• @lugal@sopuli.xyz
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    14327 days ago

    “Fun fact”: Mount Rushmore or Six Grandfathers was a sacred mountain for the Lakota to actively disrespect their beliefs

  • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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    10327 days ago

    The history of Washingtons teeth is uncertain. The evidence that those were slave teeth seems to show that the teeth were purchased.

    Internet pictures with words are fucking dumb.

    • SpectreOP
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      27 days ago

      Washington owned slaves. He was not some moral high ground individual. The only reason why they even got independence from Britain was that Britain wanted to stop the expansion of the territory and the people in the colonies wanted to continue it and kill all the natives.

      Edit:

      In 1784, Washington paid unnamed “Negroes” for nine teeth. We don’t know the precise circumstances, says Van Horn: “The president’s decision to pay his slaves for their teeth may have been a recognition on his part that teeth were something sacrosanct and personal.” On the other hand, being enslaved meant that any economic exchange was inherently not fair.

      He literally took advantage of enslaved people to get their teeth and you consider it as just “bought”. Top tier cracker mindset. I guess that to you it was also fair for him to own his slaves because he “bought” them.

      https://daily.jstor.org/were-george-washingtons-teeth-taken-from-enslaved-people/

      • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        3727 days ago

        I didn’t suggest anything about his character, and we could probably have an entirely separate discussion about imperialism.

        What is important is how you source information when it comes to dental prosthetics.

        • SpectreOP
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          2627 days ago

          Oh please, criticizing the meme because “the teeth were bought” Is an attempt to save his caharacter. And then saying that images with words are all dumb. People can see through your attempt of white washing.

          • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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            3327 days ago

            I don’t give a fuck about his character.

            You are making assumptions about my intent or what I believe, which is a childish argument tactic.

            Again, internet pictures with words are fucking dumb. You might get a ton of likes on Facebook with that shit though.

            • SpectreOP
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              1827 days ago

              Go on a seethe, cope calling me childish or whatever your manipulation tactic is, but your attempt of white washing is obvious. I am done talking to you.

              • @hime0321@lemmy.world
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                2327 days ago

                I only see one person coping and seething. Dude has criticism about a meme because the source is questionable and you just bitch and moan. You literally put word in their mouth.

                • SpectreOP
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                  827 days ago

                  Lmao, “questionable source”, you can literally Google that in 5 seconds and see all the sources that confirm that. Now I know that memes are supposed to have sources when the users can easily Google it themselves /s. The white washing apologist just get funnier and funnier.

              • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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                1727 days ago

                Lulz, wut? I called your discussion style childish and you literally just did the same thing again.

                I could make all kinds of assumptions about your intents, and none of them good. But I don’t.

    • @loaExMachina@sh.itjust.works
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      2527 days ago

      Internet pictures with words are fucking dumb

      Memers in shambles right now. Webcomic artists, to shreds. Researchers who use diagrams with legends in their publications, pulverized. Journalists, atomised.

      A child draws a picture of his father and writes “I love you” for it is the man’s birthday. He posts the picture online.

      YOU FOOLS!

      Yells the mother, as she beats them both to death with a large brick.

      In the halls of the United Nations, an envoy reads the latest finding of his commission: “I’m afraid every character of every alphabet is ultimately a drawing.”

      “But that would mean…”

      “Yes, I’m afraid. Every text online counts as internet picture with words. Including the meeting reports that Stephanie posts on our site.” Sound of typing stops, as Stephanie looks up, aghast The discussion resumes, the tone rises and descends again, a consensus is reached. It is a hard choice, but a fair one. All the lettered people are to be buried alive.

    • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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      727 days ago

      I was at the museum at his estate on the potomac; the dentures were there. The plaque underneath claimed it was slaves.

      • @stickly@lemmy.world
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        727 days ago

        Is that not how dentures worked at the time? Any tooth you got was from someone so poor they had to sell it or who had it taken from them.

        Modern equivalent would be displaying shoes made in a sweatshop. Yeah terrible practice, but so commonplace its generally not a huge reflection on the character of the owner.

      • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        527 days ago

        Both conditions apply, was the intent. Teeth from slaves that were also purchased. My wording was unclear, sorry.

        It was so unclear, it seems that I am white washing racist now.

          • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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            527 days ago

            And that’s OK! Some people just need to blame everyone else for everything that is fucked up in their own lives. I don’t support that, but it is what it is.

        • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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          227 days ago

          I don’t mean to imply you are racist at all. Whatever it turns out the provenance of those teeth are has no bearing on whether or not you are racist.

          • @remotelove@lemmy.ca
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            427 days ago

            I was referencing another thread in this post, so it’s not you. Sorry to give the wrong impression.

  • @Cano@lemm.ee
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    8827 days ago

    Lincoln also commuted the sentence of 264 other Dakotans that had to be executed the same day. If he didn’t intervene the executions would’ve been 303

      • OBJECTION!
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        2127 days ago

        Honestly the worst thing Lincoln ever did was choosing Johnson as his VP. Even then, I learned recently that he asked a different (better) guy, Benjamin Butler, to be VP but he turned him down. Had he lived to do Reconstruction, we might have more to critique, certainly he’d have done better than Johnson (not a high bar), but since he died he’s off the hook for figuring that one out.

        You could also criticize him for not being committed enough to ending slavery from the start. But really, other than the mass hangings of the Dakotas (which could’ve been worse but was still not great), most criticism of him is just Lost Causers whining about “authoritarianism” by freeing the slaves and expanding the scope and power of the federal government as was necessary to free the slaves.

        • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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          27 days ago

          I’m not American, so I don’t really know that part of your history.

          Edit: he was assassinated for wanting to give black people citizenship is what I’m reading…?

          • @Belgdore@lemm.ee
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            927 days ago

            You are correct. The only other thing that Lincoln is criticized for is suspending habeas corpus during the US civil war. I don’t know what the person you’re commenting on is on about. They may be a confederate sympathizer.

              • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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                26 days ago

                Ah! I see now. When you said “it’s telling that while you can’t think of something cartoonishly evil he did off of the top of your head,” I thought you were saying I was ignorant for not being able to think of something cartoonishly evil. My bad, I’m just primed to read hostility on Lemmy I guess.

          • @Bldck@beehaw.org
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            727 days ago

            There’s a fascinating historical nonfiction book by Erik Larson that covers the early days of the American civil war.

            The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War is mostly focused on the soldiers and officers manning Fort Sumter in South Carolina, the site of the first battle of the war. But it also includes lengthy discussions of how Lincoln was vilified for things he never said and blamed for things he didn’t actually do.

            The southern states, specifically the landed elite, were very interested in starting a war so they could maintain their wealth and power so they used Lincoln as a scapegoat to rouse the masses

          • Captain Aggravated
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            126 days ago

            A primer on the American Civil War, as understood by a natural born citizen of the state of North Carolina and a graduate of said public state’s school system.

            The United States in the mid-1800s 1. did not yet span the entire width of the continent, this becomes important later and 2. could broadly be divided into two regions: the South, characterized by an agrarian economy featuring large plantations growing cash crops like cotton and tobacco via the labor of chattel slaves, and the North, with a more industrial economy that had abolished slave labor.

            In the North, you get a lot of the day’s moralistic movements as they existed at the time. You see a lot of the Christian sects like the shakers, the early roots of the temperance movement, and most relevantly, abolitionism. People who wanted to see slavery abolished at the federal level. This became a popular political cause in the North and you start seeing legislation proposed.

            Meanwhile in the South, slaves are where the money comes from, so obviously God says it’s the white man’s inalienable right to own black men.

            Turns out there was pretty equal representation in congress about it; about the same number of Northern to Southern states, so nothing got done. Except remember earlier I said we didn’t span the continent yet? Well that was a project under active development at the time. Territory was being purchased or conquered, and new territories were drafting constitutions and applying for statehood. And what if more pro-abolition states than anti-abolition states joined the union?

            We get a temporary pause with a compromise that states would be admitted in pairs, one free state in the North and one slave state in the South. You can still see the line they drew, the perfectly straight northern border of Arizona, New Mexico and Oklahoma. That’s why that’s like that. Notice it stops at Nevada. That’s about how far that went before war were declared.

            Southern states decided to secede from the union, forming their own nation called the Confederate States of America. The South raised an army to repel what they now saw as a foreign invasion, the North deployed their army to put down what they saw as a treasonous rebellion.

            During the conflict, the North passed increasingly abolitionist policy, culminating in the Emancipation Proclamation, an executive order signed by president Abraham Lincoln in 1863 which declared all slaves everywhere in the nation free, and the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery except as punishment for a crime (this has present day ramifications) was ratified.

            On April 14, 1865, actor and confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth assassinated Abraham Lincoln via gunshot to the back of the head while the President was enjoying a play at Ford’s theater. His motive, quoting directly from Wikipedia:

            On April 11, Booth attended Lincoln’s last speech, in which Lincoln promoted voting rights for emancipated slaves;[18] Booth said, “That means nigger citizenship. … That is the last speech he will ever give.”[19]

      • JoshCodes
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        226 days ago

        I think he was a shitty husband? From memory he didn’t cope well after one of his sons died in the civil war and took it out in his personal life. He was also horribly depressed. Not that mental health was something people even considered at that time, so it’s not like seeing a therapist was on the cards.

  • @VeryVito@lemmy.ml
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    6727 days ago

    I understand the point, but as an exercise, try to find four historical figures without glaring character defects. Eventually, I figure we’ll all be either judged or forgotten in time.

    • @argon@lemmy.today
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      We only learn about the ones with defects, because they are the most interesting. Most people in history were fine.

      One historic figure who had no known defects: Alan Turing

      • @stickly@lemmy.world
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        1326 days ago

        Its telling that your example is someone explicitly kept out of the public eye during his life. Basically any account of Turing is from personal friends or his professional work. He was a generally good person and great scientist that helped defeat the nazis, but he’s only celebrated by progressives for his persecution as a gay man.

        I struggle to find any major social cause he publicly championed or records of his views on controversial topics. I’d like to be wrong, but it’s easy to not have a mixed record as a private citizen. Nobody was grilling him to free slaves or asking his opinion on systemic injustice.

        Einstein is a contemporary comparable. He was a great scientist, opposed the nazis, and by most accounts a decent guy. He was even had to flee his homeland to escape persecution as a jew. Clearly lots of parallels. The main difference being he was an idol in his own day so we have way more first hand accounts.

        Turns out he was a socialist with varying views on communism, had shifting support for zionism and wrote rascist shit in his travel diaries. You could probably find a quote like Roosevelt’s and slap it on a picture of him, that doesn’t sum up his life.

        • luluu
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          1026 days ago

          I can tell you that Turing is not only celebrated because he was gay. That man is one of the fathers of computer science as we know it today. His Turin machines are the basis for a lot of theoretical computer science

          • @stickly@lemmy.world
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            Again, that is an incredible technical achievement but it’s not inherently good or bad. A ton of problems today come from the proliferation of tech, maybe we’d be better off if he studied something else. Coming from someone who studied and can professionally appreciate his work: it’s not exactly discovering lifesaving vaccines.

            He’s a relatable role model, especially for people who can are unfairly persecuted today. But that’s not the same as being a notable figure playing a role on the historical stage.

            Edit: I’m not mad about down votes, but disappointed nobody has provided any argument all.

            Is there any evidence that he tried to use his discovery to advance the wellbeing of the human race? Does his estate do any public outreach against the atrocities of the information age? I genuinely cannot find that. Even Alfred Nobel is still doing penance for inventing a new way to blow up rocks, and he’s been dead for nearly 130 years.

            Taken alone, creating the theoretical model for modern computer science is as laudable as inventing the internal combustion engine. Both are the innocuous roots that directly sprout to massive problems in our modern world. Not sure why that in particular needs celebration?

        • @SLVRDRGN@lemmy.world
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          226 days ago

          I’m not certain many people even know he was gay. I’ve never heard of this. Interesting info tho- thanks.

          • OBJECTION!
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            Despite his contributions, he was forced to undergo chemical castration because of his sexuality, so it’s a pretty big deal.

    • @PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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      1126 days ago

      Yeah every political leader have little oopsies like being called “town destroyer” by the people which land they invaded and towns they destroyed. They also were proud of it, used it to invade even more land, and their grandpas were also called that because it’s their family and nation thing to do for generations.

    • TacoButtPlug
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      1026 days ago

      Obama bombed a wedding of civilians not to mention hid Afghanistan casualty reports, was a part of the death of half a million Iraqi casualties, was part of the Syrian hell that targeted mainly children with fatalities at 191,000 by 2014, then there was Yemen and saber rattling on Iran and full support of Israel. Carter sadly oversaw the East Timor genocide at 25% of the population or 170,000 killed.

    • acargitz
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      I dunno Barack Obama and Jimmy Carter, seem to have been personally good people. That’s two recent US presidents. Then I guess I would add some super low hanging fruit like Nelson Mandela, Frederick the Great, John II Komnenos, any of the Five Good Emperors, Cyrus the Great, Ashoka, and one could keep going.

      EDIT: To all those pestering me about how US presidents presided over criminal imperialist policies, here is my answer from down below:

      OP talked about “glaring character defects”.

      These are policy failures and state crimes, arguably attributed to the American state as a whole, and the long term US imperialist policies, rather to the singular person of the president.

      You might have noticed that I added Frederick the Great in the list, which tells you exactly what my understanding of the challenge was.

      I’m not here to defend US imperialism, don’t @ me.

        • @Zerush@lemmy.ml
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          1026 days ago

          Without the US, the world would be much more peaceful today, most of the current wars and terrorisms are caused by US interventions, directly and indirectly.

          • @RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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            126 days ago

            That’s a claim I would LOVE for you to attempt to back up.

            Just off the top of my head I would suspect UK, French, and Soviet imperialism to have been as big if not a bigger factor than the USA.

        • @CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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          426 days ago

          That is an incredible list. Did a find for a few things I personally knew about and have always been disappointed in Obama for… and sure enough found them. First one I searched, was extending the Bush tax cuts on the rich. I remember Bill O’Reilly saying “Oh, if I have to pay taxes, I’m going to have to fire people, and that’s on Obama, so tax cuts means less jobs!” (so glad Bill got canned) and Obama just fucking caved like a spineless coward.

      • @Packet@lemmy.ml
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        Obama?? Obama??? The Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya Obama? You must be joking, right?

        • acargitz
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          OP talked about “glaring character defects”.

          These are policy failures and state crimes, arguably attributed to the American state as a whole, and the long term US imperialist policies, rather to the singular person of the president.

          You might have noticed that I added Frederick the Great in the list, which tells you exactly what my understanding of the challenge was.

      • @AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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        1226 days ago

        Obama lied to the left to gain power, that’s enough to disqualify him right there.

        Also Washington was the greatest president in our history because he willingly let go of his power. He could have been a king but he chose to step down instead to set future precedent.

        • @Wilco@lemm.ee
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          526 days ago

          Yes! Buying dentures made from slave teeth is overshadowed by the fact this man did what very few would have done by setting power aside.

          Would we get labeled by history as evil because we might have bought a product from China made in a work camp?

          • Dessalines
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            Washington was the richest man in the US at the time, and had the most to gain from indigenous eviction. The Iroquios named him “the town destroyer”, for burning down dozens of their cities. He also owned slaves and supported the institution just like most presidents after him (I think 10 presidents in a row were southern slave-holders like himself).

            And also, its the US, not China, that has slave labor camps. Just because an anti-semitic evangelical christian (adrian zenz) who works for the US government claims that China has forced labor, doesn’t make it so. These claims have been debunked over and over.

            • acargitz
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              426 days ago

              And also, its the US, not China, that has slave labor camps. Just because an anti-semitic evangelical christian (adrian zenz) who works for the US government claims that China has forced labor, doesn’t make it so. These claims have been debunked over and over.

              China has forced labour, according the the UN Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences: https://docs.un.org/en/A/HRC/51/26

              • Dessalines
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                626 days ago

                I looked that doc, and they source debunked Zenz reports, and WUC. So nothing new.

                • acargitz
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                  426 days ago

                  If the UN fucking rapporteur deems it reliable enough, and if the UN HRC hasn’t found reason to retract this report, then I have zero reason to believe some internet rando that it has been debunked. For all I know, your one liner responses are no different from pro-Zionist hasbara casting doubt on UN reports on Palestine.

            • @Wilco@lemm.ee
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              326 days ago

              No, China has forced labor camps.

              The US has prison work camps, but most prisoners don’t have to work if they dont want to, it isn’t forced.

          • @pebbles@sh.itjust.works
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            526 days ago

            Fr, like look into the companies that get you your fruits and vegetables. You can’t escape unethical consumption.

      • Cowbee [he/they]
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        1126 days ago

        Carter supported Pol Pot and Obama was a monster to people in the Middle East, neither can be considered to be “good people.”

      • @jacksilver@lemmy.world
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        526 days ago

        I mean we absolutely could call out their flaws too, someone with that much power/responsibility is going to do abhorrent things (drone strikes with Obama being an easy one to bring up). Just like the four on Mount Rushmore these things aren’t what we typically call out because they either were “of the times” or not on the same scale as their accomplishments.

        • Stern
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          726 days ago

          They called Obama the Deporter in Chief. Trump wishes he could get a nickname like that. Carter himself was a nice guy but his below average presidency led to Reagan.

        • @bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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          326 days ago

          The drone strikes thing is a bad example. If he didn’t touch it, individual combat units could use drones with impunity. He required drone strikes to be approved by his office.

          Tell me if you had the choice between sending in boots to kill a guy, or drone strike, would you really ever risk your guys getting shot?

          He added red tape, the minimum thing he could do. I’ll agree with criticism that he did the bare minimum, but all these comments about this frame it like he was horny for drones. That’s reductive and misleading.

          • @jacksilver@lemmy.world
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            326 days ago

            Your comment is exactly the point I was trying to make. The world is complex and imperfect, so anyone with the power/responsibility of a president is going to do controversial things.

            • @bane_killgrind@slrpnk.net
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              126 days ago

              Oh I get it.

              Yeah running countries is a series of shitty compromises, unless you are small enough to gain consensus.

  • @bricklove@midwest.social
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    5627 days ago

    Not pictured: the giant, shitty looking pile of rubble under them.

    They just blasted chunks off the mountain and left the mess behind

    • @Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca
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      726 days ago

      My wife and I found ourselves near Mt. Rushmore by happenstance durin a road trip several years back. We knew the history, but stopped in to see it for ourselves. We found it to be extremely shitty and underwhelming. The natural area behind the monument was incredible, and I absolutely understand why the indigenous people believed this place to be sacred, but the front was small, tacky, and depressing. I wish I could refund our admission and give it to some chill natives at a gas station instead.

        • @Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca
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          126 days ago

          Internet says there’s no admission, so I must have misremembered that part. We did look around the gift shop a bit.

          • @x00z@lemmy.world
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            226 days ago

            Sadly I wouldn’t have put it past the US.

            But yeah gift shops and stuff around it is the tourist norm.

  • IninewCrow
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    4527 days ago

    All four of them carved onto a sacred natural site known to the Plains Indigenous people of the area as the ‘Six Grandfathers’

  • @BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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    4426 days ago

    303 natives were convicted and sentenced to death following the Dakota War of 1862. Lincoln actually commuted the sentences of 264 of those natives, allowing the convictions to stand only for those he believed personally engaged in the murder of innocent women and children.

    Therefore, the last one is deliberately and intentionally misleading.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      The Dakota War came out of a strategic starvation campaign imposed by the Union Army over Sioux Territory. The original tribes had been forced off the productive soil around the Minnesota River and displaced into barren wasteland. Subsequent crop failure and long winter made trading for foodstuffs from their home territories the only means of survival. And the settlers took maximum advantage, deliberately scamming and price gouging the Sioux for the remains of their family wealth. This, after a series of treaties had been casually violated from administration to administration.

      The war was quite literally a fight for survival by the Sioux. Lincoln’s largess in hanging only the young men directly involved in the raid did nothing to prevent the Sioux population from continuing its rapid decline, as the surviving elders were left to starve to death in the wilderness and the children were forced into Christian schools notorious for brutalizing and killing the kidnapped youths.

      • @beejboytyson@lemmy.world
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        225 days ago

        OK, but america had already been established. You have to ask who were the groups that pushed those policies. AoC is part of the machine that invades countries doesn’t mean she advocates for it.

        Something stuck out to me in your response and that’s the religious aspect of the oppression.

  • @rational_lib@lemmy.world
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    3426 days ago

    Teddy Roosevelt never said “The only good indian is a dead indian.” That quote is typically associated with Philip Sheridan.

    A number of sources claim a similar quote (“I don’t go so far as to think that the only good Indians are the dead Indians, but I believe nine out of every 10 are…") alleged to be from an 1886 speech in New York, but this still goes against how he treated native americans generally and I can’t find the original speech so I’m a bit suspicious of this as well.

      • @ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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        27 days ago

        I’m picturing 200 dems walking slowly chanting “we shall overcome” on the way to brunch. George Bush is there. No one tips.

        • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          326 days ago

          And the major action item is to do some internet videos with whatever video games are popular with those millennial kids these days playing in the background. Shot in Nancy Pelosi’s beautiful home–oh nm, she doesn’t want any dirty YouTube filmographers in her home but W is willing to let them use his ranch and his copy of EA Football Game 202425. See if we can get Joe Rogan to make a guest appearance, and we’re sure to recapture the millennial under 30 crowd!

          Oh good, the corporate sponsorship money arrived, let’s split that up and go home. Don’t forget to set aside the King’s fifth!

        • TacoButtPlug
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          126 days ago

          Greg Stoker was just making fun of Chuck Schumer yelling “We will win” on the steps of (I think the treasury?) before dipping permanently.

  • @Boddhisatva@lemmy.world
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    1527 days ago

    That’s four of them. I rather think Carter was a good human being, regardless of whether or not you think he was a good president.

    • Cowbee [he/they]
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      2727 days ago

      I can’t really agree with that given how he treated Cambodia and supported the Khmer Rouge, as well as other crimes against humanity in the name of “opposing Communism.”

        • Cowbee [he/they]
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          1027 days ago

          George W. Bush’s treatment by the media in recent years in a nutshell. Thank goodness for Blowback reminding people of his atrocities.

      • TacoButtPlug
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        526 days ago

        It’s sad how lacking of recent historical context people have. They always point to Carter and it’s like… frustrating.

        • Cowbee [he/they]
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          526 days ago

          Absolutely, the media machine does a great job of “cleansing the records” on US figures.

      • OBJECTION!
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        1025 days ago

        I have never seen anybody on any platform anywhere defend Pol Pot.

        • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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          225 days ago

          I think it’s tremendously funny that you saw a list including Stalin, Putin, and Mao, and your only response was "I’ve never seen anyone defend Pol Pot.

          Proves my point, there are plenty of leaders that users of this instance think were good people.

          • OBJECTION!
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            525 days ago

            And I think it’s funny that you’re blatantly lying about what other people believe, and your response to that is, “Ha! Not every word that comes out of my mouth is a lie, only lots of them!”

  • @TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    27 days ago

    You could look at any country in the world and find leaders that were just as bad and even worse throughout history. I think the takeaway should be that shitty people exist. Some of it is a product of the times, some of it just being awful people. Shitty people have and always will exist.

    Edit: With these downvotes it almost seems like y’all thought I was defending them. I absolutely was not defending them. :)

    • Cowbee [he/they]
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      2127 days ago

      The US Empire is definitely one of the worst States to exist in history, though, consistently.

    • @GrayBackgroundMusic@lemm.ee
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      627 days ago

      This is an ml community. Anything that praises the USA or normalizes it (that is, reducing the awfulness) is gonna get down votes.

        • @argon@lemmy.today
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          126 days ago

          And then they would have removed them later. Just like all the statues of Adolf Hitler, which no longer exist.

          • @stickly@lemmy.world
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            226 days ago

            Lmao what the fuck is this take? Somebody tell Egypt to start tearing down the pyramids. There are 1000s of Roman monuments still standing that celebrate specific conquests of slavers. Why are there still statues of shitty imperial colonizers all over Europe?

            You only get your blood-monuments torn down when your state is systematically destroyed.