Black Lives Matter. Still

The article even talked about how the punishments were often even worse than on the plantations because it was officers who brought their slaves along to do the grunt work, and they had to make sure the white men under them saw them as leaders to be feared.

7 Likes
14 Likes
6 Likes
8 Likes

On Aug. 29, Julia Acosta-Grommon, who was hired to Dayton’s Human Relations Council in April, allegedly became upset after being told to quiet down and had her beer taken away by Ryan Collins,

I have been to many a bar, and you have to really be an obnoxious douche to have your drink taken away.

a bartender at Elsa’s Corner Cantina in Sugarcreek Twp.

LOL.

Sugarcreek Township is in the safest, whitest, richest part of metro Dayton. What’s the matter, sweetheart? Are the fewer than 100 black people who live in your township too much for you to bear? Or do you just not have the ovaries to pull that shit downtown where half the population is black?

Collins said his bartending shift started at 4 p.m. and he encountered Acosta-Grommon and a friend.

It must be nice to have a job that allows me to day drink instead of coming in to work.

Fortunately she’ll have a lot more time for day drinking now and less time helping those “unappreciative dogs”.

He said the bartender he took over for indicated Acosta-Grommon had only consumed two drinks.

Either she’s a lightweight or she’s really racist. I’m going for really really really racist.

Collins said she began telling her friend why she “hated black people” and representing them.

Collins said Acosta-Grommon “informed” him of her position in the city and her “position in society” and that he would never amount to anything more in life, his email states.

7 Likes

I hope her counselor at the unemployment office is black…

10 Likes

As a white person, if a black person told me that she hated helping white people because we’re unappreciative dogs who wanted everything handed to us and didn’t want to work for anything, I’d have to admit she’s not wrong.

13 Likes
8 Likes
8 Likes

image

12 Likes
11 Likes

That was a powerful, well-written piece. Thanks for posting it. That last line: know it, live it.

4 Likes

Bulletproof Emmett Till Memorial Unveiled After Repeated Vandalism

11 Likes

The stories we tell ourselves matter. Many (yes, white, or at least non-Black) people have noted that they never heard about this until now. And because we’ve never told these stories, it’s been possible to largely erase the history.

14 Likes

But of course, history doesn’t matter, because we’re postracial now! So we can safely cut funding for these classes and even gut entire departments, because it doesn’t matter. /s

Today I covered Primo Levi and Alekandr Solzhenitsyn, so I talked about the holocaust (and gulags) and other forms of state sponsored violence. The biggest misconception about the holocaust was that most people were gassed to death in camps and that it was all very neat and orderly, a well-run death machine, when in reality a very large percentage of the people killed were shot outside their villages in massive pits they dug themselves. When I told the students the death toll from the Baba Yar massacre (over 33,000 people), there was an audible gasp at how many people were shot and stabbed to death in just 2 days. Stalin was right about a million being a statistic that people can easily shrug off. when you put it in those stark terms - 33,000 people shot to death over 2 days - that’s something else though.

[ETA] There are just as many misconceptions about the Jim Crow south and race relations. People constantly assume that “people didn’t know better” when there were people who were blowing the horn on this stuff for years as it was happening, that white people weren’t told how they were hurting others, and that they didn’t understand. Well, fuck that, they very much did understand. They actively participated in these kinds of atrocities right here, all in the name of some stupid fucking notion of “white purity.” Over and over again, regular, everyday people committed acts of violence against their neighbors of color, because they would much rather burn down any chance of having a working, free society than give up their tiny sliver of privilege.

17 Likes

How often have you run up against “we don’t teach that here. The kids wouldn’t be able to process it, and we don’t want complaints from offended parents” in your professional life? When my kids were in school we got that more than once over history classes, generally involving some sort of project or presentation. Yeah, my kids were trouble makers. Gotta love it.

10 Likes

Well, never, as I generally teach college… If parents came and told me what to teach (even as a lowly adjunct) I would probably literally laugh in their faces! I’ve also been teaching a dual enrollment class on a HS campus this semester, and that’s been fine, too.

Good for them! And good for you for raising trouble makers. We need more of those types in the world today.

9 Likes

Teach the true history; no matter how ugly or unpleasant.

11 Likes

From this thread:

12 Likes

I wouldn’t put it past some helicopter parents to do just that.

If you’re at a commuter campus it’s probably fine though.

7 Likes