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6 Civil Rights Movement Myths You Learned In History Class
By Adam Koski, Bevan Morgan June 12, 2016 477,391 views Viral
By Adam Koski, Bevan Morgan June 12, 2016 477,391 views Viral
- Library Or Congress
We mean, of course it did. The Civil War ended that year, while the Emancipation Proclamation went into effect and spin-kicked slavery right in the dikk, and that was that. You learn that shyt in kindergarten.
The thing is, simply winning a war and saying "Slavery is abolished, a$$holes!" doesn't make it stop any more than telling your cat not to use your shoe as a toilet stops her from doing it. The South's economy (and occasionally geography) was in ruins after the war, and they weren't exactly thrilled about giving away a significant chunk of their workforce. As such, they didn't so much do away with slavery after the end of the Civil War as they did something much more American: They justrebranded the operation, albeit on a smaller scale.
duncan1890/iStock
"Congrats, you have been upgraded to 'forced independent contractors.'"
The years after the war saw both black and white criminal activity increase, which was a problem, because most prisons had been destroyed during the war. The states took a look at the massive influx of prisoners in their hands, surreptitiously glanced at each other ... and started leasing them to wealthy planters and industry big shots as free, forced labor.
This system, known as convict lease, quickly became one of the most lubed-up loopholes in history. Some of the criminals caught up in the machine were white, but an estimated 80 to 90 percent were black, because of fukking course they were. Many former slaves found that freedom was the worst thing that could have happened to them, as the police got hold of them and piled on enough arbitrary charges to put them into "totally not slavery" forced labor for years, toiling under essentially the same a$$holes who had owned them during their slave days.
Grafissimo/iStock
"If you love someone, set them free. If you force them to come back shackled, kicking, and screaming, it was meant to be."
The conditions were generally much worse, too. There was a lot less financial incentive to keep a prisoner alive than a slave, so living conditions of prisoners under convict lease tended to be abysmal. In some cases, the death rate was as high as 40 percent. But the public was okay with it, because hey, that's what they get for committing crimes! We're not exploiting a racial and economic class, we're punishing the bad guys!
Some would argue that this legally-sanctioned prison slavery ended in 1941, when Franklin Roosevelt stepped hard on involuntary servitude (because he was worried that the Japanese would use it to embarrass America with their propaganda). However, others would point out that convict lease ended precisely fukking never. Establishments like the Louisiana State Penitentiary are still employing the model today, and are cool enough with what they do that they let a camera crew record their operation in 2015. Their preferred deployment for the (nigh-invariably black) prisoners is forced labor. In the fields. While watched over by white, armed men on horseback. Somewhere, Calvin Candie is smiling.
#5. Myth: Malcolm X Was A Violent Radical, While Martin Luther King, Jr. Was All About Pacifism
Marion S. Trikosko
History sees Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr. as two sides of the same coin. Malcolm X was the violence-preaching militant radical, and Martin Luther King, Jr. was a Gandhi-like pacifist, though both were pushing for the same outcome. These days, we always tend to put activists into one of those two molds, and only offer public approval for the latter.
Reality, however, is always more complicated. For all of his militant talk, Malcolm X did not advocate attacking the government. He urged that black people should be ready to defend themselves violently if need be, but never once by initiating violence. Sure, he used scary-sounding rhetoric, but it was never "Kill the whites to affect change" (which his mentor Elijah Muhammad told him would be suicide). Rather, it was, "We're not afraid to fight back," or in his own words, "Put your hands on us thinking that we're going to turn the other cheek -- we'll put you to death just like that." He was otherwise known to actively defuse situations where his supporters were getting too unruly, and even in his private life he was far more likely to be polite to the "white devils" he met.
Herman Hiller/New York World-Telegram
"Thank you -- both for the questions and for causing irreparable harm and suffering to my people."
Meanwhile, Martin Luther King, Jr. wasn't quite as averse to guns as his popular legacy would have us believe. While he certainly did organize all of those nonviolent protests you know him for, he fully bought into the idea of "just in case" firepower. Remember, King was a man of the South, fighting against acts of terrorism against his person and his people. Of course the dude had a piece or 16. In the early period of his leadership, his household could be accurately called an arsenal. It wasn't unheard of for a visitor to sit on a chair, only to be warned at the last second they were about to place their ass on a couple of guns. After his house was bombed in 1956, King even tried to get a concealed carry permit, though this went about as well as you'd expect. King also preached what he practiced, incidentally; his writings acknowledge the right to armed self-defense.
Once again, please don't take this as some kind of simplistic "So King was the violent one, and X was the peace-seeker!" switcheroo. The point is that we tend to remember activists by their catchiest soundbites, boiling an entire body of work into something that can fit on a T-shirt. Malcolm X got mainstream headlines for being scary, while King's most famous speeches are about Christian calls for peace and justice. But humans aren't slogans, and real life demands that every activist has a practical side.
Ebony Magazine
"Maybe start focusing on the issue that makes me needing to own an M1 carbine practical to begin with."
#4. Myth: Martin Luther King Died As One Of The Most Beloved Civil Rights Leaders
U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
Martin Luther King, Jr. became famous during the Montgomery boycotts in 1956, marched on Washington and gave his "I have a dream" speech in 1963, marched in Selma in 1965, and got murdered in 1968. His movement changed the country, white America saw the light, and today his birthday is a national holiday. Hell, the biggest controversy over King's legacy these days is how Democrats and Republicans both try to claim him as their own. Is there a less controversial figure in American history? It's not that there are no King haters out there, but when you meet one, you automatically assume they probably spend a lot of time on white nationalist message boards.
But history lessons like to skip things that screw up rote narratives in school classrooms, and King's final three years certainly qualify. King dedicated much of these years to protesting American involvement in Vietnam and campaigning for social relief for the poor. That may sound great to lots of you reading this now, but it all but ruined him at the time.
National Archives and Records Administration
"And while we're at it, we could use more positive females role models on televis-- OK, why are you booing me?"
The problem wasn't that King was protesting the Vietnam War -- that's hardly a controversial position these days. It's that he did so before it was cool (yeah, the early popularity of the Vietnam war is something else we've revised out of history). King started speaking against the war in 1965, well before things had turned south for the U.S. -- at that point, mainstream America was all about killing communists abroad. The New York Times and Washington Post published articles calling his antiwar words a tragedy. Hell, even the rest of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference thought that opposing the war was a bad idea. By early 1967, King was criticizing the war so vocally that his longtime civil rights ally, President Lyndon B. Johnson, saw it as the ultimate breach of trust and dismissed King as a "goddamned n****r preacher."
HBO
Reasonably sure they left that line out of the movie.
Before long, even his allies got in on the King mockery. Newspapers with predominantly black readerships stopped endorsing him; former political allies did their level best to distance themselves from him. By 1967, his reputation was such that when he spoke at a conference in Chicago, the man you know as the hero of the Civil Rights Movement was booed by virtually everyone.
Even King's Poor People's Campaign did little to help his reputation. Instead, he was actually accused of seeking new causes because he felt he had gotten too big for the Civil Rights Movement. King reacted by doubling down on his efforts, and spent his last few months taking part in a sanitation strike in Memphis. His famous final "I have seen the promised land" speech was delivered to a group of striking sanitation workers.
Mississippi Valley Collection/University of Memphis
"... And it is NOT covered in poop."
It turns out that it's one thing to get white America to agree that black people should be able to attend the same schools and sit in the same bus seats, but start talking about wages and economic inequality, and suddenly you've pissed off a brand-new group of powerful people. Make no mistake: King died knowing he was fighting for causes that were deeply unpopular to the mainstream. Hate mail and death threats were part of the everyday landscape of his life ... and that shyt wasn't only coming from the Klan.