I’m starting to think it has to do with what I’m calling “two-sentence history.” Or maybe “textbook history” might work, too. A great deal of people do not seem to believe history matters unless you can explain it to them in about two sentences. Or that history outside of what would be taught in a grade-school textbook is not worth bothering with. A number of people in my earlier post pointed out that even European history is pretty shoddily written in textbooks–which is true, though it still gets a better deal than non-European history. Textbooks have historically been written with particular goals of providing an easy-to-follow and patriotic nation-supporting narrative. It’s not necessarily bad that textbooks are a specialized kind of writing–every kind of writing has some specific purpose. But too many people seem to have the attitude that any history more in-depth than that is pointless.

Note that the holder of the Two-Sentence View doesn’t just want you to be able to explain what happened in two sentences. No, you also have to be able to explain how and why what happened is of tangible relevance to Two-Sentence Viewholder right now. And then add in that what is considered “relevant” is largely determined by the narrative the viewholder was fed whenever they attended school. It’s basically a self-perpetuating cycle, with only the two sentences in their grade-school textbook ever being accepted as valid. Any new views of history are basically impossible to introduce with that sort of mindset.

https://indigenoushistory.wordpress.com/2015/02/14/the-two-sentence-view-of-history/

This seems very important to have in mind *nods nods*
indigenous-rising

(via wetmattos)

witchstock:

Like I don’t think y’all nonblack people realize that you trying to come at a black person because of their own internalized antiblackness is antiblackness. You do not have the right to critique or scold us about internalized racism, it was never/will never be your place. Thats solely for our community to do and for you to have the audacity to even try it is completely ugly.

(via labrownrecluse)

The majority of the Africans that were kidnapped from the continent of Africa were kidnapped by force and by violence through warfare, they were brought out of their villages, brought down to the coast, then put on those slave ships. In fact, no African country, no African nation in West Africa ever was a slave economy. No society in Africa, had its principle mode of production as slavery, it did not exist, that was only something that the Europeans invented and created.

Dr. Molefi Kete Asante 

“But Africans sold slaves too” - 500 Years Later - Dr. Molefi Kete Asante explains how slavery among Africans and slavery among Europeans were completely different systems and should not be used as a point to derail discussions of slavery in an attempt to revert the blame on slavery’s proliferation to Africans. 

(via afro-dominicano)

Boom! No tolerance for the intellectual dishonesty and false equalization of “well Africans had slaves too!”

(via goatwishes)

(via politicsofblackgirlidentity-dea)

We, as survivors, get the right to define what happened to us. Even if it doesn’t fit the narrative other people want, even if others would find it easier if we changed our story so it would make better sense to them, even if others want to justify what our abusers did because “they didn’t know better” or “they were hurt, too.” Even if our experiences are “too much to be real” for some and “too little to count” for others.

Survivors don’t have to listen to your opinions about abuse — via Speaking When the World Sleeps (via speakingwhentheworldsleeps)

(via astrowomyn-deactivated20150922)

sunlight-chaser:
“Rate of law enforcement killings, per million population per year, 1999-2011.
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.
Above shows that African Americans are murdered by police more...

sunlight-chaser:

Rate of law enforcement killings, per million population per year, 1999-2011.
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.

Above shows that African Americans are murdered by police more than any other race in American. And that Native Americans are the second most murdered people in America killed by cops.

the-not-here-yet:

In order for white elites in Latin America to claim the land as their own they used “mestizaje” as way to say this land is mine too because my great great grand mother was indigenous.

This is no different than when white people in the US dress up as “Native Americans” and claim it’s not racist because they are 1/18th Native America.

Different country, same bullshit.

(via yesixicana)