6 Facts About Racial Justice to Jumpstart Your Thanksgiving Conversations - Ben and Jerry's says, only one scoop, not two

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
Archive
--------
DRV_PiePairings_AmericoneDream_PecanPie_779x400.jpg


Thanksgiving isn’t going to be the same this year. We’ll have to trade our raucous, jam-packed gatherings at grandma’s house for a cozier celebration at home—but that doesn’t mean we can’t still have meaningful debates about racial justice and current events! Whether you’re exchanging words with close family at the dining table or inviting relatives and friends into the fray via video, you’ll want to come prepared this year with some relatively unknown but indisputably true facts to help them understand why there continue to be systems of oppression in America.

“Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America” is the new podcast we launched this year in partnership with Vox Media and our friend, Jeffery Robinson, ACLU deputy legal director. There are six amazing episodes, all inspired by the idea that we can’t change our future if we don’t understand our past. We pulled critical points from each one that will help everyone at your table, or on your screen, understand the roots of racism.

Selling Human Beings Made Our Country Rich
Episode 1:
Despite what we may have read in textbooks, slavery wasn’t just an unfortunate thing that happened in America a long time ago: America was built on slavery, on purpose—America depended on slavery. We became one of the richest nations in the history of the world because of it. We’re not taught in school that there were breeding farms for enslaved people in the South. We’re not taught that Virginia’s main export wasn’t tobacco, but human beings. Let that sink in: Selling people, enslaved human beings, was the pillar of its economy. Then consider that four out of the first five presidents of the United States came from… Virginia.

Our Election System Was Built to Maintain White Supremacy
Episode 2:
The Electoral College was devised by the Founding Fathers to maintain white supremacy. Southern states were prosperous and powerful thanks to the unpaid labor of a huge population of enslaved people. After the Revolutionary War, they wanted to stay powerful and prosperous, which meant making sure they could benefit politically from enslaved people without having to give them any rights. The solution? The three-fifths compromise. With 93% of the country’s enslaved population located in just five Southern states, this approach increased the representation of the South by 42%. The Electoral College was built upon this racist foundation, ensuring that a small number of wealthy white men would hold and wield power over the majority of the country. It still operates in much the same way.

The Land of the Enslaved and the Home of the Not-So Brave
Episode 3:
Raise your hand if you know the third verse of the “Star-Spangled Banner.” No one? That’s understandable. It’s not usually sung before sporting events, and this might be why:

“No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave
And the star spangled banner in triumph, doth wave,

O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave."

Those words were written during the War of 1812. At the time, the British were offering freedom to any enslaved people who would join them and fight against the United States. So this verse was very clearly a warning that the United States, as a matter of law enforcement, would hunt down any enslaved person who tried to escape. But there’s something more going on here. Controlling Black bodies has been part of the American project from the very beginning, not just in wartime, but all the time. Here in “the land of the free,” the very first police forces were slave patrols, rooted in “slave catching and union busting,” as they put it in the episode. The police, from their founding, have always been the enforcers of American white supremacy. We can see that right in the national anthem.

When Black People Prosper, White People Riot
Episode 4:
In America, it’s all about pulling yourself up by your bootstraps, making your own way—and making money. Unless you’re Black. Do all that while Black, and white people will resent you. Maybe even kill you. Ever hear of the 1919 Elaine, Arkansas, massacre? Black sharecroppers organizing for better pay were killed by a white mob—and, true story, while the perpetrators went unpunished, the victims were put on trial. That wasn’t the first or last time white violence erupted in this country—the Tulsa, OK, race massacre, where white mobs burned down a prosperous Black district known as “Black Wall Street” and killed 300 people, happened only two years later. Barriers to Black wealth-building remain in place to this very day.

Our Racist Healthcare System Fails Black People Starting at Birth
Episode 5:
The American healthcare system is racist and always has been. The best place to start talking about this is at the beginning: birth.
• Black women in America are three to four times more likely to die in childbirth than white women.
• In New York, they’re eight times more likely.
What is causing this huge and letal racial disparity? A study recently done in Florida provides some insight: Black newborns are more likely to survive birth if they’re cared for by Black doctors. As of 2018, only 5% of all active physicians identify as Black. Sounds to us like the lack of Black doctors is putting Black people at risk.

Mass Incarceration: The Continuation of Slavery by Another Name
Episode 6:
We all know that slavery ended with the passage of the 13th Amendment, right? Wrong. The 13th abolished slavery... “except as a punishment for crime.” That led to the passage of a slew of racist laws throughout the South, known as “Black codes,” that locked up Black people and allowed for the continuation of slavery by another name. To this very day America’s criminal justice system incarcerates Black people at alarmingly disproportionate rates, ensuring that they and their families and communities cannot build wealth, and denying them full citizenship when they return from prison. Is that evidence of a broken system? No, it’s working as intended. It’s written right into the Constitution.

It’s worth thinking about all of this, and talking about it open and honestly. In fact, we highly recommend listening to “Who We Are” in its entirety. It’ll change how you think about our country, which is what has to happen if we want to make progress. And making progress starts at the dinner table, it starts with these conversations we have with family. It’s not easy, but the more we learn about who we are as a nation, the more it becomes clear that every one of us must do the work to dismantle racism and white supremacy. It’s not enough to just be against racism—we must become anti-racist. That’s the only way we’ll secure equality and justice for all. And that would be something to truly give thanks for.
 
What retard brings up politics at the dinner table? No wonder why these people are miseravle, they don't look at family or friends as anything but converts or enemies. There ain't people, just allies to further your cause and validate you or enemies who must be destroyed and humiliated or converted. Jesus Christ, just let us eat and be merry in fucking peace...
 
Wait -- why is this author celebrating the colonizers' genocide and theft of Native land? If you are even having a Thanksgiving Dinner you are part of the problem. Cancel Ben & Jerry's.

This is why you tell people like this that you aren't having Thanksgiving dinner because of le coof and then you secretly hold one without them.
 
I would actually love it if more history was taught in schools (done properly of course), but this generation has proven time and time again that they cannot handle learning about our world without throwing temper tantrums and making it all about themselves.

Yes, history can be horrifying and completely unfair. Look at the past and look where we are now. The world isn't perfect and fair today, but it is a hell of a lot better and fairer than it was in the past. Most people today are just using history as a way to spread propaganda and get likes on twitter. If you are doing that, you have it a lot better than most people have through history.
 
You might think slavery was just a bad thing that happened in the past, but actually [INSERT REFERENCES TO BAD THINGS IN THE PAST].

Also, the only thing we have to be grateful for is something that, by my own admission, hasn't happened.


This writer is a goddam imbecile. The whole article reads like Bobby Hill's essay on pollution.

Pollution by Bobby Hill

Some people might try to tell you that pollution is good. I think they are wrong. From all the research I have done it seems to me that pollution is bad..very bad. Pollution makes the sky a funny brown color and that is bad. The only way to stop all this pollution is if we will just stop spilling oil and throwing our garbage around.
 
Last edited:
Selling Human Beings Made Our Country Rich
Are you thinking of the British Empire? Because the US didn't really export slaves.

Our Election System Was Built to Maintain White Supremacy
Um...No. The Electoral College was invented to keep a few cities from controlling the entire nation.
Our Racist Healthcare System Fails Black People Starting at Birth
Genetic differences between the races? I'm listening. Which one is better?
Mass Incarceration: The Continuation of Slavery by Another Name
I had no idea that almost as many white people as black are currently slaves in the US, how is that racist?

Nigger, you need to use your brain for more than just rewriting 'white people bad' crap.
 
This is why you tell people like this that you aren't having Thanksgiving dinner because of le coof and then you secretly hold one without them.
I hope we get an article next week from at least 1 journalist who this will happen to.
The only two coversations I want on thanksgiving are about how good the food is and "Hey cousin! How have you been?"
I like hobby disscussions too. "Oh, nice table! I can't believe you made it yourself, it looks even better than the store's!" Bitching about school is also acceptable.
 
Back