum implies that slavery benefited them.
The college board is responding to press reports, not to the actual contents of the curriculum. And it's always and only that one line, taken out of context. Out of the pages and pages on the topic, just one line.
Even if Ziggurat's bizzare interpretation of that requirement was correct it would still be obvious attempt to water-down the horrors of slavery.
You're working from second-hand reporting focused on a single out-of-context sentence.
“We are aware that some in Florida have reviewed the Advanced Placement (AP) African American Studies framework and have suggested that the state’s recently approved middle school African American History standards align with our course requirements,” the College Board said in a statement. “We resolutely disagree with the notion that enslavement was in any way a beneficial, productive, or useful experience for African Americans.”
It added: “Unequivocally, slavery was an atrocity that cannot be justified by examples of African Americans’ agency and resistance during their enslavement.”
I've gone to the actual curriculum document, and heard from one of the drafters. I'm not the one with my head in the sand.
You haven't actually read the curriculum, have you?
Examine the various duties and trades performed by slaves (e.g., agricultural
work, painting, carpentry, tailoring, domestic service, blacksmithing,
transportation).
Benchmark Clarifications:
Clarification 1: Instruction includes how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be
applied for their personal benefit.