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Never Enough Slavery Museums

Thread ID: 10087 | Posts: 5 | Started: 2003-09-28

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Kurt [OP]

2003-09-28 07:42 | User Profile

Next stop, [url=http://www.ncobra.com/]reparations[/url]. And don't say you're not gonna pay, White man. You will. You always do. Hell, you're afraid to even use the word ngger ("It's not cricket, old chap. It makes us look bad."), so what makes you think you'll have the guts to refuse reparations?*

**Never Enough Slavery Museums

by Gail Jarvis**

(link: [url=http://www.lewrockwell.com/jarvis/jarvis48.html]http://www.lewrockwell.com/jarvis/jarvis48.html[/url])

In a [url=http://www.lewrockwell.com/jarvis/jarvis47.html]recent LRC column[/url], I made mention of the city of Charleston’s proposed $35 million slavery museum that will be constructed on ten acres of waterfront property. This surprised some of my respondents, who wondered, not only about the size, but also whether the new museum was needed as the city already has at least three museums with extensive slavery exhibits.

The question: how many slavery museums does a city need? Or: how many slavery museums does the United States need? is currently a much-debated topic. Unfortunately, the debate was a little late getting started because slavery museums have become the latest trend sweeping the nation.

In May, 2002, Bill Gwaltney, a member of the National Park Service and President of the Association of African American Museums, said of slavery museums: "We counted 19 new projects just last year and we knew there were several more. Clearly, there are several dozen more that are anticipated in 2002. They are all over the country, too. They’re in the Midwest, the West, the Northeast and the South. It represents a maturation of thought about the breadth and depth of American history."

The numbers cited by Gwaltney indicate that, in a two-year period, 50 or more new slavery museums were constructed throughout the nation. This phenomenal rate of growth greatly exceeds the spread of civil rights museums in prior years. If this rate of growth continues, we can anticipate that all major cities as well as most moderately sized cities will soon have both a civil rights museum and a slavery museum. Furthermore, the day may come when a family traveling across the nation will encounter, in every town it drives through, a McDonald’s, a Burger King, a Wal-Mart, a Target, a Best Western and a slavery museum.

Gwaltney also stated: "It has often been left to African-American professionals to tell these less-than-pretty stories. These are hard things to look at. But it is the kind of thing that has to be confronted in order for us to make progress as a nation."

Frank Caltroppa, superintendent of the Martin Luther King, Jr. historic site in Atlanta, that also houses slavery exhibits, made this comment regarding slavery museums: "America is now ready to face the horrific acts of our past with hope of building a future rooted in truth and justice. The story is often noble but is sometimes shameful and sorrowful."

The $35 million facility planned for Charleston is just one of many new large-scale slavery museums. A $33 million African-American History museum in Baltimore will tell the story of slavery when it opens in the near future. Its 80,000 square-feet will make it the second largest African-American museum in America; the largest being the 120,000 square-foot facility in Detroit. Construction will soon begin on a national slavery museum in Fredericksburg, VA and another national African-American museum is being proposed for the National Mall in Washington.

Cincinnati is trying to raise $110 million for its National Underground Railroad Freedom Center which will tell the story of escaped slaves. And a [url=http://www.slaverymuseum.org]slavery website[/url] is also being constructed.

In addition to these new slavery museums, the National Park Service stated that the new Liberty Bell site in Philadelphia will no longer focus primarily on the Revolutionary War. It will now include numerous exhibits on slavery. This decision was reached after historians lobbied for an expanded discussion of slavery at the various Park Service sites around the nation. The changes at the Liberty Bell site were based on arguments that George Washington and other early presidents owned slaves. And, of course, the National Park Service has already added slavery exhibits to all Civil War battle sites.

W. Fitzhugh Brundage, history professor at the University of North Carolina, said of these new slavery museums: "The proliferation of museums speaks of African-Americans’ desire to create an ennobling history of blacks’ struggle for civil rights. So they’re popping up all over. It’ll be much more interesting to see how whites respond to a museum of slavery. I can imagine whites having much more difficulty with a slavery museum."

Brundage’s assessment of "whites having much more difficulty with a slavery museum" is refuted by existing exhibits on slavery at museums and other sites throughout the country; exhibits implemented primarily by whites. On the other hand, I believe that many whites would indeed object to the spread of slavery museums in the numbers cited by Mr. Gwaltney. And, not surprisingly, some communities are already expressing concern over having too many slavery museums. To this complaint, Bill Gwaltney responded:" But the African-American experience is not monolithic. We don’t all have the same story. There is a regionalism that is developing, plus, people are interested in learning the California story, connections with Canada, connections with Mexico."

It is not only whites who are concerned about this excess of slavery museums. Support from the black community has been less than enthusiastic. A typical negative response came from a black lady in Charleston: "Why are we bringing all this up now? This was something that happened 150 years ago. Why can’t we just move on?"

One reason why we can’t move on is because of posturing white liberals, especially those politicos who think they are currying favor with black voters. An example is Charleston’s opportunistic Mayor, Joe Riley. Mr. Riley can always be found at any rally for politically correct causes. When protestors marched in South Carolina’s capital to demand the removal of the Confederate flag, Mr. Riley was at the head of the parade, tripping over other marchers in his attempt to put his face in front on the TV cameras.

Charleston’s proposed ten-acre slavery museum is the brainchild of Mayor Joe Riley who states that the facility will "go beyond emancipation to about 1900, covering the period of Jim Crow in the South." Like most politicians of his stripe, Riley is only concerned about the political mileage he can get out of this project and he ignores the law of unintended consequences. Once the museum is opened, it will require a revision of Charleston tourism brochures, possibly changing the image of Charleston from a colorful antebellum city to a major slavery port. How such a change would impact Charleston’s tourism industry is unknown.

Incredibly, Riley said of his proposed ten-acre slavery museum: "This is a part of our history, our American history, that is under-explained and under-presented." Under-explained? Under-presented? Where has Joe Riley been for the past half-century? The Fiji Islands?

For the past several decades, slavery, and that conjectural social malady "the legacy of slavery," has been one of the most discussed and analyzed subjects in the United States. Slavery and the legacy of slavery are also among the media’s favorite subjects for discussion. And, of course, during the annual Black History Month, we hear all over again about slavery and the legacy of slavery. Consequently, although a high school student might not be able to find Kansas on a map, he could write a term paper on slavery.

As we might expect, those defending the proliferation of new slavery museums claim that they will help "heal our wounds." Righteous sounding phrases like "heal our wounds" cause a cynical person like me to look for a hidden agenda. Also, the excessive number of new museums is troublesome. My conclusion is that those who are promoting these new slavery museums don’t want our wounds to be healed; at least not just yet. To the contrary, they want wounds reopened and they want to rub salt in them. And they wouldn’t be terribly unhappy if, in the process, they created enough guilt among gullible whites to generate additional support for reparations for slavery.

September 27, 2003

Gail Jarvis ([url=mailto:gjarvis@islc.net]send him mail[/url]), a CPA living in Beaufort, SC, is an advocate of the voluntary union of states established by the founders.

Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com


I have an idea for an African-American History Museum; but it won't be a living museum. I'm thinking of something more along the lines of a dinosaur exhibit...

The year is 2030, and a White father and his son are visiting the African-American exhibit at the Museum Of Natural History in NYC...

Son: Daddy, what was an "African-American?"

Father: Well son, African-Americans were a vile breed of people that caused White people much misery and suffering, until a...um...mysterious virus wiped them all out.

Son: What was life like when African-Americans were around?

Daddy: Oh, it was terrible, son. Crime was rampant, cities were uninhabitable hell-holes; White people lived in dread, and the police were powerless to do anything about it, for fear of being called racist.

Son: "Racist?" What does that mean?

Father: Well, "racist" was a term African-Americans would constantly call Whites, to get power, money -- anything they wanted, really. Of course when African-Americans disappeared, so did the word "racist."

Son: Daddy, I'm glad they're aren't any African-Americans around.

Father: Me too son, me too.

Son: Daddy, after we're finished with the African-American exhibit, can we visit the Jew exhibit too?

Father: Sure son! But first Daddy wants to check out how the new Mestizo exhibit they're building is coming along...


Sertorius

2003-09-28 07:52 | User Profile

We are already paying "reparations" with the welfare state and things like affirmative action. Hell, it might be the best thing to happen to whites if they were told that their taxes were going to go up to pay for this nonsense. If you can't appeal to their intelligence, what little so many show, then appeal to their greed. That might put some backbone in our more spineless brethern.


Kurt

2003-09-28 08:11 | User Profile

[QUOTE=Sertorius]We are already paying "reparations" with the welfare state and things like affirmative action. Hell, it might be the best thing to happen to whites if they were told that their taxes were going to go up to pay for this nonsense.[/QUOTE] This is true. But since Whites already pay for so many things that don't benefit them, (such as aid to Israel) what's one more? I mean if we haven't risen up by now, we never will. And if reparations for slavery become a reality, they won't be called "slavery reparations," but something like The African-American Empowerment Project, and who but a filthy racist would be against something as noble as that? (And any Whites who'd rather not pay, well, there's always prison.)


Sertorius

2003-09-28 08:59 | User Profile

What you write is equally true. Still, hope springs eternal and there has to be a breaking point where enough people come to the same conclusion at the same time about all of this. I sense that in a way, the War for Jews and Oil (in that order) is helping to contribute to this, what I hope to be a social explosion of the first magnitude. I'd hate to think that we have all become a race of cowards.

I have a theory that most Americans only care about three things and they are sex, sports and money. They are oblivious to everything else and this has been done deliberately so. The inner party will insure that they get plenty of sports. The popular culture will continue to pimp sex, the more perverted the better. The one thing they won't be able to do is provide more money even if they inflate it for they need this money for not only their empire building, but for their own self aggrandizment and to bribe their pet constituencies. They will have to take it from the whites and I think (and hope) that this will wake up the oblivious, for the reparations crowd wants something like on the order of a trillion dollars and that is a cost that can't be easily hidden.

I have a feeling that ultimately the reparations idea will be deep sixed because of the potential to wake up alot of folks. For the time being the "civil rights" whores will have to settle for these museums.


Faust

2003-09-29 02:18 | User Profile

Kurt,

Great Post! I love it! I love it! I love it! :)

[QUOTE]I have an idea for an African-American History Museum; but it won't be a living museum. I'm thinking of something more along the lines of a dinosaur exhibit...

The year is 2030, and a White father and his son are visiting the African-American exhibit at the Museum Of Natural History in NYC...

Son: Daddy, what was an "African-American?"

Father: Well son, African-Americans were a vile breed of people that caused White people much misery and suffering, until a...um...mysterious virus wiped them all out.

Son: What was life like when African-Americans were around?

Daddy: Oh, it was terrible, son. Crime was rampant, cities were uninhabitable hell-holes; White people lived in dread, and the police were powerless to do anything about it, for fear of being called racist.

Son: "Racist?" What does that mean?

Father: Well, "racist" was a term African-Americans would constantly call Whites, to get power, money -- anything they wanted, really. Of course when African-Americans disappeared, so did the word "racist."

Son: Daddy, I'm glad they're aren't any African-Americans around.

Father: Me too son, me too.

Son: Daddy, after we're finished with the African-American exhibit, can we visit the Jew exhibit too?

Father: Sure son! But first Daddy wants to check out how the new Mestizo exhibit they're building is coming along...[/QUOTE]