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160 years later, Confederate constitution an ignoble relic
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160 years later, Confederate constitution an ignoble relic
washingtontimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtontimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Violence stokers must go | Opinion
Updated Feb 04, 2021;
Kudos to the Sunday Patriot-news for calling out elected leaders like Scott Perry who are stoking hatred and violence, and also for including Becky Bennett’s answer to our deep divisions. Much work needs to be done on both fronts stopping the hatred and coexistence.
Having leaders who support unity amidst diversity, truthfulness instead of propaganda, and tolerance instead of racial hatred is a good first step. By that measure indeed, Perry and other violence stokers must go. But that will not be enough to undo the decades of learned hatred, economic insecurity and racial fears that plague our society.
The Atlantic Slave Trade Continued Illegally in America Until the Civil War Cargo was delivered to the southern states and the West Indies, but much of the shipping originated in New York Cityâin the abolitionist North.
Author:
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Cargo was delivered to the southern states and the West Indies, but much of the shipping originated in New York Cityâin the abolitionist North.
The United States transatlantic slave trade wasn’t supposed to last all the way to the Civil War. And it wasn’t supposed to be a profit center for America’s abolitionist North.
Courtesy David and Kathi Peters
Scott Hancock has been challenging Confederate sympathizers for five years. But in 2020, he said something changed.
“It was the first time I wondered if I could actually get hurt,” said Hancock, an associate professor of history and Africana Studies at Gettysburg College.
Hancock, who is Black, had made a practice of going to the Civil War-era battlefields near the college once or twice a year when he knew there would be an event to glorify the Confederacy. He and family or friends would show up with signs situating Confederate leaders in “a better, historically grounded reality,” and each time a few people would engage on the role of slavery in the war.
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