Thursday, October 15, 2020

Removing Guilt and Shame from the Study of Slavery

 

Some people come from the “the land down under”.  I come from the land “where old times are not forgotten”.  As historians we must recommit to helping our youth understand our history and realize that without a commanding knowledge of our history, there is no future for a free United States of America.

It is natural to fight for your place in the sun.  God has even been known to assist people in that struggle; but it is diabolical to lie about your opponent.  That is unforgivable.

For this reason we must remove the perceived obligation to assign guilt, shame and victimhood upon historical individuals as we study the history of slavery in the United States of America.  The historical study of a topic should be guided by the search for the facts of the matter and not by the hunger of delivering an argument of guilt and the need to see that someone is shamed, or as expressed in Japanese society, that someone “lose face”.

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2 comments:

  1. In short the left is insane. They want to condemn and erase American and more specifically Southern history, using slavery as their main pretence. The other pretence they use is the alleged "genocide" of native American culture and people. Well therein lies the cognitive dissonance.

    Not only are there virtually no pre 1800 cultures where slavery wasn't part of the norms of economic structure. When it comes to the pre-Columbian cultures of the Western hemisphere, not only was slavery a common practice that quickly became a course of conflict between them and the English settlers, but cannibalism as well was not an unknown practice. Much more so in Central and South America than in North America.

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