Law Newly Proposed Oklahoma Law Would Force Educators To Tell Students Blacks Were Not the ‘Victims’ of Slavery or ‘Oppressed’ by Whites


In the latest conservative attack against the teaching of critical race theory in schools, an Oklahoma lawmaker has proposed new legislation that would force history teachers and educators to teach students that no one race was oppressed under slavery, and no single race was solely responsible for the evils of bringing slavery into the United States.

Marlene Lenthang of NBC News reported that the new Oklahoma House Bill, 2988, filed by state Rep. Jim Olsen “would limit how slavery is taught in schools and ban teaching that ‘one race is the unique oppressor’ or ‘victim’ in slavery’s history.”

According to Lenthang, “the bill [also] prohibits state agencies and public school districts from placing culpability on one race and teaching ‘that one race is the unique oppressor’ or ‘another race is the unique victim in the institution of slavery.’”

If that weren’t enough, Olsen’s bill also bans teaching that slavery persisted longer in the U.S. than in other countries and insists that America has no greater culpability for slavery occurring in the world than any other nation.

Not surprisingly, the bill also prohibits any teaching connected to journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times’ 1619 Project.

“Public schools that fail to comply would see the state Department of Education withhold up to 5% of their monthly state funding under the bill,” Lenthang said. “Similarly, state-supported two-year and four-year higher education institutions that fail to comply could have 10% of state funding withheld.”

In an interview with NBC affiliate KFOR, Olsen justified his bill by claiming it is designed to teach students about slavery “in balance and context.”

“It doesn’t prohibit anybody from teaching that America had slavery [or] that it was evil,” Olsen said. “It doesn’t prohibit teaching that we’re better for not having slavery.”

Still, criticism of Olsen and his proposed censorship of history has been swift from a number of areas.

In a tweet, Hannah-Jones called the bill an “anti-history memory law,” accusing Olsen and his supporters of being “opposed to truth.”

The University of Oklahoma Chapter of the American Association of University Professors also came out against the bill, calling it “disturbing.”

The group said in a statement, “[Republicans] are cranking this legislation out faster than the courts can keep up. In the meantime, we have no intention of lying to our students or bowing to this assault on truth and academic freedom.”

In an interview with KFOR, state Rep. Forrest Bennett agreed, calling Olsen’s ideas “embarrassing” and a “waste of time.”

“This doesn’t help people,” Bennett said. “It does nothing to further the conversation about race, and I think it’s an important one to have. It also distracts from so many of the other issues that are facing Oklahoma today.”

Democratic state Rep. Monroe Nichols also criticized Olsen and his bill on social media, tweeting: “Throughout history, we’ve had Holocaust deniers, 9/11 deniers, Sandy Hook deniers… don’t give Rep. Olsen too much credit for his denial and romanticizing of American slavery. He’s just joining an exclusive club of hate and division that none of us really want to be a part of.”

Olsen’s bill is just one of several racist proposals to emerge in Oklahoma in the past year. Lenthang reported that Gov. Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 1775 in May 2021, “which prohibited public school teachers from teaching that ‘one race or sex is inherently superior to another,’ or that ‘an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive.’”

Shortly after his endorsement, a group of civil rights advocates sued the state over the law, saying that it violated both students’ and teachers’ free speech.
 
In the latest conservative attack against the teaching of critical race theory in schools, an Oklahoma lawmaker has proposed new legislation that would force history teachers and educators to teach students that no one race was oppressed under slavery, and no single race was solely responsible for the evils of bringing slavery into the United States.

Marlene Lenthang of NBC News reported that the new Oklahoma House Bill, 2988, filed by state Rep. Jim Olsen “would limit how slavery is taught in schools and ban teaching that ‘one race is the unique oppressor’ or ‘victim’ in slavery’s history.”

Newly Proposed Oklahoma Law Would Force Educators To Tell Students Blacks Were Not the ‘Victims’ of Slavery or ‘Oppressed’ by Whites​

As you probably already guessed based on this thing being pushed out of the dailydot's asshole, the title of this dog shit article is completely inaccurate and does not accurately portray what the bill is proposing. The bill is merely trying to portray an even handed approach to the complex issue of slavery in the US and ban the made up historical farce known as "Critical Race Theory".

Just for example, most Black slaves were treated better than most white indentured serfs.

Turns out, enslaved employees are treated worse when they are seen as people than people who are viewed as valuable property.

Its all bad, but saying blacks were the only ones that suffered and whites didn't suffer from anything related to slavery is beyond horseshit.
 
Olsen’s bill is just one of several racist proposals to emerge in Oklahoma in the past year. Lenthang reported that Gov. Kevin Stitt signed House Bill 1775 in May 2021, “which prohibited public school teachers from teaching that ‘one race or sex is inherently superior to another,’ or that ‘an individual, by virtue of his or her race or sex, is inherently racist, sexist or oppressive.’”

Shortly after his endorsement, a group of civil rights advocates sued the state over the law, saying that it violated both students’ and teachers’ free speech.
thats kind of based from those advocates, lets see if they put their money where their mouth is and sue if some white teacher doesnt play ball with the Zeitgeist...

In a tweet, Hannah-Jones called the bill an “anti-history memory law,” accusing Olsen and his supporters of being “opposed to truth.”
somebody forgot that latinos were the biggest slave owners in the western us...
 
According to Lenthang, “the bill [also] prohibits state agencies and public school districts from placing culpability on one race and teaching ‘that one race is the unique oppressor’ or ‘another race is the unique victim in the institution of slavery.’”
That actually sounds reasonable. Here's how they spin it:
“Throughout history, we’ve had Holocaust deniers, 9/11 deniers, Sandy Hook deniers… don’t give Rep. Olsen too much credit for his denial and romanticizing of American slavery. He’s just joining an exclusive club of hate and division that none of us really want to be a part of.”
These are common tactics they use: guilt by association, strawmanning, and just telling blatant lies. There's no arguing with these people because they have already convinced themselves that you are the scum of the earth. The only appropriate response is, "Shut the fuck up, liberal."
 
Let's get some primary sources out here. The bill in question is:

Oklahoma House Bill 2988 said:
A. No state agency, school district, charter school, online instruction funded in any manner by the Oklahoma Legislature, or personnel or agent of such state agency, school district, charter school, or online instruction shall teach, use, or provide for use by any pupil any curricula, instructional materials, or assignments designed to teach components of the 1619 Project as part of any curricula, course syllabi, or instruction in any course or program of study, including:

1. Any teaching that America has more culpability, in general, than other nations for the institution of slavery;
2. That one race is the unique oppressor in the institution of slavery;
3. That another race is the unique victim in the institution of slavery;
4. That America, in general, had slavery more extensively and for a later period of time than other nations; or
5. The primary and overarching purpose for the founding of America was the initiation and perpetuation of slavery.

This seems poorly drafted, and #4 in particular seems to be denying a straight-up fact - America did abolish slavery before some major nations and after others. The article's characterization of the bill is dishonest overall though.
 
As you probably already guessed based on this thing being pushed out of the dailydot's asshole, the title of this dog shit article is completely inaccurate and does not accurately portray what the bill is proposing. The bill is merely trying to portray an even handed approach to the complex issue of slavery in the US and ban the made up historical farce known as "Critical Race Theory".

Just for example, most Black slaves were treated better than most white indentured serfs.

Turns out, enslaved employees are treated worse when they are seen as people than people who are viewed as valuable property.

Its all bad, but saying blacks were the only ones that suffered and whites didn't suffer from anything related to slavery is beyond horseshit.
This is utter bullshit lol and you are dumb for thinking it's not. Source: My ass
 
If that weren’t enough, Olsen’s bill also bans teaching that slavery persisted longer in the U.S. than in other countries and insists that America has no greater culpability for slavery occurring in the world than any other nation.
Africans are still enslaving each other 160 years after the Civil War, despite the efforts of the British and the French to teach the sub-Saharans a different way.
 
I knew before I opened the thread that what the bill actually does is ensure that broader discussions of slavery throughout history occur, rather than training kids to believe slavery only ever existed in the American context.

Black people despise being told they’re not singular in their “oppression.”

Now do “colonization.”
 
We should have educational resources for indentured servitude, the barbary slave trade, and the arab slave trade.
And child labor, and serfdom, and labor in general.

Most of the working conditions for most people throughout history were not markedly different from the working conditions of a lot of slaves in the US.
 
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