• @[email protected]
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    240 minutes ago

    I did learn about the Native American genocide in school.

    Are there schools where this isn’t taught?

  • @[email protected]
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    21 hour ago

    Yeah, no. We covered this in elementary school, along with Japanese internment. I grew up in a small town of almost exclusively white people, too.

  • @ChicoSuave
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    164 hours ago

    So clearly you aren’t an American. If you were American you would know about the Trail of Tears. It’s one of the landmark, pivotal chapters in American history that is actually taught: the people who were living here first were brutally repressed and removed from their own land and moved to parts of the country no one wanted, regardless of where the native people were from. So the folks who grew up around swamps on the Florida peninsula were moved to the dry, dusty wastes of Oklahoma. This is all stuff Americans learn.

    So why are you posting this? You’re just a dumb fucking troll. Go fight and be a sunflower like the rest of your ilk.

    • @WordBox
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      52 hours ago

      As what a city man might call a redneck… Even my hodunk school taught this.

  • @SeattleRain
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    22 hours ago

    No, we’re a post racial society you see uwu. And no we won’t give the land back, we didn’t steal it, our racist ancestors did, and we’re not racist.

    • @GroundedGator
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      03 hours ago

      Eventually this will get used in Florida to make sure we worship Christopher Columbus and don’t make white kids feel bad about what their great great great great grandparents did. Because somehow we can’t both acknowledge the bad and not have ancestral guilt. Oh maybe it makes white kids feel guilty because their parents are still teaching them they are better than people different from them. I think they should feel guilty.

  • @PlaidBaron
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    5 hours ago

    Yeah Im with others on this. We were taught this and all the gory details. Same with slavery. We were not sheltered from the reality of any of it.

    Just to give you some clarity, in 9th grade our teacher told us a historical account in which a slaveowner punished his slave by literally shitting in his mouth and sewing it shut.

    We were made to understand the brutality of slavery.

  • @HootinNHollerin
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    175 hours ago

    I learned about it in school in Texas, with all the deaths. You trippin

  • @shalafi
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    54 hours ago

    Reminds me of a girl I knew posting on FB, “How come they don’t have changing stations in men’s rooms, huh?!”

    LOL my god she got roasted. One guy was like, “You know $Brand you see in the bathroom? They in our bathrooms too and the company is headquartered in Tulsa. Where you’re from.”

    And yes, The Trail of Tears was covered in OK classrooms, in the 80s.

  • @[email protected]
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    266 hours ago

    I went to highschool in Utah in the 90s and it was covered pretty well… No glossing over or anything, tho I don’t remember it being in any text book, I just remembered it from regular lecture time in US history class

  • Lexam
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    126 hours ago

    We’re just going to downvote you for this ok. It happens.

  • @SlapnutsGT
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    8 hours ago

    I’m old af and I grew up in the south with most topics whitewashed but I even learned about this in school and it wasn’t sugar coated.

  • @[email protected]
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    157 hours ago

    In Canada, we devote a lot of time discussing how Europe settled the Americas and what happened to the Natives. There are daily announcements from certain school boards acknowledging that we reside on land previously belonging to a certain First Nations group. We still have a way to go in terms of the treatment of our first Nations groups, but it’s become very common knowledge how horrible European settlers were to them.

      • @ChicoSuave
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        34 hours ago

        You may want to actually read the book you’re using.

      • @Stovetop
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        448 hours ago

        That’s Canadian, the US doesn’t refer to indigenous Americans as “First Nations”. Native American is still the academic go-to south of the border.

        • @Telodzrum
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          43 hours ago

          Academic circles have preferred “American Indian” for a couple decades now. You still see “Native American” in lower-level materials (undergraduate and below), though.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 hours ago

        looks like an older Canadian textbook, not US.

        trail of tears is a centerpiece in any section on native American history in US schools.

        • @PlaidBaron
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          44 hours ago

          Yeah having lived in both countries, until recently the US was miles ahead in admitting its wrongs on Indigenous people. Things are starting to change here but I was amazed when I first moved to Canada how few knew the history.

      • @kemsat
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        55 hours ago

        Lol that fails to mention that guns were aimed at them when they “agreed.”

    • JackGreenEarth
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      24 hours ago

      It wasn’t taught in my UK primary school. I didn’t take GCSE history, so I don’t know if it was taught in secondary school. Probably not, from what I’ve heard from other people the curriculum tends to be pretty Eurocentric.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        Settlement of the new world by European migrants and colonialism are the overarching themes.

    • @rockSlayer
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      09 hours ago

      And I bet it’s because of how important the American genocides were to the concept of Lebensraum.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 hours ago

        No it’s because we are taught world history, not just that which relates to our own country.

        • @rockSlayer
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          6 hours ago

          That’s kinda my point. Nothing is in a vacuum, national history is intrinsically linked to world history, and vice versa. In this case, American atrocities are foundational for an ideology built upon atrocities. It’s good to never forget how it happened. America could use those lessons.