@lispi314 Yeah, OP was misleading there, that did not happen, it seems.
The "follower" (in the sense that James Hodgkinson is a Bernie Sanders follower, or David DePape is a Mike Lindell follower) was arrested and as far as I can tell possibly faces years in prison.
@lispi314 You're talking about Catherine Leavy, right? Sure, she faces all kinds of jail time if convicted. A very serious offense. (OP sort of maybe gave you the impression that Chaya Raichik made the threat? I don't think there's any evidence she made a threat or asked anyone else to.)
@neutrino78x Do I condemn Canada? What? No? But I recognize that like US, they have a significant dark part of their history. And they, like the US, have a *much* better human rights record recently than they did 200 years ago.
@neutrino78x I think you might be talking about something else. If it helps clarify, I'll note that there were no nuclear weapons during the Mexican–American war.
If it's what you're saying, I'll agree that our foreign policy was somewhat better since we got nukes than it was before – we usually at least *pretend* we're doing things for good reasons since then.
@AnonymooseGuy That's a common argument among the identity-left (which utterly dominates political discourse on instances like mastodon.social): consider some element of culture or society today, then draw some kind of tenuous BS connection back to some super racist (or otherwise oppressive) thing from the past. Then, use that to beat people over the head.
I have literally seen this argument applied to excel spreadsheets, ice cream trucks, Trader Joes, you name it. I think most people aren't buying it. 😂
However, I think Cassandra is supporting my claim here, that things are better, and getting better. See the followups for specifics.
@Raven47 "Little has changed so far." 😂
@M_U@toot.community Lincoln not being enthusiastically abolitionist doesn't support your claim that US sentiment and education haven't improved in this respect in the last 40–50 years; hopefully that is clear.
Neither does AUMF. Also I'll note we're far more isolationist today: look at the rise of Trump and others. I seriously doubt AUMF would even pass today.
@vyr This is a crude, bad faith mischaracterization of events, with a screenshot deliberately disconnecting the message from what it was replying to, in the context of a longer conversation, and then doubly mischaracterizing what said message actually says.
@TootUncommon@mstdn.party Hey I said less so in the last few decades; I'm not that old.
For me personally (and I said this elsewhere in these threads) I think things like e.g. Mexican-American war were presented a bit benignly, I feel like I should have been taught about things like Tulsa, etc. But overall not nearly as bad in this respect as the rest of the comments here are implying about US education.
@Dervishpi @TootUncommon@mstdn.party exactly. I was 80s California, things were getting better already, I guess. Although I still didn't learn about Tulsa for example – still lots of him for improvement.
@TootUncommon@mstdn.party early on that wasn't really true, I think; it was more widespread. But to your point we had a civil war (at least partly) about it, while Germany didn't.
I'm not sure how germane to OP this is, though – the point is do we teach our history honestly?
(I think we have a lot of room for improvement, but do far better than you'd think after reading this thread 😂 )
@TootUncommon@mstdn.party The myth is that US can do no wrong and our history is a beacon of righteousness in a world of brutality and suffering.
Pretty much nowhere in the US in the last few decades, I think. I was in elementary school in the 80s, I think my history classes made some wars like the Mexican–American war or Philippines look like we were the good guys, but they sure taught about slavery; not at all the experience you'd think after reading this thread.
There were textbooks used in some places like 50 years ago that try to make slavery look like a benevolent thing.
@unearth Don't we? I was trad-style homeschooled and I sure did. What do they teach you guys in public schools!
Computer programmer
"From what we can tell, Haugen works at Google. So much for "Do no evil."" – Kent Anderson