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On this Tuesday in Black History Month, I present Black History for White People:

youtu.be/ljVZ4BAGFeU

There are 63 episodes, plus some additional related videos:

youtube.com/@blackhistoryforwh

It is my general working theory that most of us wypipo are essentially ignorant about either huge categories of events and people in American history, or missing a huge amount of important details about events and people we think we know about from American history, or both. This series of videos aims to assume nothing, and fill in the gaps.

Honestly, it can be embarrassing sometimes to realize just how ignorant the listener stand-in character can be, but that's how we learn: put away the pride, listen by yourself if it helps, and take in the new information. And fellow wypipo, if you find that you know almost everything you hear in these videos, that's good, but it's not as if it's a huge measure of success to be proud of. It's more like you're no longer asleep (but "woke" has been turned into something like a slur), or you've opened your eyes. A good thing, but not something to brag about, in my opinion.

The concepts of un/fairness are a big deal to kids. So when #BlackHistoryMonth comes up, some kids may genuinely wonder: Why are we celebrating #BlackHistory? What about other ppl? The important context of a #history of centuries of #inequality is complicated to explain to kids but it’s necessary to discuss this early & often. If they ask, e.g. “How come there’s no White History Month?” (or hears it), here are some ideas
parents-together.org/how-come-

#BlackMastodon #Blackfedi #BlackDispora #Diversity

Missouri Is About to Kill a Man Who Witnesses Say Was 2,000 Miles Away at the Time of the Crime

"Leonard “Raheem” Taylor is scheduled for execution on Tuesday, but the state’s case against him doesn’t add up."

theintercept.com/2023/02/05/mi

#execution #missouri #antireport

This is a hard thread for me, and I suspect a hard one for most wypipo like me.

hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109

I have long considered myself someone who resists hero worship, but I also know I have a hard time letting go of positive images formed when I was young.

I don't want to let perfection stand in the way of progress, so I think it's worthwhile to celebrate the progress made by Lincoln while also being honest about his failures. Even in the whitewashed history I was taught, he bent over backwards to accommodate the enslaving southern states, and all for naught. It didn't help, and you'd think the suffering of so many people would have made it clear it never could.

But maybe that's still me, not wanting to go as far as I should in my criticism. I honestly don't know.

I appreciate the effort @mekkaokereke is going to attempting to educate people like me.

mekka okereke :verified:  
Happy #BlackHistoryMonth ! Still not talking about Black history. Still talking about white US history. Q: Why do so many Black folk call Abraham ...

Is it crazy how saying sentences backwards creates backwards sentences saying how crazy it is?

Happy #BlackHistoryMonth !

Still not talking about Black History. Still talking about white US History.

The US *loves* soldiers and veterans! Virtuous! Service! 🇺🇲🦅

The US *hates* homeless people. Lazy! Dirty! Want a handout!

But... ~1 in every 20 US homeless folk is a Black or hispanic veteran. 🤷🏿‍♂️

In the USA, the phrase "support our troops!" is a euphemism that does mean military jingoism, but doesn't mean supporting all of our troops.

AN OPEN POST TO MASTO ADMINS (boost for reach pls):

Yesterday a sizable instance (dice.camp, a TTRPG community, where I have - or HAD - many mutuals) defederated with mastodon.social (cut ties). That server then reversed that decision but the damage was done: follows had been deleted. I lost my friends there.

ADMINS: PLEASE... we (USERS) are all working hard to establish mastodon as a viable social network. This type of action fundamentally damages that effort. Even reversed, it's damaging.

For this Monday during Black History Month, I'll provide more than one video link, but we'll start with:

Moments in Black History, from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD-

These are 53 very short videos, or rather 52 very short videos with a single two-hour "A Day of Impact" presentation about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr which has more than a few moments of cringe for anybody not a an alumnus of that school.

The 52 short videos cover many common well-known events and people, as well as some I didn't know about, so my fellow wypipo might learn something new, like I have.

These aren't well-polished presentation. To be honest, most sound like school reports. But since most of us didn't learn most of this in school, that seems apt. It won't take long to catch up on a series of Black luminaries such as "Stagecoach Mary" and more recently, Smokie Norful.

For something Much More Modern, there's MKBHD, the YouTube channel of Marques Brownlee, who mostly reviews tech.

youtube.com/@mkbhd

He has been my go-to guy for a couple of years now, and I bought a car less than two months ago based entirely on his video reviewing it. I mean, I also test drove it, but that's the level of trust I have in Mr. Brownlee.

Morning Good people! It's a new day to be grateful for. Back at it. Wishing you a happy new week full of love, health and peace.✌🏾 Have a Marvelous Monday!

Dr. Mae Jemison, MD, the first black woman in space and first actual astronaut to appear on a Star Trek show, one of the very few people on this planet of whom two pictures can be posted depicting them doing their job on a spaceship with entirely different contexts.
#StarTrek #BlackHistoryMonth

Apple Music persists in forcing songs I don't want onto my New Music Mix playlist every week. This week I have a block of four (4) country songs in a row, despite hitting the thumbs-down "Suggest less like this" button on all of those for several weeks in a row now.

If I can completely reset my recommendations, I'll give Apple another chance. Otherwise I'm going to cancel my family plan and switch to Spotify, a service I considered vastly inferior right up until Apple started trying to force-feed me music I hate.

It has been more than a month since I started complaining about this publicly.

qoto.org/@pwinn/10964428001943

Instead of a source of joy, Apple Music has become a source of irritation. Celebrate your record Apple Services revenue all you want, Apple, you are about to lose my business completely.

Presenting without comment, AI model MidJourney v4's response for the prompt "Black history month."

An abolitionist designed the statue. A group of abolitionists paid for the statue. There's a plaque at the feet telling everyone what it's for. They named it the Statue of Liberty. It's arguably the largest anti-racism monument in the US, and the most recognizable anti-racism monument in the world...

Except people don't even know it's an anti-racism monument. They think it celebrates the huge influx of white immigrants from Europe that came to the US.

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The law locks up the man or woman
Who steals the goose off the common
But leaves the greater villain loose
Who steals the common from the goose.
— 17th century folk poem

"Long list with the title "In Honor of Black History Month - Black Inventors" and a photograph of four Black people next to it. Categories are "Product", "Inventor" and "Date". Contents of the list in that order:

Air Conditioning Unit: Frederick M. Jones, 1949
Almanac: Benjamin Banneker, 1791
Auto Cut-Off Switch: Granville T. Woods, 1839
Auto Fishing Device: George Cook, 1899
Baby Buggy: William H. Richardson, 1889
Biscuit Cutter: Alexander P. Ashbourne, 1875
Blood Plasma Bag: Charles Drew, 1945
Chamber Commode: Thomas Elkins, 1897
Clothes Dryer: George T. Sampson, 1971
Curtain Rod: Samuel R. Scrottron, 1892
Curtain Rod Support: William S. Grant, 1896
Door Knob: Osbourn Dorsey, 1878
Door Stop: Osbourn Dorsey, 1878
Egg Beater: Willie Johnson, 1884
Electric Lamb Bulb: Lewis Latimer, 1882
Elevator: Alexander Miles, 1867
Eye Protector: Powell Johnson, 1880
Fire Escape Ladder: Joseph W. Winters, 1878
Fire Extinguisher: Thomas Marshall, 1872
Folding Bed: Leonard C. Bailey, 1899
Folding Chair: Nathaniel Alexander, 1911
Fountain Pen: Walter B. Purvis, 1890
Furniture Caster: David A. Fisher, 1878
Gas Mask: Garrett Morgan, 1914
Golf Tee: George T. Grant, 1899
Guitar: Robert F. Fleming, Jr., 1886
Hair Brush: Lydia O. Newman, 1898
Hand Stamp: Walter B. Purvis, 1883
Ice Cream Scoop: Alfred L. Cralle, 1897
Insect Destroyer Gun: Albert C. Richardson, 1899
Ironing Board: Sarah Boone, 1887
Key Chain: Frederick J. Loudin, 1894
Lantern: Michael C. Harvey, 1884
Lawn Sprinkler: John H. Smith, 1897
Lemon Squeezer: John Thomas White, 1893
Lock: Washington A. Martin, 1893
Lubricating Cup: Elijah McCoy, 1895
Lunch Pail: James Robinson, 1887
Mail Box: Paul L. Downing, 1891
Mop: Thomas W. Stewart, 1893
Peanut Butter: George W. Carver, 1896
Pencil Sharpener: John L. Love, 1897
Record Player Arm: Joseph H. Dickinson, 1916
Rolling Pin: John W. Reed, 1864
Shampoo Headrest: Charles Orren Bailiff, 1898
Spark Plug: Edmond Berger, 1839
Stethoscope: Thomas A. Carrington, 1876
Straightening Comb: Madam C. J. Walker, 1905
Street Sweeper: Charles B. Brooks, 1890
Phone Transmitter: Granville T. Woods, 1884
Thermostat Control: Frederick M. Jones, 1960
Traffic Light: Garret Morgan, 1923
Tricycle: Matthew A. Cherry, 1886"

Thanks to @Sirablopp for the transcription!

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The unrelenting pervasive nature of white history as the default leads to most people forming unconscious ideas about roles we can each play. It is incredibly and sadly common for people to believe that white European society is the pinnacle of civilization, as evidenced by... [waves all around] Never mind that Steve Jobs' father was Syrian, clearly white people invented technology, right? Never mind that mathematics was developed far from western lands, to the point that we now study algebra, or الجبر al-jabr, developed while Europe was mired in tribal warfare.

It's a vicious cycle: if you believe that everything you see was invented by white people, then you believe that white people invented everything, because each set of false information reinforces the other.

Wypipo, open your eyes! Here's a popular meme image of just a few things invented by Black people, and the full list is so much longer. This list is so long mastodon won't let me put the entire text description in the alt tag, so I'll add it as a reply to this post.

I'm still beyond salty about the ban on AP African American history. I don't know why it isn't registering just how far out of line this is.

This is the tamest and most conventional kind of class. It's not like it's IDK a course of "Planned Shrinkage" or "US covert operations in South America" this is just... normal and I THOUGHT well established history.

This is why I never liked studying history. I just don't get the borders of the subject. It's a big mess.

Elijah McCoy was born in 1844 in Ontario to formerly-enslaved parents from Kentucky. They saved enough to send him to Scotland to study mechanical #engineering. When he returned and couldn't get work in his field, he took a job as a train oilman and invented a method of automatic lubrication that eliminated the frequent stops trains had to make to oil up axles & bearings. Railroad companies asking for his product rather than copycat devices spawned the phrase "the real McCoy." #BlackHistoryMonth

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