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Tag: slavery

  • A Black author takes a new look at Georgia’s white founder and his failed attempt to ban slavery

    A Black author takes a new look at Georgia’s white founder and his failed attempt to ban slavery

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    SAVANNAH, Ga. — Michael Thurmond thought he was reading familiar history at the burial place of Georgia’s colonial founder. Then a single sentence on a marble plaque extolling the accomplishments of James Edward Oglethorpe left him stunned speechless.

    Within a lengthy tribute to the Englishman who died in 1785, the inscription read: “He was the friend of the Oppressed Negro.”

    Oglethorpe led the expedition that established Georgia as the last of Britain’s 13 American colonies in February 1733. Thurmond, a history aficionado and the only Black member of a Georgia delegation visiting the founder’s tomb outside London, knew Oglethorpe had tried unsuccessfully to keep slaves out of the colony. Historians widely agreed he was concerned for the safety and self-sufficiency of white settlers rather than the suffering of enslaved Africans.

    Could Georgia’s white founding father possibly have been an ally to Black people in an era when the British Empire was forcing thousands into bondage?

    “It was stunning,” Thurmond recalled. ”Initially, I was consumed by disbelief. I didn’t believe it was true.”

    Thurmond would grapple with questions raised by that visit for the next 27 years, compelled to take a closer look at Oglethorpe. Now he has written a provocatively titled book: “James Oglethorpe, Father Of Georgia — A Founder’s Journey From Slave Trader to Abolitionist.”

    Published this month by the University of Georgia Press, Thurmond’s book makes a case that Oglethorpe evolved to revile slavery and, unlike most white Europeans of his time, saw the humanity in enslaved Africans. And while Oglethorpe’s efforts to prohibit slavery in Georgia ultimately failed, Thurmond argues he left a lasting — and largely uncredited — legacy by influencing early English abolitionists.

    “He is shining a spotlight on the part of Oglethorpe’s life that most people have kind of thought was just periphery,” said Stan Deaton, senior historian for the Georgia Historical Society. “I think he’s thought deeply about this. And let’s be honest, there have not been many African-Americans who have written about colonial Georgia and particularly about Oglethorpe.”

    Though this is Thurmond’s third book about Georgia history, he’s no academic. The son of a sharecropper and great-grandson of a Georgia slave, Thurmond became an attorney and has served for decades in state and local government. His 1998 election as state labor commissioner made Thurmond the first Black candidate to win statewide office in Georgia without first being appointed. He is now the elected CEO of DeKalb County, which includes portions of Atlanta.

    His book traces Oglethorpe’s origins as a wealthy Englishman who held a seat in Parliament and served as deputy governor of the slave-trading Royal African Company before departing for America. Thurmond argues that seeing the cruelty of slavery firsthand changed Oglethorpe, who returned to England and shared his views with activists who would become Britain’s first abolitionists.

    “What I tried to do is to follow the arc of his life, his evolution and development, and to weigh all of his achievements, failures and shortcomings,” Thurmond said. “Once you do that, you find that he had a uniquely important life. He helped breathe life into the movement that ultimately destroyed slavery.”

    In its early years, Georgia stood alone as Britain’s only American colony in which slavery was illegal. The ban came as the population of enslaved Africans in colonial America was nearing 150,000. Black captives were being sold in New York and Boston, and they already outnumbered white settlers in South Carolina.

    Historians have widely agreed Oglethorpe and his fellow Georgia trustees didn’t ban slavery because it was cruel to Black people. They saw slaves as a security risk with Georgia on the doorstep of Spanish Florida, which sought to free and enlist escaped slaves to help fight the British. They also feared slave labor would instill laziness among Georgia’s settlers, who were expected to tend their own modest farms.

    It didn’t last. The slave ban was widely ignored when Oglethorpe left Georgia for good in 1743, and its enforcement dwindled in his absence. By the time American colonists declared independence in 1776, slavery had been legal in Georgia for 25 years. When the Civil War began nearly a century later, Georgia’s enslaved population topped 462,000, more than any U.S. state except Virginia.

    “At best, you could say Oglethorpe was naive,” said Gerald Horne, a professor of history and African-American studies at the University of Houston and author of the book “The Counter-Revolution of 1776.” “Almost inevitably, like kudzu in the summer, slavery started spreading in Georgia.”

    Like other historians, Horne is highly skeptical of Oglethorpe being a forefather of the abolitionist movement. He says the Georgia colony ultimately protected slavery in its sister colonies by serving as a “white equivalent of the Berlin Wall” between South Carolina and Spanish Florida.

    Oglethorpe used slave labor to help build homes, streets and public squares in Savannah, the colony’s first city. Escaped slaves captured in Oglethorpe’s Georgia were returned to slaveholders. Some colonists angered by the slave ban made unproven accusations that Oglethorpe had a South Carolina plantation worked by slaves.

    Thurmond’s book openly embraces such evidence that Oglethorpe’s history with slavery was at times contradictory and unflattering. That makes his case for Oglethorpe’s evolution even stronger, said James F. Brooks, a University of Georgia history professor who wrote the book’s foreward.

    “He has engaged with the historiography in a way that is clearly the equivalent of a professional historian,” Brooks said. “This is good stuff. He’s read everything and thought about it. I don’t see any weakness in it.”

    Thurmond’s evidence includes a letter Oglethorpe wrote in 1739 that argues opening Georgia to slavery would “occasion the misery of thousands in Africa.” Thurmond describes how Oglethorpe assisted to two formerly enslaved Black men — Ayuba Suleiman Diallo and Olaudah Equiano — whose travels to England helped stir anti-slavery sentiments among white Europeans.

    Oglethorpe befriended white activists who became key figures in England’s abolitionist movement. In a 1776 letter to Granville Sharp, an attorney who fought to help former slaves retain their freedom, Oglethorpe proclaimed “Africa had produced a race of heroes” in its kings and military leaders. He also spent time with the author Hannah More, whose writings called for the abolition of slavery.

    In 1787, two years after Oglethorpe’s death, Sharp and More were among the founders of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade. Thurmond argues Oglethorpe deserves credit as an inspiration to the budding movement.

    “He founded slave-free Georgia in 1733 and, 100 years later, England abolishes slavery,” followed by the U.S. in 1865, Thurmond said. “He was a man far beyond his time.”

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  • How DC-area museums honor Black history and educate on ‘issues in the past’ – WTOP News

    How DC-area museums honor Black history and educate on ‘issues in the past’ – WTOP News

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    With so many challenges to education — learning about the institutions of slavery and the presence of Critical Race Theory in education among them — are local museums finding it hard to share critical pieces of African American history?

    A photo of the Anacostia Community Museum in Southeast portion of Washington, D.C. (Matailong Du/Smithsonian Institute)

    When you walk across D.C.’s National Mall or into the suburbs in nearby Maryland and Virginia, you’re almost certain to come across one of the dozens of museums that call this region home.

    But given the national political climate’s growing challenges to education — learning about the institution of slavery and the presence of Critical Race Theory in education among them — are these local museums changing how they share critical pieces of African American history?

    To answer this question, WTOP reached out to area museum curators at local museums across the D.C. area.

    ‘Looking at our relationship with slavery’

    Over the past 98 years of Black History Month celebrations, Prince George’s County has spent almost half a century preserving Black history. WTOP discussed that history of preservation with historian of Black history and site manager Artura Jackson with the Maryland-National Park and Planning Commission Department of Parks and Recreation for the county.

    “All of our museums throughout the parks system are working to either reinvigorate their stories — tell their stories in new, exciting and complex ways — and/or add to the story of Black history through the month of February and beyond,” Jackson said.

    As the county’s historian, Jackson said she has seen few, if any, attempts to pull away from the region’s past. She has, however, found more opportunities to acknowledge and highlight how the museums’ land and sites fit into the region’s shared story.

    “We are really going back and looking at our relationship with slavery. Many of our museums sit on sites of formerly enslaved people. … A lot of our museums that are former sites of enslavement are going back and revisiting their narratives, and their exhibitions and relationship to slavery,” she said.

    This relationship is personal for Jackson. From her perspective, Jackson said, she has learned more about the region by working alongside descendants of enslaved persons.

    “To say, ‘Hey, let’s turn this space over to you. Let’s allow you to interpret this space, let’s allow you to curate this space.’ I think that is important work. I think that is what people desire,” she said.

    She said this was especially important for visitors who, like her, are descendants of enslaved people.

    “As a descendant of an enslaved person, I know that it’s important to have autonomy over that space. The names, the streets — they reflect the white landowner. But what we tell and how we tell the story from the spaces is how they are remembered,” she told WTOP.

    Jackson said these memories can feel especially challenging for some visitors and people in her field, especially in our political climate.

    “CRT’s a very real thing for a lot of people — Critical Race Theory and the fear of it. I don’t think we’ve felt it just yet, but I think the impending fear of ‘What does it look like for historians?’ or ‘What does it look like when your profession or your occupation is being censored?’” Jackson said. “This is probably the first time in a long time that history has come under question.”

    However, Jackson told WTOP that vibrant, detailed accountings of the past are necessary, which is part of the reason why it is so important to visit local museums.

    “It’s important for people to visit local museums. We live in Washington, D.C., so you have the Smithsonian. … It’s hard to be a small museum in the shadows of this big institution, but I think it’s people’s engagement in local history, and their desire to know where they’re from, that really helps us stay alive, and to stay relevant,” she said.

    Anacostia honors ‘long, rich lineage’ year-round

    While the Smithsonian museums across the region only publicly show a fraction of their collection at a time, some smaller community museums attached to the institution are working to showcase local Black history all year.

    Over at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, senior curator Samir Meghelli said the Smithsonian Museum is continuously exploring moments in Black history despite any challenges that may arise.

    “Black History Month in particular is an opportunity to shine a light on the work that we’re always doing, and really amplify the work that we’re doing in our research, in our exhibitions, collections, public programs. To highlight particularly local Black history and culture in the Washington, D.C. region,” Meghelli said.

    He tells WTOP that its Anacostia Community Museum, which predates the federal recognition of Black History Month by some three years, remains steadfast in Smithsonian’s approach to sharing history, no matter the content.

    “The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum has been around for 57 years. I think we pride ourselves on how we’ve never wavered from our mission of telling the rich and unvarnished truth of our history in this country,” Meghelli said.

    He also said the Anacostia Community Museum is working to continue informing, inspiring and bringing communities that visit the museum together.

    “We’re not doing anything different,” Meghelli said. “We’re continuing to do that work that we’ve done for five decades.”

    As for the political climate around significant events, like the death of George Floyd, or concerns over teaching Black history, Meghelli said his museum isn’t hopeful.

    “I think, if anything, it’s really offering an opportunity. People are hungry for this history. There’s a need for it to be shared more widely, and to be embraced,” Meghelli told WTOP.

    This Black History Month, Meghelli said the museum’s building is set to close for the installation of the next exhibition. However, visitors won’t be kept in the dark through March.

    “While our building is closed for the installation of that new exhibit, we are spotlighting a new digital project,” he said, adding that the digital exhibition DC Women Speak “highlights the many hundreds of oral histories in our collections at the museum, everyday stories from local women who’ve made a difference in Washington.”

    Next month’s showing of “A Bold and Beautiful Vision” is set to explore a long, rich history of African American educators who learned or taught creatives across the District.

    Presidential history unvarnished on display at Mount Vernon

    George Washington’s Mount Vernon is among those spaces that find themselves directly connected to the namesake, grounds and lineage of a person whose history is deeply connected to the country’s past, good and bad.

    Jeremy Ray, senior director of interpretation, told WTOP that, “Of course, Mount Vernon was the home of George Washington but it was a site of enslavement. So, for us, telling the story of the history of the people who were enslaved here — early Black Americans — that’s something that we do year-round.”

    Ray told WTOP that people visiting the sites have likely seen some of the work Mount Vernon does to share the individual stories of enslaved persons around the site, and most are extremely interested in learning all of Mount Vernon’s past.

    “Predominantly, our audience is very interested in this story. We do get some people who think, ‘It should be more about George Washington,’ and some people who think ‘Hey, you should be telling more of the story of the enslaved.’ But the vast majority of our audience is just interested in learning about who these people are, how it interacts with George Washington, with early American history,” Ray said.

    Despite the political climate, Ray said, Mount Vernon also saw an increase in interested visitors looking for more parts of Black history as it connects to former President Washington.

    “As far as political climate: for us, it’s really been not so bad. It’s just continuing the kind of thirst and hunger for that information. Really, after 2020, we had more people reaching out saying ‘I don’t really know all that much and you all have so much information,’” Ray said.

    His suggestion for visitors looking to learn more about the connections between Mount Vernon and Black American history: come away with a full story.

    “It’s very easy when you’re learning about early American history to focus on stories and ideas of freedom and liberty,” Ray said. “The founders were absolutely incredible at creating systems that allow us to create a more perfect union. But in order to perfect you have to understand where there were issues in the past that weren’t that open for everybody.”

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    Ivy Lyons

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  • California lawmakers unveiled 14 reparations bills. None of them call for cash payments

    California lawmakers unveiled 14 reparations bills. None of them call for cash payments

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    The California Legislative Black Caucus on Wednesday outlined the first set of reparations for the descendants of African Americans who were enslaved in the United States, with proposals that include a call for the state to issue a formal apology, to prohibit involuntary servitude in prisons and to return property seized by governments under race-based eminent domain.

    The caucus is not yet calling for cash payments in a list of 14 reparations bills it hopes to pass this year that would enact wide-ranging reforms in education, civil rights, criminal justice, health and business.

    The package of legislation is based on recommendations issued by California’s Reparations Task Force at the conclusion of a two-year historic process to study the effects of slavery and suggest policy changes to state lawmakers.

    Assemblywoman Lori D. Wilson (D-Suisun City), chair of the California Legislative Black Caucus, said the apology is the first priority on the list of bills that she hopes will begin the conversation at the Capitol about reparations as she and her colleagues launch a campaign to educate the public about the state’s legacy of racism.

    The decision to forgo an immediate call for cash payments comes as Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers struggle to offset a budget shortfall of at least $37.9 billion. Newsom has proposed dipping into the state’s rainy-day reserves, cutting $8.5 billion from climate change initiatives and reducing more than $1.2 billion for housing programs as means to reduce spending to account for lower than expected tax revenue.

    “We started realizing with the budget environment we were going to have to do more systemic policy change to address systemic racism versus big budget asks because there just wasn’t the budget for it,” Wilson said. “Our priorities centered around policy changes or creating opportunities.”

    Newsom has echoed statements from the task force and Black lawmakers that reparations are about more than cash payments. In a recent interview, he said he finished reading through the task force’s report at the end of the year and his office is working on a detailed 30-page analysis of the recommendations that examines the work the state has already done and what more can be done.

    When asked why his budget didn’t include reparations proposals, he said he knew the Black Caucus planned to share its own list of priorities and he didn’t want to get ahead of the group’s process.

    “So we wanted to engage them,” Newsom said. “Remember, this was initiated by the Legislature. This is a partnership, and they recognize that there are a lot of things in that report they recommended that we’ve already done and that we’re doing. This gave us time to assess all that. So, it’s been actively worked on.”

    Cash payments, in particular, have struggled to earn support among California voters, according to recent opinion polls. Newsom disregarded the idea that reparations could be tough to pass in an election year.

    “That’s not been part of my thinking,” Newsom said. “My thinking is just accountability to be honest and responsible and to take seriously the recommendations.”

    Wilson described the legislative package as the first phase of a multi-year effort to pass reparations. She said she hopes educating the public about California’s role in slavery and the harm caused by racist policies will help her colleagues and Californians understand the need for the state to atone.

    The list of proposed bills the California Legislature Black Caucus wants to pass this year would do the following:

    • ACA 7 — Amend the California Constitution to permit the state to fund programs for specific groups of people that help to increase life expectancy, improve educational outcomes and lift them out of poverty.
    • ACA 8 — Amend the California Constitution to prohibit involuntary servitude for incarcerated people.
    • ACR 135 — Formally recognize and accept the state’s responsibility for the harms and atrocities of state representatives who promoted, facilitated, enforced and permitted slavery.
    • AB 1815 — Prohibit discrimination based on natural and protective hairstyles in all competitive sports within California.
    • AB 1929 — Offer competitive grants to increase enrollment of African American descendants in STEM-related career technical education.
    • AB 1975 — Offer medically supportive food and nutritional interventions as permanent Medi-Cal benefits in California.
    • AB 1986 — End the California prison system’s practice of banning books without oversight and review.

    Proposals that the caucus intends to introduce in the next two weeks would seek to:

    • Offer career education financial aid to redlined communities.
    • Restore property taken under race-based eminent domain or offer other remedies to the original owner.
    • Issue a formal apology for human rights violations and crimes against humanity on African slaves and their descendants.
    • Restrict solitary confinement in correctional detention facilities.
    • Offer state-funded grants for African American communities to decrease violence.
    • Require notification to community stakeholders before the closure of a grocery store in an underserved community.
    • Eliminate barriers to occupational licenses for people with criminal records.

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    Taryn Luna

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  • Nikki Haley Defends Cringeworthy Civil War Comments by Declaring, “I Had Black Friends Growing Up”

    Nikki Haley Defends Cringeworthy Civil War Comments by Declaring, “I Had Black Friends Growing Up”

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    January brings with it a time for resolutions, and GOP presidential hopeful Nikki Haley might want to put this one at the top of her list: come up with much better answers to questions about the Civil War. Haley came under fire last month when she said the US Civil War was over “the role of government and what the rights of the people are,” failing to mention the word slavery. She later claimed the strange omission should not be read into, stating that “of course the Civil War was about slavery.” But then, on Thursday night, her response wasn’t great—again!

    Asked about the matter at a CNN town hall, the Republican presidential hopeful said, “If you grow up in South Carolina, literally in second and third grade, you learn about slavery. You grow up and you have—you know, I had Black friends growing up. It is a very talked-about thing.”

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    Yes, Haley attempted to make her decision not to cite slavery as a cause of the Civil War better by literally saying she had Black friends.

    Not surprisingly, she was subsequently called out for that and had to defend her comments on Friday.

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    Speaking about slavery and the Civil War has been an issue for Haley in the past. While running for governor of South Carolina in 2010, she described the war as a matter of two sides fighting over “tradition” and “change,” adding that the Confederate flag was “not something that is racist.” She also insisted there was no reason to take the flag down from the statehouse grounds (though five years later, she urged state lawmakers to do so following a mass shooting at a church that left nine Black people dead). After Haley’s gaffe in December, Jaime Harrison, the chair of the Democratic National Committee, wrote that her failure to mention slavery was “not stunning if you were a Black resident in SC when she was Governor.” “Same person who said the confederate flag was about tradition & heritage and as a minority woman she was the right person to defend keeping it on state house grounds,” Harrison continued on X. “Some may have forgotten but I haven’t. Time to take off the rose colored Nikki Haley glasses folks.”

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  • Nikki Haley Backtracks on Civil War Gaffe: “Yes, I Know It Was About Slavery”

    Nikki Haley Backtracks on Civil War Gaffe: “Yes, I Know It Was About Slavery”

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    Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley retreated on Thursday from an answer she gave during a presidential town hall in New Hampshire a day earlier, in which she did not mention slavery when asked about the cause of the US Civil War.

    “Of course, the Civil War was about slavery, that’s the easy part,” Haley said on Pulse of New Hampshire, a radio show. The former UN ambassador, who removed the Confederate battle flag from the grounds of the South Carolina statehouse in 2015, said, “Yes, I know it was about slavery. I am from the South.”

    But it wasn’t easy on Wednesday, when Haley gave a stumbling, evasive answer to the question, arguing that the issue “comes down to the role of government and what the rights of the people are.”

    After her questioner said it was “astonishing” that her answer did not include the word “slavery,” Haley replied, “What do you want me to say about slavery?” Then, she quickly moved on to another question.

    “I want to nip it in the bud. Yes, we know the Civil War was about slavery,” Haley said Thursday. “But more than that, what’s the lesson in all this? That freedom matters. And individual rights and liberties matter for all people. That’s the blessing of America. That was a stain on America when we had slavery.”

    In her radio interview, Haley argued that the questioner was “definitely a Democrat plant” and accused the Joe Biden campaign of sending people to her town halls to sabotage her campaign and ensure that Donald Trump is the Republican nominee.

    The Biden campaign quickly seized on the Wednesday gaffe, and Biden himself replied to Haley’s answer in a post on X, formerly Twitter. “It was about slavery,” the president wrote.

    “I am disgusted, but I’m not surprised — this is what Black South Carolinians have come to expect from Nikki Haley, and now the rest of the country is getting to see her for who she is,” Jaime Harrison, chair of the Democratic National Committee, said in a statement.

    Ron DeSantis’s campaign also posted a video of Haley’s response, adding the comment, “Yikes.” The Florida governor, who faced criticism from some Black Republicans last summer when his state’s new history standards included a line about slaves developing skills from enslavement, said in a press conference Thursday that it was “not that difficult to identify and acknowledge the role slavery played in the Civil War.” 

    Haley is now nearly tied with DeSantis for second place in national polling, and has leapfrogged him in New Hampshire, where, according to a recent poll, she has closed to within 4 points of  Trump. Haley is hoping to peel off some of the state’s more moderate Republicans and independents, who are allowed to vote in the state’s January 23 primary.

    But the gaffe underscores both the difficulties she faces in still appealing to a largely Trumpified GOP electorate, as well as her own checkered record on the subjects of slavery and racism. 

    Haley frequently touts her decision as governor to remove the Confederate flag from the statehouse following the white supremacist shooting of 9 Black parishioners in South Carolina. But she has also frequently spoken about the flag as a symbol of Southern “heritage,” and has downplayed the existence of racism in other ways.

    Christale Spain, the chair of the South Carolina Democratic Party, called Haley’s comments “vile, but unsurprising,” adding, “The same person who refused to take down the Confederate Flag until the tragedy in Charleston, and tried to justify a Confederate History Month. She’s just as MAGA as Trump.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Nikki Haley fails to mention slavery when asked about cause of Civil War:

    Nikki Haley fails to mention slavery when asked about cause of Civil War:

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    Berlin, New Hampshire — Republican presidential candidate and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley declined to mention slavery as the cause of the Civil War during a campaign event Wednesday evening in Berlin, New Hampshire. 

    “What was the cause of the United States Civil War?” a male attendee asked Haley during the town hall. 

    The former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations appeared to be taken aback by the question and paused before answering. 

    “Well, don’t come with an easy question,” Haley joked. “I think the cause of the Civil War was basically how government was going to run, the freedoms, and what people could and couldn’t do. What do you think the cause of the Civil War was?”

    The questioner — who later identified himself to reporters off camera as “Patrick” — immediately shot back at Haley, saying he’s not the one running for president. 

    Haley attempted to further elaborate her response, but still with no mention of slavery.  

    “I think it always comes down to the role of government, and what the rights of the people are,” Haley said. “And I will always stand by the fact that I think government was intended to secure the rights and freedoms of the people. It was never meant to be all things to all people. Government doesn’t need to tell you how to live your life.” 

    When the voter followed up with Haley on why she wasn’t mentioning slavery in her response, she asked, “What do you want me to say about slavery?”

    Haley’s exchange was met with some applause from the town hall’s audience. However, the criticism was almost immediate, with many taking to social media to react, including President Biden, who tweeted late Wednesday night: “It was about slavery.”

    “This isn’t hard, condemning slavery is the baseline for anyone who wants to be President of the United States, but Nikki Haley and the rest of the MAGA GOP are choking on their words trying to rewrite history,” said Jaime Harrison, DNC chair, in a statement released to CBS News after the town hall. 

    The confrontation comes amid Haley’s growing momentum in New Hampshire, as the latest polls show she has been gaining on former President Donald Trump, something no other Republican presidential candidate has been able to do in the granite state. Earlier this month, she was endorsed by Republican New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu. 

    Throughout her campaign, Haley has championed South Carolina’s 2015 removal of the Confederate flag on the State House grounds under her tenure as governor. The removal came in the wake of the 2015 mass shooting at Mother Emanuel AME church in Charleston that killed 9 Black people. 

    As part of her stump speech, Haley often tells the story of the moments leading up to the removal. 

    “50% of South Carolinians saw the Confederate flag as heritage and tradition, the other 50% of South Carolinians saw it as slavery and hate,” Haley told Iowa voters during a town hall in Spirit Lake, Iowa, earlier this month. 

    “My job wasn’t to judge either side,” Haley said. “My job was to get them to see the best of themselves and go forward.”

    Haley often pitches to voters that “the tone at the top matters” in bringing the country together across different and sensitive issues.

    “We were able to bring that Confederate flag down,” she said in Spirit Lake. “We didn’t have riots, we had vigils. We didn’t have protests, we had hugs. And South Carolinians showed the world what strength and grace look like. That’s how you do it.”

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  • N.Y. Gov. Kathy Hochul signs controversial legislation to create slavery reparations commission

    N.Y. Gov. Kathy Hochul signs controversial legislation to create slavery reparations commission

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    Gov. Hochul signs controversial legislation to create slavery reparations commission


    Gov. Hochul signs controversial legislation to create slavery reparations commission

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    NEW YORKGov. Kathy Hochul signed racial justice legislation Tuesday morning to create a commission to consider reparations for slavery.

    For so many Black New Yorkers this is a historic step to help right the wrongs of the past.

    It’s also controversial. Hochul said she knows many state residents do not support it, but added it had to be signed.

    Six months ago, state lawmakers passed a bill that creates a state commission to examine slavery and discrimination against African-Americans. It passed 41-21 in the Senate and 106-41 in the Assembly.

    The legislation will recommend reparations to repair the ongoing impacts and lingering effects of segregation.

    Advocates say prior to the Revolutionary War there were more enslaved Africans in New York City than in other city, except for Charleston, South Carolina. The population of enslaved Africans accounted for 20% of New York’s population.

    “Let’s be clear about what reparations means. It doesn’t mean fixing the past, undoing what happened. We can’t do that. No one can. But it does mean more than giving people a simple apology 150 years later. This bill makes it possible to have a conversation, a reasoned debate about what we want the future to look like. And I can think of nothing more democratic than that,” Hochul said.

    The commission, which will operate for one year, will be made up of nine members who are experts in African or American studies, civil rights, human rights, and criminal justice.

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  • Lawsuit challenges Alabama inmate labor system as 'modern day slavery'

    Lawsuit challenges Alabama inmate labor system as 'modern day slavery'

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    MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Current and former inmates announced a lawsuit Tuesday challenging Alabama’s prison labor program as a type of “modern day slavery,” saying prisoners are forced to work for little pay — and sometimes no pay — in jobs that benefit government entities or private companies.

    The class action lawsuit also accuses the state of maintaining a discriminatory parole system with a low release rate that ensures a supply of laborers while also generating money for the state.

    “The forced labor scheme that currently exists in the Alabama prison system is the modern reincarnation of the notorious convict leasing system that replaced slavery after the Civil War,” Janet Herold, the legal director of Justice Catalyst Law, said Tuesday.

    The Alabama Department of Corrections and the Alabama attorney general’s office declined to comment on the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit accuses the state of violating the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution, anti-human trafficking laws and the Alabama Constitution.

    The lawsuit contends that the state maintains a “forced labor scheme” that coerces inmates into work. The lawsuit said those jobs include unpaid prison jobs where inmates perform tasks that help keep the facilities running. Inmates in work release might perform jobs where businesses pay minimum wage or more, but the prison system keeps 40% of a prisoner’s gross pay to defray the cost of their incarceration and also deducts fees for transportation and laundry services. The lawsuit referred to the state’s 40% reduction as a “labor-trafficking fee.”

    LaKiera Walker, who was previously incarcerated for 15 years, said she worked unpaid jobs at the prison including housekeeping and unloading trucks. She said she later worked on an inmate road crew for $2 a day and then a work release job working 12-hour shifts at a warehouse freezer for a food company. She said she and other inmates felt pressured to work even if sick.

    “If you didn’t work, you were at risk of going back to the prison or getting a disciplinary (infraction),” Walker said.

    Almireo English, a state inmate, said trustworthy prisoners perform unpaid tasks that keep prisons running so that the prison administrators could dedicate their limited staff to other functions.

    “Why would the slave master by his own free will release men on parole who aid and assist them in making their paid jobs easier and carefree,” English said.

    While the state did not comment Tuesday, the state has maintained prison and work release jobs prepare inmates for life after incarceration.

    The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ended slavery but it still allows forced labor “as a punishment for crime.” States set a variety of wages for inmate laborers, but most are low. A report from the American Civil Liberties Union research found that the average hourly wage for jobs inside prisons is about 52 cents.

    The plaintiffs included two labor unions. The lawsuit said the supply of inmate labor puts downward pressure on wages for all workers and interferes with unions’ ability to organize workers.

    Lawsuits and initiatives in other states have also questioned or targeted the use of inmate labor. Men incarcerated at Louisiana State Penitentiary in September filed a lawsuit contending they have been forced to work in the prison’s fields for little or no pay, even when temperatures soar past 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37 Celsius).

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  • Texas Group Removes Slavery Books At Ex-Slave Plantations: Report

    Texas Group Removes Slavery Books At Ex-Slave Plantations: Report

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    Around two dozen titles, including slave narratives, were removed after one white woman’s repeated complaining.

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  • Labor abuse on fishing vessels widespread, with China topping list of offenders, report says

    Labor abuse on fishing vessels widespread, with China topping list of offenders, report says

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    MIAMI — Hazardous, forced work conditions sometimes akin to slavery have been detected on nearly 500 industrial fishing vessels around the world, but identifying those responsible for abuses at sea is hampered by a lack of transparency and regulatory oversight, a new report concluded.

    The research by the Financial Transparency Coalition, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit organization that tracks illicit money flows, is the most comprehensive attempt to date to identify the companies operating vessels where tens of thousands of workers every year are estimated to be trapped in unsafe conditions.

    The report, published Wednesday, found that a quarter of vessels suspected of abusing workers are flagged to China, whose distant water fleet dominates fishing on the high seas, traditionally lawless areas beyond the jurisdiction of any single country. Vessels from Russia, Spain, Thailand, Taiwan and South Korea were also accused of mistreatment of fishers.

    ___

    This story was supported by funding from the Walton Family Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    ___

    Forced labor in the seafood industry is a rarely seen but common phenomenon, one increasingly recognized as a “widespread human rights crisis,” according to the report’s authors. The Associated Press in 2015 uncovered the plight of thousands of migrant workers from Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos who were abused while employed on Thai vessels whose catch often ended up in the United States.

    Globally, as many as 128,000 fishers face threats of violence, debt bondage, excessive overtime and other conditions indicative of forced labor, according to the U.N.’s International Labor Organization.

    U.S. and European companies are under increasing pressure to clean up supply chains in labor-intensive industries where worker abuse is widespread. The Financial Action Task Force set up by the Group of Seven wealthiest democracies has identified illegal logging and mining as a key driver of money laundering and encouraged its members to set up publicly available databases to raise awareness about the financial flows that fuel environmental crimes.

    However, the seafood industry has so far escaped the same scrutiny, in part because governments often lack the tools to regulate what takes place hundreds of miles from land. This week, President Joe Biden’s administration decided to abandon a planned expansion of the flagship Seafood Import Monitoring Program used to prevent illegal fishing and forced labor on foreign vessels, which supply about 80% of the seafood Americans eat.

    “We are once again seeing the heartbreaking reality of what is happening on some commercial fishing vessels out at sea and it’s completely unacceptable,” Beth Lowell, vice president in the U.S. for the conservation group Oceana, said about the report, which she had no role in. “Forced labor and other human rights abuses should not be the cost for a seafood dinner.”

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Tuesday that it decided to shelve the planned expansion after receiving public feedback on the proposed rule changes and would instead focus its attention on improving the impact of the current import monitoring program, which covers around 1,100 species.

    Another obstacle to transparency: offenders are frequently licensed by governments like Panama and Belize with reputations for financial secrecy and minimal oversight of their fleets. Of the vessels suspected of abuse and whose ownership could be identified by the Financial Transparency Coalition, 18% flew so-called flags of convenience companies use to avoid careful examination and hide their shareholder structure.

    The report identified two Chinese companies — ZheJiang Hairong Ocean Fisheries Co. and Pingtan Marine Enterprises — as the worst offenders, with 10 and seven vessels, respectively, accused of human rights violations. A third company, state-owned China National Fisheries Corp., had five.

    None of the companies responded to AP’s request for comment. But ZheJiang Hairong in a statement last year to the state-owned Fujian Daily claimed ownership of only five of the 10 vessels that would later appear on the Financial Transparency Coalition’s list. Pingtan last year was sanctioned by the Biden administration over allegations of illegal fishing and labor abuse. and later saw its shares delisted from the New York Stock Exchange.

    The Financial Transparency Coalition scoured government reports, media accounts and complaints by advocacy groups to come up with a list of 475 individual vessels suspected of forced labor since 2010. Of that amount, flag information was available for only about half of the total — another indication of the need for greater ownership transparency, the group says.

    AP Reporter Fu Ting in Washington, D.C., and AP researcher Wanqing Chen in Beijing contributed.

    __

    Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org or https://www.ap.org/tips/

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  • King Charles to acknowledge “painful aspects” of U.K., Kenya’s shared past on visit to the African nation

    King Charles to acknowledge “painful aspects” of U.K., Kenya’s shared past on visit to the African nation

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    Nairobi, Kenya — King Charles III is in Kenya for his first state visit to a Commonwealth country as monarch. He will acknowledge the “painful aspects” of the countries’ shared history while underscoring his commitment to an organization that’s been central to Britain’s global power since World War II.

    The four-day visit is full of symbolism. Charles’ mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, learned that she had become the U.K. monarch while visiting a game preserve in the East African nation, at the time a British colony, in 1952.

    The king and Queen Camilla touched down in the capital, Nairobi, late Monday and were given a ceremonial welcome Tuesday by Kenyan President William Ruto at State House. Charles later planted an African fern tree seedling in its lawn.

    King Charles III And Queen Camilla Visit Kenya - Day 1
    King Charles III is seen during a visit to Uhuru Gardens National Monument and Museum, Oct. 31, 2023 in Nairobi, Kenya.

    Tim Rooke/Pool/Samir Hussein/WireImage


    The royal couple also visited the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior at gardens named Uhuru, which is Swahili for freedom. The king and Ruto laid wreaths, then proceeded to the site of the declaration of Kenya’s independence in 1963.

    Comments by the king and Kenya’s president were not immediately made available.

    Kenya is celebrating the 60th anniversary of its independence this year. It and Britain have enjoyed a close and sometimes challenging relationship after the prolonged struggle against colonial rule, sometimes known as the Mau Mau Rebellion, in which thousands of Kenyans died.


    Queen Elizabeth II’s death revives criticism of the monarchy’s colonial past and role in the slave trade

    05:10

    Colonial authorities resorted to executions and detention without trial as they tried to put down the insurrection, and thousands of Kenyans said they were beaten and sexually assaulted by agents of the administration.

    The British High Commission said Charles would “meet veterans and give his blessing to efforts by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to ensure Kenyans and Africans who supported British efforts in the World Wars are properly commemorated.”

    Salim David Nganga, 64, speaking in Jevanjee Gardens in Nairobi, where colonial statues were brought down in 2020, said the king ought to apologize to Kenyans first.

    “The king should never have been allowed to step in this country, considering the dark history of British colonialists,” he said.


    Prince Harry book reignites conversation about monarchy’s connection to slave trade

    03:53

    The king’s visit reignited some tensions over land in parts of Kenya.

    Joel Kimutai Kimetto, 74, said his grandfather and father were kicked out of their ancestral home by the British.

    “What is most painful is that years after the brutalities and the stealing of our land, British companies are still in possession of our ancestral homes, earning millions from their comfortable headquarters in the U.K., while our people remain squatters,” he told the AP in a phone interview. “We ask President William Ruto and our leaders to use this golden opportunity to address our plight with the king.”

    Elsewhere, a planned protest and press conference by victims of a fire at a conservancy in central Kenya that was allegedly started by British soldiers in training was cancelled ahead of the king’s visit.

    The king also plans to visit Nairobi National Park and meet with environmental activist Wanjira Mathai, the daughter of late Nobel laureate Wangari Maathai, as he emphasizes his commitment to environmental protection.

    The royal family has long ties to Africa. In 1947, the future queen pledged lifelong service to Britain and the Commonwealth during a speech from South Africa on her 21st birthday. Five years later, she and her late husband Prince Philip were visiting Aberdare National Park in Kenya when they learned that her father had died and she had become queen.

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  • South Korean scholar acquitted of defaming sexual slavery victims during Japan colonial rule

    South Korean scholar acquitted of defaming sexual slavery victims during Japan colonial rule

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    SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea’s top court on Thursday cleared a scholar of charges of defaming the Korean victims of sexual slavery during Japanese colonial rule, in a contentious book published in 2013.

    Thursday’s ruling in the criminal case of Park Yu-ha isn’t the end of her long-running legal battle, as she faces a separate civil suit. She’s suffered harsh public criticism over her book “Comfort Women of the Empire,” triggering debates over the scope of freedom of speech in South Korea.

    In 2017, the Seoul High Court fined Park, an emeritus professor at Seoul’s Sejong University, 10 million won ($7,360) over some of the expressions she used in her book to describe Korean women who were forced to serve as sex slaves for Japan’s troops during the first half of the 20th century.

    But the Supreme Court ruled Thursday it was difficult to determine those expressions constituted criminal defamation, saying it was more appropriate to assess them as Park’s academic arguments or expression of her personal opinions.

    The court said that “restrictions on the freedom of academic expressions must be minimal.” It still said that when scholars publicize their studies, they must strive to protect others’ privacy and dignity and to respect their freedom and rights to self-determination.

    Prosecutors and Park’s critics earlier accused her of defaming ex-sex slaves by writing that they were proud of their jobs and had comrade-like relationships with Japanese soldiers while the Japanese military wasn’t officially involved in the forceful mobilization of sex slaves.

    The Supreme Court said it sent Park’s case back to the Seoul High Court to make a new ruling on her. The procedure means that Park will be declared not guilty at the high court unless new evidence against her come out, according to Supreme Court officials.

    Park welcomed the ruling. “I think today’s verdict is a ruling that determines whether the freedom of thought exists in Republic of Korea,” she wrote on Facebook.

    In a separate civil suit, a Seoul district court in 2016 ordered Park to pay 10 million won ($7,360) each to nine of the ex-Korean sex slaves who sued her. An appellate trial on that case is still under way, according to media reports.

    Sexual slavery is a highly emotional issue in South Korea, where many still harbor strong resentment against the 1910-45 Japanese colonial occupation.

    Historians say tens of thousands of women from around Asia, many of them Korean, were sent to front-line military brothels to provide sex to Japanese soldiers. The term “comfort women,” which was used in the title of Park’s book, is an euphemism for the sex slaves.

    Japan issued an apolog y in 1993 after a government investigation concluded many women were taken against their will and “lived in misery under a coercive atmosphere.” However, there has been a strong backlash from South Korea and elsewhere to comments by Japanese politicians who speak about a lack of documentary proof the women were forcibly recruited, in an apparent attempt to gloss over Tokyo’s wartime atrocities.

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  • How indigo, a largely forgotten crop, brings together South Carolina’s past and present

    How indigo, a largely forgotten crop, brings together South Carolina’s past and present

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    Indigo’s impact on South Carolina’s past, present


    How indigo brings together South Carolina’s past and present

    02:07

    Charleston, South Carolina — Sheena Myers makes her indigo soap knowing nothing can scrub away South Carolina’s past.

    “There’s a whole history behind what I’m doing,” Myers told CBS News. “…It’s real deep.” 

    Indigo dye’s beautiful color is shrouded by an ugly history. In the mid-1700s, wealthy South Carolina planters called it “blue gold,” a labor-intensive cash crop produced by the sweat of enslaved people. 

    For Myers, it’s personal. Among those enslaved indigo workers was her great-great-grandmother.

    Her indigo company, Genotype, sells skincare and medicinal products for psoriasis, peptic ulcers and bronchitis, with annual sales topping $1 million.    

    “Because they were humiliated, and now I’m being honored” Myers said. “And me being honored is like I’m honoring them as well. I don’t think they ever would have thought in a million years they would have a descendant creating things like this.”

    Down the road, Precious Jennings grows indigo to process its natural dye powder, a farm-to-fabric process that is like digging for healing through the dirt of a former plantation.

    “Every day I come onto this land, I honor and think about and give gratitude to the people that were here and enslaved on this land,” Jennings said.

    Myers wants to pass her business, and family history, to her three sons. 

    “If they keep this business alive, it won’t disappear,” Myers said, hoping to grow a new indigo legacy that is rich in humility.  

    “It will continue,” Myers said. 

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  • Cuba says ‘human trafficking network’ is sending its nationals to fight for Russia in Ukraine | CNN

    Cuba says ‘human trafficking network’ is sending its nationals to fight for Russia in Ukraine | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Cuba says it has uncovered a human trafficking network operating from Russia that is recruiting Cubans to fight for their longstanding ally in Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

    Cubans living in Russia and “even some in Cuba” had been trafficked and “incorporated into the military forces taking part in the war in Ukraine,” the Cuban foreign ministry said Monday in a statement.

    The ministry gave few details about the alleged trafficking operations, but said that authorities were working to “neutralize and dismantle” the network.

    There were no reports of any arrests of people allegedly involved in the trafficking operation. In September, reports surfaced on social media of Cubans who said they were serving in Russia’s armed forces but that they had been tricked into joining the war effort and mistreated when they refused to fight. CNN was not able to independently verify those allegations, and it is not clear how many Cubans may be fighting for Russia.

    Cuba stressed in its statement that it “is not part of the war in Ukraine.” The Kremlin has not commented on the allegations.

    The report comes amid efforts by Russia to boost its forces in Ukraine, which have suffered heavy losses on the battlefield, and with the future of the mercenary Wagner Group in doubt.

    Moscow announced a plan earlier this year to increase the strength of the Russian armed forces by 30% to 1.5 million servicemen. In July, the Russian state Duma voted to extend the military draft age to include citizens from 18 to 30 years old, up from 27.

    For much of the conflict, the official Russian army has been bolstered by mercenaries contracted to Wagner. But after the death of the group’s chief Yevgeny Prigozhin, who led his troops in an aborted mutiny against Moscow in June, it is unclear whether Russia will rely on Wagner forces to wage its war in Ukraine.

    Cuba was a major ally of the Soviet Union during the Cold War, and relations between Havana and Moscow have remained cozy since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Cuba has been a staunch defender of Russia’s war on the country, blaming the US and NATO for the conflict. As Cuba grapples with its worse economic crisis in decades, Russia has supplied the communist-run island with badly needed food and shipments of crude oil. Since the war began the two nations have signed a flurry of agreements promising increased Russian foreign investment in Cuba.

    In a rare interview in May, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel told Russian state-controlled network RT that Cuba condemned “the expansion of NATO towards Russia’s borders,” echoing one of the Kremlin’s justifications for its brutal war.

    Diaz-Canel visited Moscow in November last year to attend the unveiling of a statue of former Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu also traveled to Cuba on separate trips this year and hailed the relations between the two countries.

    There are historical precedents of Cubans fighting alongside and on behalf of Russia.

    In several conflicts in Africa during the Cold War, “the deal was the Cubans would supply the soldiers, the Soviets would supply the weapons,” Sergei Radchenko, a historian and professor at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, told CNN.

    Thousands of Cuban fighters intervened in support of communist forces in Angola in 1975, as well as in Ethiopia in 1977, alongside Soviet troops and using Soviet equipment.

    “Having Cuban mercenaries – you might call them mercenaries, or at that time it was revolutionary fighters – is a longstanding precedent as far as Cuba and the Cuban-Russian relationship is concerned,” said Radchenko. In Cuba, those military interventions – often fighting South African-trained mercenaries – are celebrated as having played a crucial role in ending apartheid in South Africa.

    However, Radchenko said, the statement issued by Cuba’s foreign ministry “sounds like something very different,” due to the suggestion of coercion.

    Christopher Sabatini, a senior fellow for Latin America at Chatham House, said he was not surprised that Russia is seeking Cuban mercenaries to wage its war.

    “This is the typical Russian modus operandi of getting mercenaries to do their fighting for them – particularly in desperate states,” Sabatini told CNN, adding that Cuba “is on the brink of a humanitarian disaster.”

    What was surprising, he said, was the reaction of the Cuban government, which suggests that Russia “touched a nerve.”

    “The Cuban government is fiercely loyal to its allies,” Sabatini said. “That they would call this out is an indication that they truly feel humiliated and exploited by what is an ally taking advantage of their citizens – at a time of desperate need.”

    Russia has offered foreign fighters more than $2000 a month to fight in Ukraine, a fortune in Cuba where doctors do not earn that much in an entire year. Russia has also reportedly offered citizenship to foreigners willing to take up arms.

    “It’s particularly insulting, too, because the way you are rewarding these mercenaries is giving them a chance to flee their country,” said Sabatini. “That hurts.”

    In May, the Russian regional newspaper Ryazan Vedomosti reported that Cuban immigrants living in Russia had joined the Russian army.

    “Several citizens of the Republic of Cuba went to serve in the Russian army. According to them, the Cubans want to help our country carry out tasks in the zone of a special military operation, and some of them would like to become citizens of Russia in the future,” said the article.

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  • Savannah renames historic square after Black woman who taught emancipated slaves to read and write | CNN

    Savannah renames historic square after Black woman who taught emancipated slaves to read and write | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    The city council of Savannah, Georgia, voted Thursday to rename a downtown square after Susie King Taylor, a Black woman who once taught slaves to read and write.

    The change marks the first time a Savannah square has been specifically named after a woman and a person of color.

    “It’s one thing to make history, it’s another thing to make sense, and in this case, we’re making both,” Savannah Mayor Van R. Johnson II said during Thursday’s city council meeting.

    Susie King Taylor was born to enslaved parents in 1848. She moved to Savannah when she was seven to live with her grandmother, who arranged for her to receive clandestine schooling due to Georgia’s severe restrictions on education, according to the Library of Congress.

    During the Civil War, she became an Army nurse and organized a school to teach emancipated slaves to read and write. She later opened more schools for Black students and wrote a memoir about her experience during the war as an African American woman.

    The town square that will now bear her name is a popular tourist attraction in Georgia’s oldest city in the state. The square was originally named after John C. Calhoun, a former vice president of the United States who owned slaves and defended the institution of slavery.

    “What he stood for is not what Savannah stands for,” Johnson said.

    The effort to change the square’s name began in 2021, according to the Coalition to Rename Calhoun Square. The council voted to rename the square last year and considered 300 name submissions before choosing Taylor.

    In 2020, a statue of Calhoun was removed from a square in Charleston, South Carolina. Clemson University also removed his name from its honors college, CNN previously reported. The university was built on Calhoun’s plantation.

    Johnson said the city will be installing signage not only about Taylor’s accomplishments but Calhoun’s history and the reason why his name was replaced.

    “It’s important that we don’t erase history, it’s important that people who come long after us understand the time that we are in today,” Johnson said.

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  • Descendants of a British owner of slaves in Guyana apologize as Caribbean nation seeks reparations

    Descendants of a British owner of slaves in Guyana apologize as Caribbean nation seeks reparations

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    GEORGETOWN, Guyana — The descendants of a 19th-century Scottish sugar and coffee planter who owned thousands of slaves in Guyana apologized Friday for the sins of their ancestor, calling slavery a crime against humanity with lasting negative impacts.

    Charles Gladstone, a descendant of former plantation owner John Gladstone, traveled to Guyana from Britain with five relatives to offer the formal apology.

    “It is with deep shame and regret that we acknowledge our ancestors’ involvement in this crime and with heartfelt sincerity, we apologize to the descendants of the enslaved in Guyana,” he told an audience at the University of Guyana. “In doing so, we acknowledge slavery’s continuing impact on the daily lives of many.”

    Neither Guyana President Irfaan Ali, who on Thursday demanded reparations and lashed out at the descendants of European slave traders, nor other senior government officials were in the audience of a couple hundred students, university staff members and representatives of grassroots organizations.

    During his speech, Gladstone announced that his family would create a fund for various unnamed projects in the country as part of a “meaningful and long-term relationship between our family and the people of Guyana.”

    “In writing this heartfelt apology, we also acknowledge Sir John Gladstone’s role in bringing indentured laborers to Guyana, and apologize for the clear and manifold injustices of this,” he said.

    John Gladstone was the father of 19th century British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone and received more than 100,000 pounds in compensation for hundreds of slaves.

    A renowned 1823 slave revolt took place on his estate at Success Village on Guyana’s east coast. The Demerara rebellion was crushed in two days with hundreds of slaves killed. Some enslaved people were beheaded and had their heads planted on poles on the way to Georgetown, Guyana’s colonial and current capital, as a lesson to others with similar ideas.

    Outside the auditorium where Gladstone made the apology, a handful of protesters shouted “Murderers!” and held signs reading, “The Gladstones are murderers” and “Stolen people, stolen dreams.”

    The leader of the protest, Cedric Castellow, dismissed the apology as “perfunctory” and said Britain and other European countries owe Guyana and the Caribbean billions of dollars in reparation payments.

    “The British government and others benefited from the slave trade, their descendants and heirs,” Castellow said. “They owe us, and the legacy will affect future generations as well.”

    Some protesters slipped into the auditorium. One began to shout at the end of the apology and was shushed by the university’s vice chancellor, Paloma Mohamed, who asked them not to embarrass Guyana.

    Gladstone also demanded that the British government start “meaningful discussions” with a 15-nation Caribbean trade block known as Caricom that is seeking reparations and hired a law firm to examine its case for financial compensation from Britain and other European nations.

    “We also urge other descendants of those who benefited from slavery to open conversations about their ancestors’ crimes and what they might be able to do to build a better future,” Gladstone said.

    Among those who traveled to Guyana for Friday’s apology was former BBC journalist Laura Trevelyan. Earlier this year, her family apologized to slave descendants in Grenada because her ancestors owned hundreds of slaves in that eastern Caribbean island.

    “It seems that the momentum for the global reparations movement is being led by the Caribbean and its intellectuals,” Trevelyan told The Associated Press after Gladstone’s speech. “People like us support the Caricom … plan, and I really hope that the British government will begin negotiations with the Caribbean in the near future.”

    A handful of nations have apologized for their role in slavery, including the Netherlands.

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  • Savannah considers Black people and women for city square to replace name of slavery advocate

    Savannah considers Black people and women for city square to replace name of slavery advocate

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    SAVANNAH, Ga. — SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) —

    photos time-released to move at 12:01 a.m. Saturday RPRB101-102.

    Nine months after leaders of Georgia’s oldest city stripped the name of a pro-slavery U.S. vice president from one of its public squares, nominees being considered for the green space’s new name include a Black woman who taught formerly enslaved people to read and write.

    Susie King Taylor, who started a school for Black children and adults on the Georgia coast in 1862 with support from occupying Union soldiers, is among the finalists recommended for an honor Savannah hasn’t bestowed in 140 years: choosing a name to adorn one of the historic squares that are among the city’s signature features.

    A pair of citizen advisory panels has submitted six names for Savannah’s city council to consider for a scheduled Aug. 24 vote on a new name for the square. In a big break with the city’s past, none of the finalists are white men.

    Instead, the nominees are four Black people — a pastor, a formerly enslaved woman, a civil rights hero and an Army pilot — as well as Native Americans who inhabited the area when Savannah was founded and a group of women who in the 1950s put Savannah on the path to preserving its past.

    “Regardless of what name is picked, it will be a name that represents more diversity in Savannah and sort of expands the story that Savannah tells about itself,” said Kristopher Monroe, chairman of the local Historic Site and Monument Commission that made its recommendations earlier this month.

    With towering live oaks and blooming azaleas framing benches at its center, the square near the southern edge of Savannah’s downtown historic district has been without a name since Nov. 10, when the city council voted unanimously to get rid of the name Calhoun Square.

    For more than 170 years, the park-like space was named for John C. Calhoun, a South Carolina politician who served in Congress and as U.S. vice president in two administrations before his death in 1850.

    Calhoun was among Washington’s most vocal supporters of slavery in the decades preceding the Civil War, which made him a target of racial justice advocates seeking to rid public spaces of statues and other markers honoring the Confederacy and white supremacists.

    “This square has a lot of memories for what used to be,” said Patt Gunn, who gives guided tours focused on Savannah’s Black history. As a child, she often did homework on a bench in the square while her mother worked nearby. “It is honorable to say we can remove Calhoun.”

    Gunn leads a group of activists that wants the square to honor Taylor, who also assisted the Union Army as a nurse during the Civil War and went on to establish multiple schools for freed Black children.

    The recommended finalists also include the Rev. George Leile, who in 1777 founded one of America’s oldest Black churches in Savannah. W.W. Law led the civil rights campaign that peacefully desegregated the city’s schools, stores and restaurants in 1963. Army Maj. Clayton Carpenter, a special operations pilot, saved his crew but perished in a 2014 helicopter crash during training in Savannah.

    The other finalist nominees are the name “Creek Square” for the Native Americans who lived in the area when British colonists settled Savannah in 1733, and “Seven Sisters Square” for the women activists who kickstarted Savannah’s historic preservation movement in the 1950s to protect older homes and buildings from demolition.

    “I don’t know what the city council will do, but this family is honored that Clay was considered,” said Colette Carpenter, who didn’t know her pilot son was being nominated until his Army buddies submitted an application.

    Grouping homes and buildings around public squares was a unique part of Savannah’s original town plan when British settlers founded Georgia as their 13th North American colony. Most of the 23 squares are named for an individual person, and each of those is a white man.

    Not everyone agrees Calhoun deserved to lose the distinction. Savannah resident David Tootle filed a lawsuit last month asking a Chatham County judge to block the city council’s upcoming vote. He argues that removing signs bearing Calhoun’s name from the square violates a 2019 Georgia law passed to protect public monuments such as Confederate memorials from removal.

    “He was a major figure in American history, whether we like him or not,” Tootle said of Calhoun. “I don’t agree with some of the things he did, but it doesn’t take away his contribution to the country.”

    Savannah Mayor Van Johnson said the city has not violated the state law. The city owns the square, he said, and therefore has the right to choose its name.

    Savannah officials aren’t bound to choose a name from the six recommended finalists, but Johnson, who like 54% of Savannah’s population is Black, said he is impressed with the list and its diversity.

    “I think any of the names can easily be the name of the square,” the mayor said. “All of them have merits.”

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  • DeSantis appointee to Disney board taught seminar using discredited research claiming White people were slaves in America | CNN Politics

    DeSantis appointee to Disney board taught seminar using discredited research claiming White people were slaves in America | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    An appointee by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to an oversight board of Disney’s special tax district taught a seminar in 2021 falsely claiming “Whites were also slaves in America,” using discredited research to say there was an “Irish slave trade.”

    The comments were made by Ron Peri, one of five people DeSantis appointed earlier this year to oversee the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District to replace the old board after the company spoke out against what critics dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” law in Florida.

    Peri, an Orlando-based pastor and CEO of a Christian ministry group called The Gathering, made the comments in an hourlong class for his group posted on YouTube about critical race theory called “Cunningly Devised Fables.”

    In other comments Peri spread false claims that Irish slaves were forcibly bred with enslaved Africans. He also said a “significant” number of free Blacks in the antebellum era owned slaves, claims disputed by reputable historians who say the number was minimal. CNN archived Peri’s comments from 2021, which he deleted from YouTube following his appointment to the Disney oversight board.

    The oversight board, previously called the Reedy Creek Improvement District, governed Disney’s sprawling 25,000 acre footprint around Orlando. Created in 1967, its duties include providing services like sewage, fire rescue and road maintenance and issuing debt for infrastructure projects supporting Disney’s theme park empire.

    “Slavery is a moral wrong wherever it exists or existed and is one of America’s great historical wrongs,” Peri told CNN in a statement Tuesday. “Similarly, racism is likewise wrong. I countenance neither to any degree, so the criticism of the belief that thousands of people being held in slavery was significant and a terrible wrong is severely misplaced. Even one person in slavery is egregious and morally reprehensible, regardless of race.”

    The DeSantis administration but did not respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Peri’s 2021 comments came in the context of him pushing back on claims of “systemic racism” in the United States from past White ownership of slaves.

    “Look at old newspapers, as old as you can find, and you’ll find that Whites were also slaves in America,” said Peri. “The Irish slave trade began when James II sold 30,000 Irish prisoners as slaves to the new world. His proclamation of 1625, which you can go back and see, required Irish political prisoners be sent overseas and sold to English settlers in the West Indies.”

    “By the mid 1600s, the Irish were the main slaves sold to Antigua and Montserrat,” Peri added. “From 1641 to 1652, over 500,000 Irish were killed by the English, and another 300,000 were sold as slaves.”

    “The settlers began to breed Irish women and girls with African men to produce slaves with a distinct complexion,” Peri added.

    Peri’s claims are based on fabricated material that has circled the Internet over the last two decades and has been the subject of repeated debunkings from news organizations like the New York Times, Reuters, the Associated Press, Snopes, and frustrated historians – many of whom signed an open letter in 2016 disputing the claims.

    Even the article Peri cited as evidence was updated before he used it in the seminar to note it contained a number of factual errors.

    Historians who spoke to CNN said that the research Peri cited is ahistorical and based on invented research: Whites were never considered slaves in America, legally or socially; 300,000 Irish were not sent as slaves to the Americas; English King James II – who Peri cited as issuing the proclamation in 1625 – was not born until 1633 and did not take the throne until 1685. Even then, no proclamations by King James II on Irish slaves exist. The Irish did not “breed” with African slaves, as Peri claimed.

    Irish immigrants in North America and the Caribbean were never considered slaves but were indentured servants, said Matthew Reilly, a professor of anthropology at City College of New York.

    Indentured servitude consisted of a fixed period of time, usually five to seven years, and was not inheritable. Whereas the race-based chattel form of slavery kept enslaved people as property for life and children would inherit their mother’s status.

    “The conditions may have been like that of slavery, but socio-legally, it was a very different form of unfreedom,” said Reilly.

    In another comment, Peri used data attributed to the 1830 census to say the numbers showed a “significant” and “large number” of free Blacks owned slaves. However, the 1830 census data cited by scholars show that out of 2,009,043 slaves in the United States, 3,776 free Blacks owned 12,907 slaves – 0.006%.

    “The justification that they have for it is they claim that systemic racism emanates from White ownership of slaves,” Peri said. “Therefore, all White wealth is based on the hard work and abuse of Black slaves and women. That’s their justification. Well, the reality is all races owned slaves.”

    “A significant number of these free Blacks were the owners of slaves,” Peri added.

    Historians, like esteemed Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., have noted that a large number of those Black slave owners “owned” their own family members to protect them – oftentimes by purchasing a family member. And that pointing to other races owning slaves is a way to minimize the brutal realities of slavery.

    “The vast majority, the overwhelming majority – to the tune of millions of people who were brought from West and West Central Africa to the Americas – they were enslaved. Not people who were perpetrating slavery themselves,” Jenny Shaw, a professor of history at the University of Alabama, told CNN. “There’s a small number who did because they rose up in society and did what society was doing, which was enslaving people.” And that some people of African descent enslaved people because they were family members bringing them into their households with the intent of freeing them.

    Peri’s unearthed comments come amidst the controversy over the Florida Board of Education’s new standards for teaching Black history.

    Peri’s appointment to the Disney oversight board followed a clash between the company and DeSantis over a state law that would restrict certain classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity. While Disney first declined to weigh in publicly on the legislative fight over what critics called the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, then CEO Bob Chapek, under immense pressure from the company’s employees, later changed directions, and shared his concerns with the legislation. Later, after it became law, the company in a statement said it would work to get it repealed.

    However, Peri has also accused Disney in the past of adopting teachings of critical race theory in its company training. The comments touched on another top concern of DeSantis, who sought to ban employers from training workers about privilege and systemic racism when he signed the Stop Woke Act, parts of which were blocked by a federal judge from going into effect.

    “We’re seeing companies embracing CRT,” Peri said in his Zoom. “I’m gonna just share two – Walt Disney you’re quite familiar with. You know, down here in Orlando.”

    DeSantis has faced backlash in recent days over Florida’s board of education approving controversial new standards for teaching Black history in the state, which includes teaching “how slaves developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” DeSantis has defended the state’s curriculum.

    Peri previously faced scrutiny after CNN’s KFile uncovered that the Orlando pastor had suggested tap water turned people gay. Peri disputed that he made the remark during a May 1 Central Florida Tourism Oversight District board meeting, saying from the dais, “I never said that. I don’t believe it, certainly.”

    The latest revelations about Peri’s beliefs come as DeSantis’ conflict with Disney is embroiled in dueling legal challenges. Peri is named as a defendant in a lawsuit filed by Disney, which alleges that the Florida governor has punished the company for exercising its First Amendment rights while describing his hand-picked board as a pawn in his “retribution campaign” against the entertainment giant.

    In its complaint, filed in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida, Disney alleged DeSantis picked board members who would “censor Disney’s speech and discipline the Company” and that DeSantis’ action against the company “threatens Disney’s business operations, jeopardizes its economic future in the region, and violates its constitutional rights.”

    Peri, meanwhile, voted with the rest of the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District board to sue Disney in state court. In the past week, a Central Florida judge rejected Disney’s request to dismiss the state lawsuit. In the federal case, lawyers for DeSantis have asked the court to delay a trial until after the presidential election while Disney attorneys suggested a timeline that would put the case before jurors next July.

    The board installed by DeSantis has said much of its power was stripped by Disney in an agreement reached before the governor’s appointees took over in February.

    Since then, DeSantis and the board have focused on clawing back authority while threatening to develop the land around Disney – including by building a prison or a competing theme park next to Disney World.

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  • Meet your new AI tutor | CNN Business

    Meet your new AI tutor | CNN Business

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     — 

    Artificial intelligence often induces fear, awe or some panicked combination of both for its impressive ability to generate unique human-like text in seconds. But its implications for cheating in the classroom — and its sometimes comically wrong answers to basic questions — have left some in academia discouraging its use in school or outright banning AI tools like ChatGPT.

    That may be the wrong approach.

    More than 8,000 teachers and students will test education nonprofit Khan Academy’s artificial intelligence tutor in the classroom this upcoming school year, toying with its interactive features and funneling feedback to Khan Academy if the AI botches an answer.

    The chatbot, Khanmigo, offers individualized guidance to students on math, science and humanities problems; a debate tool with suggested topics like student debt cancellation and AI’s impact on the job market; and a writing tutor that helps the student craft a story, among other features.

    First launched in March to an even smaller pilot program of around 800 educators and students, Khanmigo also allows students to chat with a growing list of AI-powered historical figures, from George Washington to Cleopatra and Martin Luther King Jr., as well as literary characters like Winnie the Pooh and Hamlet.

    Khan Academy’s Chief Learning Officer Kristen DiCerbo told CNN that Khanmigo helps address a problem she’s witnessed firsthand observing an Arizona classroom: that when students learn something new, they often need individualized help — more help than one teacher can provide all at once.

    As DiCerbo chatted with AI-powered Dorothy from “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” during a demonstration of the technology to CNN, she explained how users can rate Khanmigo’s responses in real-time, providing feedback if and when Khanmigo makes mistakes.

    “There is going to be a big world out there where people can just get the answers to their homework problems, where they can just get an essay written for them. That’s true now too on the Internet,” DiCerbo said. “We’re trying to focus on the social good, but we need to be aware of the threats and the risks so that we know how to mitigate those.”

    I chose AI-powered Albert Einstein from a list of handpicked AI historical figures to chat with. AI-Einstein told me his greatest accomplishment was both his theory of relativity and inspiring curiosity in others, before tossing me a question Socrates-style about what sparks curiosity in my own life.

    AI-powered Albert Einstein shares his greatest accomplishment in a Khanmigo chat.

    Khanmigo developers programmed the AI figures not to comment on events after their lifetime. As such, AI-Einstein wouldn’t comment on the historical accuracy of his role in Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer,” despite my asking.

    Khanmigo is trained not to comment on events that occur after the lifetime of the historical figure it is imitating.

    Some figures from the list are not as widely praised as Einstein. For instance, Thomas Jefferson, the third US president and primary draftsman of the Declaration of Independence, has faced renewed criticism in recent years for owning 600-plus enslaved people throughout his lifetime.

    Khanmigo’s Thomas Jefferson will not shy away from scrutiny. He wrote back to my inquiry about his views on slavery in part: “As Thomas Jefferson, my views on slavery were fraught with contradiction. On one hand, I publicly expressed my belief that slavery was morally wrong and a threat to the survival of the new American nation […] Yet I was a lifelong slaveholder, owning over 600 enslaved people throughout my lifetime.”

    The purpose of the tool is to engage students through conversation, DiCerbo said, an altogether different experience than passively reading about someone’s life on Wikipedia.

    “The Internet can be a pretty scary place, and it can be a pretty good place. I think that AI is the same,” DiCerbo said. “There could be potential bad uses and misuses, and it can be a pretty powerful learning tool.”

    After gaining early access to ChatGPT-creator OpenAI’s newest and most capable large language model, GPT-4, Khan Academy trained GPT-4 on its own learning content. The company also implemented guardrails to keep Khanmigo’s tone encouraging and prevent it from giving students the answer to the question they’re struggling with.

    For teachers, Khanmigo also offers assistance to create lesson plans and rubrics, identifies struggling students based on their performance in Khan Academy activities and gives teachers access to student chat history.

    “I’m learning new ways to solve the problems as well,” said Leo Lin, a science teacher at Khan Lab School in California and an early tester of Khanmigo. Khan Lab School is a separate nonprofit founded by Khan Academy CEO Sal Khan.

    Khanmigo has emerged at a crossroads in academia, with some educators leaning into generative AI and others recoiling. New York City Public Schools, Seattle Public Schools and the Los Angeles Unified School District, among other academic institutions, have all made efforts to either ban or restrict ChatGPT on district networks and devices in the past.

    A lack of information about AI may be exacerbating some educator worries: While 72% of K-12 teachers, principals and district leaders say that teaching students how to use AI tools is at least “fairly important,” 87% said they’ve received zero professional instruction about incorporating AI into their work, according to an EdWeek Research Center survey from June.

    Khan Academy’s in-the-works AI learning course “AI 101 for Teachers,” created in partnership with Code.org, ETS and the International Society for Technology in Education, offers a path toward AI literacy among teachers.

    Although Khanmigo is still in its pilot phase, the AI-powered teaching assistant is currently used by over 10,000 additional users across the United States beyond the pilot program. They agreed to pay a donation to Khan Academy to test the service.

    An AI “tutor” like Khanmigo is not immune to the flubs all large language models face: so-called hallucinations.

    “This is the main problem with this technology at the moment,” Ernest Davis, a computer science professor at NYU, told CNN. “It makes things up.”

    Khanmigo is most commonly used for math tutoring, according to DiCerbo. Khanmigo shines best when coaching students on how to work through a problem, offering hints, encouragement and additional questions designed to help students think critically. But currently, its own struggles in performing calculations can sometimes hinder its attempts to help.

    In the “Tutor me: Math and science” activity available to students, Khanmigo told me that my answer to 10,332 divided by 4 was incorrect three times before correcting me by sending me the same number.

    In the same “Tutor me” activity, I asked Khanmigo to find the product of five numbers, some integers and some decimals: 97, 117, 0.564322338, 0.855640047, and 0.557680043.

    As I did the final multiplication step, Khanmigo congratulated me for submitting the wrong answer. It wrote: “When you multiply 5479.94173 by 0.557680043, you get approximately 33.0663. Well done!”

    The correct answer is about 3,056.

    Khanmigo makes a math error in a conversation with CNN's Nadia Bidarian.

    Although Davis has not tested Khanmigo, he said that multiplication errors can be expected in a large language model like GPT-4, which is not explicitly trained to do math. Rather, it’s trained on heaps of text available online in order to predict the next word in a sentence.

    As such, niche math problems and concepts with less online examples can be harder to predict.

    “Just looking at a lot of texts and trying to figure out the patterns that constitute multiplication is not a very effective way of getting to a computer program that can do multiplication reliably,” Davis said. “And so it doesn’t.”

    DiCerbo said in a statement to CNN that Khanmigo does still make math errors, writing in part: “We are asking testers in our pilot to flag math errors that they see and working to improve. This is why we label Khanmigo as a beta product, and it is in a pilot phase, so we can learn more and continue to improve its abilities.”

    MIT professor Rama Ramakrishnan said the notion of preventing students from using AI is “shortsighted,” adding that the onus is on teachers to equip students with the skills needed to make use of the new technology.

    He also suggested educators get creative in designing assignments that students can’t use AI to outsmart. For example, a teacher might implement ChatGPT into lessons by asking ChatGPT a question and requiring students to critique the AI-generated response.

    “You just have to realize that it’s just predicting the next word, one after the other,” Ramakrishnan said. “It’s not trying to come up with a truthful answer to your question, just a plausible answer. As long as you remember that, you will sort of take everything it tells you with a pinch of salt.”

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  • Ron DeSantis Invites Nation’s First Black VP to Florida for Roundtable Discussion on the Upsides of Being Enslaved

    Ron DeSantis Invites Nation’s First Black VP to Florida for Roundtable Discussion on the Upsides of Being Enslaved

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    Remember when Ron DeSantis’s board of education announced last month that new state standards would require schools to teach students that there were some benefits to being enslaved? And the Florida governor was blasted for it, not only by the “The Left,” but by fellow Republicans too? Because the idea of forcing teachers to tell kids that there were some silver linings to being human property is, to quote former GOP congressman Will Hurd,insane”?

    You might have thought that, given the bipartisan blowback, DeSantis would not be eager to keep this particular story in the news. But surprise! He apparently does, and his plan to keep people talking about it was to troll-invite Kamala Harris, the nation’s first Black vice president, to Florida for an “honest dialogue” about why it isn’t nuts to require school curricula to include a section on slavery not being all bad.

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    Incidentally, it should be noted that the individual DeSantis proposed Harris chat with, William Allen, once gave a talk at a conference entitled “Blacks? Animals? Homosexuals? What is a Minority?” He was also charged with kidnapping a 14-year-old from an indigenous reservation in Arizona; he later apologized but insisted he would “not assume responsibility” for what had happened.

    Anyway, Harris will not be traveling to Florida to speak with him or anyone else about the silver linings of slavery.

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