Stamped from the Beginning
By Ibram X. Kendi
My thoughts on this book are complicated. But, as I read, I noted pieces that caught my attention, validated what I already knew, or challenged my thinking. Therefore, instead of a “typical” review, here are some of my abbreviated notes:
“...minister to African souls and not challenge the enslavement of their bodies.” (33)
Monogenesis = humans ONE species vs. Polygenesis = multiple origins of human species
Christianity = more humble and better servants (74)
Enlightenment = “reason, not religion should command human affairs.” (92)
Benjamin Franklin - “racist ideas was essential to substantiating slavery.” (96)
“...loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes…” (103)
“Did (Thomas) Jefferson really believe Black people were smart in slavery and stupid in freedom?” (110)
“...they only cared about Black capabilities to make them money.” (122)
“New England’s industrial revolution...ran on the wheels of southern cotton.” (161)
“It is only as they are free, educated, enlightened, that they become a nuisance.” (187)
“When men oppress their fellowmen, the oppressor ever finds, in the character of the oppressed, a full justification for his oppression.” - Frederick Douglass (199)
“Like any racist, he dismissed the evidence that undermined his theory, and hardened his theory with evidence that supported it.” -William Lloyd Garrison (229)
“...should they be carefully civilized or rigidly segregated from whites?” -Jim Crow (268)
“If White people were racist and discriminated against Blacks, then Black people were to blame…” (294)
D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation = motion picture(s)...newest visual media by which to circulate racist ideas. (306)
“The highest aim of human existence is...the conservation of race.” -Adolph Hitler (311)
“I do not belong to the sobbing school of Negrohood who hold that nature somehow has given them a lowdown dirty deal and whose feelings are all about it.” -Zora Neale Hurston (347)
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Martin Luther King, Jr. (374)
Kerner Commission, 1968 “Our nation is moving towards two societies, one black, one white - separate and unequal.” (404)
“Those who have the power to abolish racial discrimination have not done so...and they will never be persuaded or educated to do so as long as racism benefits them in some way.” (509)
I am at once saddened at the similarities in thought to today's “divide” amongst people in the United States.
Blame.
Finger pointing.
“Found” justification.
Hate.
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