Well no. Just because one receives a benefit doesn't mean it's overall for the best. There are examples all throughout life where a person benefits from one thing even though it is on the whole for the worse.
It is entirely reasonable to say that slavery is bad even though there were some minor benefits to individuals in the course of that overall terrible institution.
The two statements are not mutually exclusive, and it's apparently very worthwhile for our education system to point that out, since so many people on here seem to overlook that.
@volkris @mloxton @InkySchwartz @cadenza
What were the benefits of slavery? The ones that are *so important* that we tell kids about they need to be outlined in the state mandated curriculum?
Why is it important that young people know that slavery "had benefits?"
Because maybe we want students of history to know more about nuances of the world, beyond the simple, often politicized black and white narratives that are as convenient for politicians as they are misleading?
Maybe it's so important that in the education system we let students know what actually happened?
What's *so important* about that? Well, honestly that seems self-evident to me as a proponent of liberal education.
YES, and the curriculum does teach that.
Like, you're on their side. You're in agreement with them. They work to teach those horrors.
You are in agreement.