Tea Party Group Wants To 'Soften' Slavery In Textbooks
What do you remember about American History class? Chances are you took away the basics; the birth of a democracy and a roller-coaster of ups-and-downs. But some Tea Party members say those basics are flawed when it comes to textbooks. "My biggest concern is that important information is being omitted, which creates a negative light on our Founding Fathers," said Tea Party activist Brian Rieck.
Many members of the group are asking Tennessee lawmakers to tweak textbooks so that doesn't happen. Notably, they're hoping to make changes in how slavery and encroachment on Native Americans are portrayed to students. "Slavery is of course portrayed in the textbooks nowadays I'm sure as a totally negative thing. Had there not been slavery in the South, the economy would've fallen," Rieck said. Rieck told News 5 without offering that balance, the Founding Fathers, many of whom were slave owners, could be slighted for their contributions in the eyes of students.
Which produced a very interesting reaction in the local paper. Here's a snippet.
Tea Bagging History by Averie Greene
A little over a year ago, the Texas Board of Education voted to edit history books so that slavery could be shown in a less negative light ... Yeah, I thought the same thing. I'm pretty sure that no matter how many times you sugarcoat slavery, it's still going to be evil and despicable. If this "edit" of history weren't bad enough, the Tennessee Tea Party now wants to edit our state's books as well, not just by making slavery seem a little less mean, but by getting rid of any reference to slavery completely — as well as any reference about our country's founding fathers owning slaves.
Their reasoning? It makes people have less than warm and fuzzy feelings about our Founding Fathers and therefore makes America look bad. Isn't that a great idea? Whenever you don't like something from history, just change it! Lincoln wasn't assassinated; Narnia was behind his balcony curtain. The Trail of Tears was actually the Trail of Lollipops, and Jimmy Hoffa just got his Hogwarts Letter. See how easy that was? So what's the problem? It's not real and it's offensive. These are history books, not fiction.
Regardless of what kind of awful things our founding fathers did, it is unethical to lie about who they were and what they did. If this makes America look bad, I say too bad. There's a reason it makes us look bad. It's because what America did was bad. Taking slavery out of history books isn't going to change it or make it any better. It's just going to give kids the idea that slavery was inconsequential; that it was so unimportant to the history of the U.S. that it doesn't even bear a mention between chapters on the Revolutionary War and Little Big Horn. Oh, are we going to take out the Native Americans, too? I guess they're not important either, even though they were here first.
But when I went on their web site, all I could find was some Black Robe Regiment and not much more.
