Podcasts about 1619

1619

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Best podcasts about 1619

Latest podcast episodes about 1619

Bookworm Room's Podcast
American Thinker Takeaways, November 17, 2024

Bookworm Room's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2024 29:50


This video/podcast discusses the illegal long count in Pennsylvania, the exodus from X, the La Leche League's founder going out with a “transphobic” bang, the Antifa fan in the Secret Service, and how Britain is going pre-modern with Net Zero.

Bookworm Room's Podcast
American Thinker Takeaways, October 3, 2024

Bookworm Room's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 18:14


This video discusses a NeverTrumper who came home; JD Vance's masterful answer re abortion; the burgeoning FEMA scandal in NC; Israel does immigration and assimilation right; election interference from the DOJ; and how the left abuses religion for political ends.   0:00 - Intro 01:00 - A NeverTrumper comes home 03:34 - JD Vance's masterful answer re abortion 06:37 - The burgeoning FEMA scandal in NC 11:03 - Israel does immigration and assimilation right 13:47 - Election interference from the DOJ 15:03 - The left abuses religion for political ends

Bright Minds: from the John Adams Institute
Nikole Hannah-Jones: A New American Origin Story

Bright Minds: from the John Adams Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 68:40


Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones's 1619 project has inspired both throngs of like-minded people as well as a severe backlash. This hasn't stopped her from devoting her career to exposing systemic and institutional racism in the United States. The 1619 Project WAS published in New York Times Magazine—and is now a successful podcast and television series.So, why 1619? That was the year an English ship carrying enslaved Africans and flying the Dutch flag appeared on the horizon of Point Comfort, Virginia. It ushered in the beginning of slavery in what would become the continental U.S., bringing unprecedented anguish and hardship to the generations that followed. No aspect of American society is untouched by the centuries of slavery that ensued. From the contemporary economy to American popular music, 1619 implores us to radically rethink America as we know it.Want to learn more about the John Adams Institute? Check out our website: www.john-adams.nlSupport the show

The Realist & The Visionary
Episode 216- Leave The World Behind

The Realist & The Visionary

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 46:27


Dutch and Tena review and break down the truth in the Netflix film, Leave the World Behind.Starring Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke, and Mahershala Ali.https://www.therealistthevisionary.com

Velshi Banned Book Club
Reexamining and Reframing U.S. History with Nikole Hannah-Jones

Velshi Banned Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 14:05


“The 1619 Project”, named for the year the first enslaved African people arrived on the shores of Virginia, began as an editorial franchise for the New York Times. Since its inception, “The 1619 Project” has faced sharp criticism and relentless calls for its ban -- from school libraries, state Senates, and even from the White House. “The 1619 Project” encapsulates exactly why the books featured on Velshi Banned Book Club are targeted each and every day -- then adds footnotes and an extensive list of distinguished peer reviewers. It represents change that is not just coming – change that is already here.

The Reading Culture
Revisit - Voice Through Verse: Renée Watson on Poetry as Empowerment

The Reading Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 35:33


We revisit our episode with Renée Watson.****On Today's Show"There's just something about literally raising your voice and letting these words come out of you. That's powerful." - Renée Watson Maya Angelou was mute for six years. After a traumatizing childhood experience, the famous poet and activist retreated inward and lost her voice. In Renée Watson's kid-friendly but unflinching retelling of her story in "Maya's Song", Watson shows how poetry was the means to Maya finding her voice and going on to use it in unforgettable ways. That's the power of poetry. And that power is something that Renée is passionate about giving to kids.From incorporating poetic elements in her stories to writing entire stories in verse, Renée utilizes poetry in her writing frequently. In this episode, she joins to tell us more about how she came to believe in the power of poetry, how she makes it accessible to children, why she thinks it's so important for youth, and more.ContentsChapter 1 - Intro to Reneé (2:43)Chapter 2 - 1619 project (5:24)Chapter 3 - Knoxville, Tennessee (10:36)Chapter 4 - Telling Maya's Story (14:11)Chapter 5 - Teaching Youth Poetry (19:37)Chapter 6 - Music as a Gateway to Poetry (22:42)Chapter 7 - Writing About Portland (27:26)Chapter 8 - Sharing Joy With Ryan Hart (29:39)Chapter 9 - Library visits (32:02)Chapter 10 - Voice Through Voice (33:02)Chapter 11 - Beanstack Featured Librarian (33:54)Links https://www.reneewatson.net/ https://www.beanstack.com https://thereadingculturepod.com/renee-watson

Into America
UPDATE: Into Reparations with Nikole Hannah-Jones

Into America

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 27:57


California's official task force on reparations has delivered its final report to the state legislature.The report includes a formula for determining direct financial compensation, along with more than 100 other recommendations, including establishing universal health care, implementing rent caps in historically redlined neighborhoods, and making Election Day a paid holiday.And in their report, the authors spent a significant amount of time explaining why reparations are necessary for the descendants of enslaved Black Americans, and why the government is responsible.Three years ago, host Trymaine Lee spoke about this case for reparations with Nikole Hannah-Jones,  creator of the 1619 Project, and now, a journalism professor at Howard University. The conversation came right after Nikole published her article “What is Owed” in her role as a staff writer for the New York Times Magazine. In light of California taking one small step closer toward reparations, we're bringing back that discussion.  This podcast was originally published on June 24, 2020.  For more:California's reparations report excludes payment plan but is full of program proposalsFor two California reparations task force members, the hard work comes nextReconstructed: Birth of a Black Nation 

The Secret Teachings
TST 5/22/23 - Para-American History: Intellectual Reparations

The Secret Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 120:01


Reparations are the new abortion. Rep. Cori Bush is proposing $14-trillion in payments, equal to the entire cost of the ‘pandemic', and half of the increasing national debt. Viral videos show dark-skinned citizens demanding payments between $5 and $200 million for historical slavery. Some suggest that without these payments they will not be voting for Democrats. What a wonderful opportunity for Democrats to pay lip service to dark-skinned communities, disregarding those they offend with such a discriminatory talking point, by buying the support of black people without ever seriously making widespread payments. Buzzwords like reparations, lynching, slavery, segregation, ‘slaves built America', etc. fill the mouths of all manner of Americans ignorant of history. Reparations were paid for with the lives of countless soldiers during the Civil War and in other ways after the war, but they were restricted by Democrats and President Lincoln who in favor of preserving only Union support. Lynchings primarily targeted whites prior to the Civil War, only after targeting blacks who had been freed - even then, thousands of whites were still lynched for registering their fellow man to vote. Slavery is a universally acknowledge part of all human history, and racial slavery was created in the midst of slavery being abolition in the newly formed United States. Segregation was dominant in post-civil-war politics only to protect whites from blacks, as the idea was presented. Even the U.S. Constitution, which is called racist, was rewritten by the Confederacy to preserve race-based slavery. Only a small percent of the Southern economy was even driven by cotton, and most of that was picked by poor whites. Dark-skinned Americans also owned plenty of slaves or were wealthy and ran businesses, while many light-skinned slave owners freed their slaves and assisted them in their new living situations by providing them with land and resources.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5328407/advertisement

The Secret Teachings
BEST OF TST 11/7/22 - Blackwashing History w. Athen Walton

The Secret Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023 120:01


With important elections just hours away we are joined by public servant, award-winning actor, and student of history, Athen Walton to discuss the history of American politics. Athen will take us through the race-based identity politics of historical and modern progressivism and show how it is rooted in the post-Civil War KKK and early eugenics, long before Adolf Hitler adopted the same policies from Britain and the United States. He will likewise help us to understand how modern black folks are kept within a racially justified psychological prison and how “black culture” has nothing to do with Africa but instead is a manufacture stereotype to further degrade black communities which were devastated far more after the 1960s than in the years immediately following the abolition of slavery. In essence, modern race-based politics and welfare stands as an obstacle to true equality on the basis of a backwashed history. Find Athen on Twitter: @AthenWalton

55 Voices for Democracy podcast
Bill Wiggins on African-American History & Historically Black Colleges and Universities

55 Voices for Democracy podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 32:08


Host Tom Zoellner sat down with professor William Wiggins to discuss the ongoing importance of African-American history within the larger context of US history. Professor Wiggins has written on numerous subjects dealing with revolutionary figures and movements in U.S. history. He has taught at the University of Connecticut, St. Olaf and Allegheny Colleges, Hampton University and Columbia University, where he also served as an Assistant Dean. 

Andrew and Jerry Save The World!
Andrew and Jerry Smash The 1619 Project!

Andrew and Jerry Save The World!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 82:59


It's Lent, and Jerry and Andrew talk about their Mardi Gras celebrations.  Jerry's never been hungover, and Andrew tells the story of the time he and his brothers did an imitation of The Who at an Indiana Ramada Inn.Substantively, we're at the one year anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and it seems Joe Biden is doing his best to turn even the most-stalwart conservative supporters of Ukraine against him. Is there an end goal for the US in its involvement in Ukraine? Why hasn't Joe Biden implemented the fullest measure of sanctions?  Just what CAN the US do to thwart not only Russia's continued assault on Ukraine, but to keep the Chinese out of the conflict? And once again, Trump was right... about Russia, about German energy policy, about a host of things - yet the left is perpetuating the meme that Trump was pro-Putin.The lack of understanding of the history of US/Russia relations leads into a discussion of the implementation of diversity, equity, and inclusion ( DEI ) policies throughout the US--and the denial that Critical Race Theory ( CRT ) is being taught to US students.  There is direct harm that is being caused within US society from these divisive policies--and then there are the indirect harms, including the gaslighting of Americans.  Jerry has a brilliant insight into the fundamental flaw in the theories being advanced by the 1619 Project, one which speaks to why America is and has been a force for good, why the principles the nation was founded on are the right principles, and that America's success is due to these policies and not the addled theories of the 1619 Project.As the show starts to close, Jerry tells a poignant anecdote about a family member's student teaching experience in Washington, DC this week.  This leads into an intense discussion of whether students should be separated by academic achievement or all mixed together, and Andrew tells the story of how such a debate almost 40 years ago led him to leaving public schools, and the legacy for his childhood school system today.

The Kevin Jackson Show
Ep. 23-052 - Sounding The Alarm Bell

The Kevin Jackson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 38:40


In this episode, plans for the FBI new building shows it's twice the size of the Pentagon. Ilhan Omar booted from FAC in a close vote. Why Democrats allow treason, lies with these two beliefs.

The Laura Flanders Show
Full Conversation: Ask Angola Prison: What difference can a play make?

The Laura Flanders Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2023 40:52


Description: In 2020, the authorities at the Louisiana State Penitentiary (better known as Angola, for the former plantation on which it stands) shut down a play in the middle of a performance.  What happened in that audience of incarcerated men that got guards so concerned? That's the subject of “Angola Do You Hear Us? Voices From a Plantation Prison," (2023 Oscar Short-Listed) a new MTV documentary directed and edited by Cinque Northern (My Name is Pauli Murray) and produced by Catherine Gund. Award-winning actress and writer, Liza Jessie Peterson, (HBO's Def Poetry, Ava Duvernay's 13th), whose one-woman show was shut down that day, and Norris Henderson, a former inmate who'd worked with her to bring the show, join Laura to reflect on the intersection of art and politics, incarceration and economics, and the work of VOTE, the criminal justice reform group Henderson founded upon his release. What difference can a play make? Watch and see.The Laura Flanders Show is made possible by listeners like you!  We do not take advertising or government funding.  Please become a member today for as little as $3 a month.  Patreon supporters  receive early access to listen and download the full uncut conversation from our weekly show.Full research and reading list to further delve into the conversation is available at Patreon.com/theLFShow.

Winning Wisconsin
Chapter 8: How We See Ourselves

Winning Wisconsin

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 40:19


Each year, Texas public school students learn the story of their state's origin: the battle for the Alamo. The story has become a rallying cry throughout the ages for Texans, and Americans – It's an underdog tale of sacrifice. But, it's also not very historically accurate. In the series finale, Grace explores the danger of teaching myths as though they're fact. Teaching Texas is a new audio documentary from Wonder Media Network that uncovers the surprising history behind America's latest culture war. WMN on Twitter: @wmnmedia Grace Lynch on Twitter: @gracelynch08

The African History Network Show
1619: 403rd Anniversary of August 20th, 1619: America's History of Slavery Began

The African History Network Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 120:00


1619 Virginia: 403rd Anniversary of August 20th, 1619: America's History of Slavery Began almost 100 years Before Jamestown, Virginia; Most of what we now about 1619 is wrong; Codified Slave Laws didn't exist in the 13 Colonies in 1619; Mississippi's Jim Crow-era Felony Disenfranchisement Voting Law dating back to 1890 is ruled Constitutional. - TheAHNShow with Michael Imhotep 8-30-22 Support The African History Network through Cash App @ https://cash.app/$TheAHNShow or PayPal @ TheAHNShow@gmail.com or http://www.PayPal.me/TheAHNShow or visit http://www.TheAfricanHistoryNetwork.com. Register for our New Online Course? Class #1 Thurs. 9-8-22, 7pm EST.  https://theahn.learnworlds.com/course/ancient-kemet-moors-maafa-trans-atlantic-slave-trade-fall-2022  

The Gary DeMar Podcast
The Founding of America

The Gary DeMar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 28:37


Every Fourth of July, we celebrate the "birth of the United States," but this is not quite accurate. The nation of America was born much earlier in the colonies. Thirteen colonies with independent governments and intact constitutions were operating in 1776. Gary discusses the early history of the colonies, and how they founded their laws and constitutions on the Bible.

The Secret Teachings
The Secret Teachings 6/16/22 - White Samboism: The Weakest Lincoln

The Secret Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 120:01


Sambosim is an act in which black people embrace cultural stereotypes and a servile attitude towards white people. It would strangely seem that today whites are taking a similar view of themselves, seeing all blacks as kings and queens while they become subservient to a misplaced sense of social justice. Since some argue that a single white slave-holder means that all whites are guilty, then by logical deduction we may declare that a single white abolitionist is a cause for the abolition of white guilt. A white man did after all write the 13th Amendment. But slavery has been the conditional state of existence for virtually all people throughout history and in the United States, such a human atrocity was long ago cleansed by much suffering, war, and the blood of both black and whites. This is a bond that should unite cultures in acceptable harmony while allowing them to still maintain their history, independence, and, if by choice, seclusion, and privacy. Desirable or otherwise, attempting to classify history by current definitions, expectations, and societal norms is the condemnation of ourselves since we will all eventually fall victim in the near future to the ignorances of the present/past. The American Revolution was not fought to maintain slavery any more than the Civil War was fought exclusively to end it. History is anything but polarized and dualistic, black and white.

The New Flesh
Phillip Magness - Fauci is a Fraud

The New Flesh

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 73:55


---ARTICLES AND LINKS DISCUSSEDRead Phil Magness at the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER):https://www.aier.org/staffs/phillip-w-magness/---Phil Magness Official Website:https://philmagness.com/---Follow Phil Magness on Twitter@PhilWMagness---SUPPORT THE NEW FLESHPatreon:https://www.patreon.com/user?u=61455803---Buy Me A Coffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thenewflesh---Instagram: @thenewfleshpodcast---Twitter: @TheNewFleshpod---Follow Ricky: @ricky_allpike on InstagramFollow Jon: @thejonastro on InstagramFollow AJ: @_aj_1985 on Instagram---Logo Design by Made To Move: @made.tomove on InstagramTheme Song: Dreamdrive "Chase Dreams"

The New Flesh
Mary Grabar - Debunking the 1619 Project

The New Flesh

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 66:06


---ARTICLES AND LINKS DISCUSSEDMary Grabar's website ---Dissident Professor:https://www.dissidentprof.com/---Follow Mary Grabar on Twitter:@MaryGrabar---SUPPORT THE NEW FLESHPatreon:https://www.patreon.com/user?u=61455803---Buy Me A Coffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thenewflesh---Instagram: @thenewfleshpodcast---Twitter: @TheNewFleshpod---Follow Ricky: @ricky_allpike on InstagramFollow Jon: @thejonastro on InstagramFollow AJ: @_aj_1985 on Instagram---Logo Design by Made To Move: @made.tomove on InstagramTheme Song: Dreamdrive "Chase Dreams"

@theorypleeb critical theory &philosophy
Both Sides Get Racism Wrong - Interview with Dr. Louis Dit-Sully

@theorypleeb critical theory &philosophy

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 192:27


Pleeb interviewed Dr. Louis Dit-Sully, author of Transcending Racial Divisions: Will You Stand By Me?Buy her book here https://www.amazon.com/Transcending-Racial-Divisions-Will-Stand/dp/1789041317Pleeb is doing everything for free. If you're grateful and want to help out go sub to www.patreon.com/TheDangerousMaybe

Reframing History
6. Now What? Using the Reframing History Report and Toolkit

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 50:51


Over the course of this series, we've explored the research and recommendations of the “Making History Matter Report.” In this final installment, we'll discuss how to put the report's findings into practice with a little help from two leaders in our field: Jennifer Ortiz, Director at the Utah Division of State History, and Steve Murray, Director at the Alabama Department of Archives & History. Then AASLH's John Marks walks us through the Reframing History Toolkit and addresses some FAQs about the report. 

Joe Madison the Black Eagle
The Black History Is American History Campaign

Joe Madison the Black Eagle

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 11:48


Wade Henderson, interim president of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, explains how his organization is pushing back against state-sanctioned ignorance and why Virginia is the right place to launch the "Black History Is American History" campaign. ・・・ Learn more and share your feelings here: http://blackhistoryisamericanhistory.org/

Funny In Failure
#161: Mike Cabellon - Being Multi Faceted

Funny In Failure

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 83:17


Mike Cabellon is an actor, producer, comedian, writer & director. From performing on stages across the country to starring in some of television's most exciting sitcoms, and creating, writing, and producing award-winning digital content, Mike Cabellon is quickly cementing his name as one to watch in Hollywood. Currently he's starring as Chief Strategist Tommy Tomás in season two of NBC's hit comedy series, "Mr. Mayor," opposite Ted Danson and Holly Hunter; created by Tina Fey and Robert Carlock, so check it out. He's also been in Orange Is the New Black, High Maintenance, Crashing, New Amsterdam, Luke Cage and is an active performer, director, producer, and writer for the award-winning Story Pirates - a nationally renowned group of top comedians, musicians, best-selling authors, and incredible teachers who create exciting content that celebrates the imaginations of children. Their marquee program, the “Story Pirates Podcast” has been downloaded over 35 million times and consistently ranks in the top three for kids and family audio programming in the world, having won multiple iHeartRadio Podcast Awards, a 2020 Webby Award, and featured special guests such as Billy Eichner, Bowen Yang, Dax Shepard, John Oliver, and Lin-Manuel Miranda, to name a few. In this wide-ranging chat we talk about not having a plan B, pursuing entertainment, being a first-generation immigrant, happiness, doing improv at a young age, creativity, giving back, children's entertainment, hobbies and being fired. The video footage of this entire chat is now out as well! So check them out on YouTube under Michael Kahan Check Mike out on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mikecabellon/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikecabellon ------------------------------------------- Follow @Funny in Failure on Instagram and Facebook https://www.instagram.com/funnyinfailure/ https://www.facebook.com/funnyinfailure/ and @Michael_Kahan on Insta & Twitter to keep up to date with the latest info. https://www.instagram.com/michael_kahan/ https://twitter.com/Michael_Kahan

Reframing History
5. The New Civics

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2022 42:40


Like history, the term civics has been pulled into recent political debates. So in this episode, we're examining the role history museums and organizations can play in the new civics. How can we help our communities find meaning, a sense of belonging, and the tools they need to make their world a better place? To help answer that question, we're joined by Eric Liu, CEO of Citizen University; Melanie Adams, Director of the Anacostia Community Museum; and Caroline Klibanoff, Managing Director of Made By Us. 

Reframing History
4. Communicating the Value of Inclusive History

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 42:57


Many people–particularly those from dominant groups–tend to treat history centered on white men as the “neutral,”  depoliticized history. Everything else is considered extra or optional, and our attempts to tell a fuller story of American history are often met with backlash. In this episode, we explore a research-backed framework for engaging audiences in inclusive history (without the backsplash) through specific, place-based, solutions-focused examples. Our guests on this episode are Niya Bates, Susan Ferentinos, and Estevan Rael-Galvez. 

Reframing History
3. Making Progress Towards Justice

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 40:32


The public widely recognizes the necessity of learning from the past. But there's a catch. For most people, the meaning of "learning from society's mistakes” is inseparable from their diagnosis of society today. So in this episode, we discuss one solution to this challenge laid out in the Making History Matter report: “Emphasize how history helps us make progress toward a just world to increase recognition of history's importance.” To explore the ideas of hard history and learning from the past, we are joined by Dr. Hasan Kwame Jeffries and Heather Bruegl. 

Reframing History
2. The Case of the Misunderstood Historical Method

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 46:21


In this episode, we take a closer look at the first two recommendations in the Making History Matter Report: 1) Talk about critical thinking to shift perceptions about what history involves and 2) Compare historical interpretation to detective work to deepen understanding of historical practice. Hosts Christy Coleman and Jason Steinhauer are joined by three guests: William Convery (Minnesota Historical Society), Stacey Watson (West Kentucky Community and Technical College, The National Quilt Museum), and Sam Wineburg (Stanford University). You can learn more about the Reframing History initiative, download the report, and access transcripts for this podcast at AASLH.org/reframing history. Reframing History is produced by Better Lemon Creative Audio for the American Association for State and Local History. 

Reframing History
1. When I Say History...

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 40:49


We need a more productive public conversation about history. But how do we get on the same page? How do we promote an understanding of history that is inclusive and builds trust in the process of nuanced historical research? In this episode, hosts Christy Coleman and Jason Steinhauer break down the research and strategies in the Making History Matter report. Public historian Lacey Wilson shares her experiences developing a not-so-traditional historic house tour and how visitors reacted. Then AASLH President & CEO John Dichtl and FrameWorks Institute Lead Researcher Theresa Miller go through the research and recommendations step by step. You can learn more about the Reframing History initiative, download the report, and access transcripts for this podcast at AASLH.org/reframing history. Reframing History is produced by Better Lemon Creative Audio for the American Association for State and Local History. 

Revelations-Reflections
2nd of 6 myths about Black history including the Revolutionary War

Revelations-Reflections " A Social Media Conversation"

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 53:18


6 Historians weigh in on the biggest misconceptions about Black History including the Tuskegee experiment. Robin and I read through these 6 myths and debunk them for you, giving you the truth in the missing history that is the premise of the 1619 project that seeks to add historical content of the black experience and achievements during the slave period in America. 

The Psychology Report
BLACK HISTORY MONTH: THEIR STORY, MY STORY, YOUR STORY, AND THE FUTURE STORY OF AMERICA

The Psychology Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2022 12:53


AFRICIAN HISTORY MONTH HAS MUCH TO EACH US.  WE NEED TO STUDY ITS HISTORY AND BECOME PART OF THE FUTURE OF THE BLACK AMERICAN PEOPLE. 

Revelations-Reflections
Host and Co Host talk debunk 6 black history myths in 3 episodes

Revelations-Reflections " A Social Media Conversation"

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2022 49:08


What we found to be true: Enslaved people actively participated in the informal and formal market economy.  So much so that Elizabeth Keckley a skilled seamstress whose dresses for Abraham Lincoln's wife are displayed in Smithsonian museums, supported her enslaver's entire family and still earned enough to pay for her freedom.

The ChurchNext Podcast
Praying with African American Spirituals with Mark Bozzuti-Jones

The ChurchNext Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 34:01


If you're interested in learning more about African American Spirituals, check out books, such as Songs my Grandma Sang, by Michael Bruce Curry, Radical Welcome: Embracing God, The Other, and the Spirit of Transformation (November, 2021) by Stephanie Spellers, and the Rastafari Book of Common Prayer by Mark Bozzuti-Jones. Also check out the Spirituals Database, and the Library of Congress' collection of African American Spirituals.You might be interested in other ChurchNext classes on similar topics. Try: Spirituality and Racial Justice with Michael CurryRacism and Racial Justice with Eduardo Bonilla-SilvaWhiteness and Racial Justice with Kelly Brown DouglasTheology and Racial Justice with J. Kameron CarterReparation and Racial Justice with Jennifer HarveyRadical Welcome with Stephanie SpellersA reading from There is a Balm in Gilead:There is a balm in GileadTo make the wounded whole;There is a balm in GileadTo heal the sin-sick soul.Sometimes I feel discouraged,And think my work's in vain,But then the Holy SpiritRevives my soul again.If you cannot sing like angels,If you can't preach like Paul,You can tell the love of Jesus,And say He died for all.There is a balm in GileadTo make the wounded whole;There is a balm in GileadTo heal the sin-sick soul.Amen. 

Reframing History
Trailer: Reframing History

Reframing History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 3:00


COMING SOON: As the public debates around history grow louder, it seems there's a gap between how history practitioners understand their work and what the public thinks history is. We need a more productive public conversation about history. But how do we get on the same page? Over the course of this series, we'll be speaking to historians, history communicators, and educators from around the country about the language we use to communicate history to the public. Hosted by Christy Coleman and Jason Steinhauer, this six-part series delves deep into a new, research-backed communication framework developed by FrameWorks Institute in partnership with the American Association for State and Local History, the National Council on Public History, and the Organization for American History. Reframing History is produced by Better Lemon Creative Audio for AASLH.Our guests on this series are (in order of appearance): Lacey Wilson, John Dichtl, Theresa L. Miller, William Convery, Stacey Watson, Sam Wineburg, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Heather Bruegl, Estevan Rael-Galvez, Susan Ferentions, Niya Bates, Eric Liu, Melanie Adams, Caroline Klibanoff, Steve Murray, and Jennifer Ortiz. Download the report and learn more about this research project at https://aaslh.org/reframing-history/

In Conversation… with Frank Schaeffer

Frank Schaeffer In Conversation with Author Lisa Sharon Harper, exploring her book, Fortune, and creating experiences that bring common understanding, common commitment and common action._____LINKShttps://lisasharonharper.comhttps://freedomroad.us_____BOOKFortune: How Race Broke My Family and the World--and How to Repair It Allhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/1587435276?tag=&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1_____From Ferguson to New York, and from Germany and South Africa to Australia and Brazil, Lisa Sharon Harper leads trainings that increase clergy and community leaders' capacity to organize people of faith toward a just world. A prolific speaker, writer and activist, Ms. Harper is the founder and president of FreedomRoad.us, a consulting group dedicated to shrinking the narrative gap in our nation by designing forums and experiences that bring common understanding, common commitment and common action._____In Conversation… with Frank Schaeffer is a production of the George Bailey Morality in Public Life Fellowship. It is hosted by Frank Schaeffer, author of Fall In Love, Have Children, Stay Put, Save the Planet, Be Happy.Learn more at https://www.lovechildrenplanet.comFollow Frank on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.https://www.facebook.com/frank.schaeffer.16https://twitter.com/Frank_Schaefferhttps://www.youtube.com/c/FrankSchaefferYouTubeIn Conversation… with Frank Schaeffer PodcastApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/in-conversation-with-frank-schaeffer/id1570357787_____Support the show

History As It Happens
Slavery and the Constitution: Joseph Ellis

History As It Happens

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 52:26


This is the first episode in an occasional series that will focus on slavery, the Constitution, and the ongoing debate over the meaning of the American founding. Each new episode will feature an interview with a different historian whose expertise covers the early Republic. In a sense it may seem odd that Americans continue to argue over what the Constitution says about slavery. After all, the South's “peculiar institution” was forever abolished in 1865. But we know this is not merely an academic issue or legalistic debate. The racism that underpinned human chattel slavery in the antebellum United States persisted in new forms after the Civil War. New interpretations, from The 1619 Project on the left to 1776 Unites on the right, have emerged amid a tumultuous reckoning with the nation's past, forcing us to revisit the morally unresolvable contradictions of the founding generation. In this episode, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Joseph Ellis discusses the deliberately ambiguous manner in which the Constitution was written, so it would reflect a series of compromises over, not an immediate solution to, slavery.

History Written By The Losers
School Curricula

History Written By The Losers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 25:38


We kick off the new year by discussing the very topic that inspired us to start this podcast: school curricula in the US. The history of the history we teach is in schools is intriguing, surprising, and occasionally hilarious. Join as as we look back on it from the losers' point of view!

GZERO World with Ian Bremmer
How We Got Here: Evaluating 1619 & US History With Nikole Hannah-Jones

GZERO World with Ian Bremmer

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2021 34:45


When Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones published the “1619 Project” in 2019, not even she could have predicted its cultural impact. It's hard to think of another piece of modern journalism that has garnered such praise while also sparking such intense outrage. Now, her new book, The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story, expands upon her initial work. She joins Ian Bremmer for an in-depth look at how she's trying to reshape US history, and the backlash it has caused.  Subscribe to the GZERO World with Ian Bremmer Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred podcast platform, to receive new episodes as soon as they're published.

History As It Happens
Misunderstanding Slavery: The 1619 Project's Egregious Errors

History As It Happens

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 35:33


Amid a national debate over history curricula and the importance of racism and slavery in shaping the American past, The 1619 Project has returned in expanded book form as an immediate bestseller. With its new and longer essays packing sweeping claims about the character of our national origins, the book expands upon the project's initial, central argument: a transhistorical white supremacy defines American society. But this is pseudo-history, according to James Oakes, a preeminent scholar of slavery and nineteenth century U.S. politics. Upon reading the new 1619 Project book, Oakes explains its errors and distortions as well as its larger purpose, which is to advance an interpretation of American history through a cynical, racial lens. This lens distorts the very issues the project purports to shine light upon, namely slavery and its relationship to capitalism.

Into America
Changing the Narrative, with Nikole Hannah-Jones

Into America

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 30:21


The 1619 Project was a career-defining moment for New York Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones. Released as a standalone issue of the Times Magazine in August 2019, the project sought to reframe the American narrative, linking our country's founding to the arrival of the first enslaved Africans on the shores of Virginia.When the project was initially released it was widely praised as a much-needed corrective to a white-washed version of American history. But there was also pushback from the likes of then-President Trump and Fox News. And some of that pushback was downright nasty.This week, Penguin Random House is releasing the 1619 Project as a book, audiobook and children's book. Into America's Trymaine Lee is one of the book's contributors. He and Nikole Hannah-Jones sat down to talk about the way the project has shaped America, how it's shaped her, and the power of changing the narrative.For a transcript, please visit https://www.msnbc.com/intoamerica. Thoughts? Feedback? Story ideas? Write to us at intoamerica@nbcuni.com.Further Reading and Listening:UNC withholds tenure for "1619 Project" journalist after conservative backlashHow Trump ignited the fight over critical race theory in schoolsInto America: Into Reparations with Nikole Hannah-Jones

Dangerous Dogma
9. Lisa Sharon Harper on Racism, History, & CRT

Dangerous Dogma

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2021 59:25


Author and activist Lisa Sharon Harper, president of FreedomRoad.us, talks with Word&Way President Brian Kaylor about racism and U.S. history. She also discusses critical race theory and the '1619 Project.' Note: Don't forget to check out our subscribe e-newsletter A Public Witness that helps you make sense of faith, culture, and politics.

The SouthSide Unicorn Show
Worthy Adversary

The SouthSide Unicorn Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2021 59:44


Today is Wednesday, which means it is HUMP DAY, it is so hot, so why don't you join me and listen in as we let off a little steam together,

History As It Happens
Why Tulsa Was Forgotten

History As It Happens

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 39:54


In the past week Americans marked the anniversaries of two major events that hold different places in the common memory. One evoked feelings of honor and pride, the other shame and revulsion. June 6 was the 77th anniversary of the D-Day invasion; May 31 was the centenary of the Tulsa race massacre, one of the most violent acts of domestic terrorism in U.S. history. But unlike D-Day, the Tulsa massacre had been largely forgotten until recent efforts succeeded in drawing attention to its relevance in a nation still grappling with a legacy of racial injustice. Northwestern University historian Leslie Harris explains why it is so difficult for Americans to reckon with the darkest chapters of our past.

Bourbon Beer & Bold Conversations Podcast

While people have labored for years to add more truth to the telling of the American story, The 1619 project and Critical Race Theory are the boldest efforts yet. And the backlash to these efforts is just as bold! Join us as we try to lift some clarity out of the muddy waters of change.

Black & Blonde
Shut Up and Dribble

Black & Blonde

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2021 37:43


Two amazing humans navigate the grey as they discuss what society expects and accepts from black people. We discuss the latest controversy between UNC and Nikole Hannah-Jones and how we are more than willing watch black athletes, musicians, and entertainers but less likely to bring black people into spaces where they have a true voice - leadership, businesses, academics, politics.Support the show (https://cash.app/$blackblondepod)

History As It Happens
The 1619 Project and America's Schools

History As It Happens

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 31:33


An effort by Republican lawmakers in several states to prohibit the teaching of the New York Times' 1619 Project in public schools has reignited the debate over who controls our understanding of the past. It has also refocused attention on the project's numerous factual errors about a matter of such surpassing importance as the American Revolution. University of Virginia historian Alan Taylor shares both criticism and praise of the 1619 Project's specific claims as well as its overall aim, which is to emphasize the importance of slavery and systemic racism in American history instead of the founding principles of liberty and freedom that were, as the project's opening essay argued, betrayed by the crime of human bondage.

Conservative Conversations with ISI
Allen Guelzo, Rewriting History, Grad School, and Lincolnian Conservatism

Conservative Conversations with ISI

Play Episode Play 21 sec Highlight Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 63:30


 In this episode . . . A member question on constructive conversations despite disagreementsAllen Guelzo on where rewriting history goes wrongPractical advice for students interested in graduate school Links: Allen GuelzoThe James Madison Program1619 ProjectDr. Guelzo on the 1619 ProjectMichel FoucaultThe Mending Wall, Robert Frost Books mentioned: A People's History of the United States, Howard Zinn Lincoln: A Very Short Introduction, Allen C. GuelzoRedeeming the Great Emancipator, Allen C. GuelzoGettysburg: The Last Invasion, Allen C. GuelzoLincoln and Douglas: The Debates That Defined America, Allen C. GuelzoAbraham Lincoln: Redeemer President, Allen C. GuelzoReconstruction: A Concise History, Allen C. Guelzo1620, Peter W. WoodLand of Hope: An Invitation to the Great American Story, Wilfred M. McClayModern Europe to 1815, Peter Gay Become a part of ISI:Become a MemberSupport ISIUpcoming ISI Events

Culture and Causation
Peter Wood on The 1619 Project's War on Objectivity

Culture and Causation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 27:34


Aaron interviews Dr. Peter Wood, president of the National Association of Scholars, about the aims of the 1619 Project, what it gets wrong, and how it's part of a larger assault on objectivity.   Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever platform you prefer.   If you'd like to suggest a guest for the show or if you'd like to be on the show, email Aaron at Aaron@ObjectiveStandard.org    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/objectivestandard Twitter: https://twitter.com/ObjStdInstitute LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/objectivestandardinstitute/

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers
Biden Shows His Hand; The Distortions of the “1619 Project”

The Christian Outlook | Topics for Today's Believers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2020 40:11


The Christian Outlook – December 12, 2020 Craig Roberts talks with Brian Johnston of the National Right to Life Committee about what can be expected from a Biden Administration regarding the right to life. Dr. Albert Mohler talks about President-elect Biden’s selection of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra as Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services and the impact on religious liberty. Gino Geraci talks with Dr. Ted Palen about how the vaccines to combat COVID-19 might shape the future. Don Kroah and historian Victor Davis Hanson talk about the strain facing the nation caused by the pandemic and other protests, riots, looting, and vandalism. Georgene Rice talks with Peter Wood, author of “1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Forget Everything You Think You Know

This introductory episode invites listeners to begin the journey of self-discovery for people who identify as Black Americans or those who have ancestry in the American Slave Trade and history of terror as Black Americans within the racist system. Explore African spiritual systems, astrology, and tools for healing the trauma incurred by Black Americans.

The Quarterback DadCast
Bonus Episode - Dale Favors - Bridging the race gap as a father

The Quarterback DadCast

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 76:36


Thank you so much to our sponsor, www.catchsitkaseafoods.com for their support!  Please visit their website to enjoy the most AMAZING and FRESH fish and support a small business in Sitka who was dramatically impacted by COVID-19.  Please use promo code QBDADAK at checkout for a 15% discount.In this episode, I am BEYOND THANKFUL I had the opportunity to interview Dale Favors.  This episode was originally recorded live via Zoom where Dale and I had this conversation.  You will hear how Dale survived 9/11 as he was supposed to be in the trade center that day but wasn't.  He also educates us and helps open our minds about race, social injustice, and black history!  There are many movies on black history that he highly recommends us all to watch:Tuskegee ExperimentMississippi burning1619 projectRosewoodAdditionally, a book he highly recommends is called "Warmth of Other Suns" which I've downloaded and will be reading soon!!!  I hope you all take notes in the episode and learn from Dale as he helps us as fathers learn more about bridging the race gap and welcoming each other to become the ultimate QB of our household!