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Lord, thank you for establishing Truth and for helping us understand the definition of truth. Help us to daily return to Your Word so that we recognize the only Truth.
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The 1619 Project’s flagship essay has been awarded a Pulitzer Prize, even though it underwent a major correction and has been criticized as revisionist history by leading historians.

The New York Times’ 1619 Project argues that all of American history should be seen through the lens of slavery and the contributions of black Americans. It argues that America’s true founding should be considered August 1619, the year slaves were first brought to Jamestown, instead of July 4, 1776, the year America declared its independence from Great Britain.

Nikole Hannah-Jones’s prize-winning essay gets three major things so wrong, even the habitually biased Pulitzer Prize Board should have been able to recognize them.

Hannah-Jones’s Essay Is Garbage History

In true Howard Zinn fashion, Hannah-Jones chose to make a political point over writing accurate, fact-based history. In her essay, entitled “Our democracy’s founding ideals were false when they were written. Black Americans have fought to make them true,” she tried to demonstrate that America was racist from the beginning. To sell her point, she cherry-picked examples, willfully ignoring the whole picture.

One of the most contentious claims in Hannah-Jones’s essay was that Americans largely fought for independence because they believed Great Britain was threatening the slave trade. Leslie M. Harris, a professor of history at Northwestern University and an expert on African-American history, “vigorously disputed” this claim when the New York Times asked her to fact-check the essay. She wrote, “Slavery in the Colonies faced no immediate threat from Great Britain, so colonists wouldn’t have needed to secede to protect it.” Harris claims her objections were ignored.

Five other leading historians wrote The New York Times asking for a correction, stating: “These errors, which concern major events, cannot be described as interpretation or ‘framing.’ They are matters of verifiable fact, which are the foundation of both honest scholarship and honest journalism. They suggest a displacement of historical understanding by ideology.”

The New York Times initially said no correction was needed. Instead, Editor-in-Chief Jake Silverstein wrote three paragraphs defending the claim. Seven months after the project’s release, however, an important editorial note was added, saying only “some of” the colonists fought for independence to preserve slavery. Historian Gordon Wood had trouble with even this assertion, claiming there is no evidence at all slavery was in danger from Great Britain.

Hannah-Jones wrote on Twitter that she had lost important context and nuance in not making clear that not all colonists fought Great Britain to protect slavery. However, when recently asked about this correction, Hannah-Jones claimed it wasn’t a correction, but a clarification. Despite finally changing the record, the 1619 Project curriculum has already been disseminated to thousands of classrooms around the country, falsehoods and all.

Hannah-Jones Incorrectly Interpreted the Constitution

Hannah-Jones criticized the Constitution because it does not condemn slavery outright. Yet the American founders had a difficult decision to make. They had to choose between outlawing slavery or forming a union. . .

In her essay, Hannah-Jones maligns the founders for “carefully constructing a document that preserves and protects slavery without ever using the word.” However, famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass criticized those who claim the Constitution was a pro-slavery document. He instead said, “The Constitution is a glorious liberty document,” arguing that the Constitution taken as a whole contains purposes and principles “entirely hostile to the existence of slavery.”. . .

America Was Founded on Equality, Not Slavery

Worse than the historical inaccuracies in Hannah-Jones’s essay is how she got America’s founding principles wrong. 1619 was not just a different century than 1776; it was a different epoch. As of 1619, John Locke had not yet written the “Two Treatises of Government,” which taught fundamental principles such as the consent of the governed, private property, and equality.

Locke wrote that in a state of nature, all men are born equal and independent. Picking up on this language, Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence in 1776, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

Hannah-Jones claimed that because these ideals were not fully realized when they were written, they were a lie. Abraham Lincoln disagrees. He wrote: “[T]hey did not mean to assert the obvious untruth, that all were then actually enjoying that equality. … They meant simply to declare the right, so that the enforcement of it might follow as fast as circumstances should permit.”

In his Gettysburg Address, Lincoln said America was “conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” Lincoln understood that even in his own time, Jefferson’s words still required action. They were not yet fully realized, but that didn’t mean they were a lie. Truth is still true when people don’t believe it.

1776 Set America on a Path Toward Equality

America became a city on a hill because it was the first nation to enshrine legal equality into its identity. While 1776 forged a new moral landscape that would eventually lead to the abolition of slavery and to the creation of the freest nation on Earth, 1619 represented slavery and tyranny. Why, except to convince black Americans of their perennial victimhood, would The New York Times and Hannah-Jones choose 1619 over 1776 as our founding date?

When Martin Luther King Jr. stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and demanded that America fulfill her promises, he did not point back to 1619, but to 1776. This is because 1619 had no promises. 1619 was the status quo. Slavery was not a new thing, but an old thing.

1776 was the real revolution, the one that has given us the world in which we live today. It may not be perfect. We may need to work for decades to ensure all men and women are treated equally under the law, but we are surely far more free than we would have been had Jefferson not espoused his famous words and had not the leading men of his day signed his declaration. . .

 

(Excerpt from the Federalist. Article by Krystina Skurk.)

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Carole Ann Neve
May 13, 2020

There was a program ‘Finding Your Roots’ that proved through a particular actress’s DNA, that her black ancestry were in America before 1776. I think the constitution still stands to help us. We don’t want a New World Order. We have to work together to keep our freedom in America.

David Espenlaub
May 12, 2020

This is a good example of how deep bitterness leads to physical, mental and spiritual corruption.

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Barbara Ann Betz
May 12, 2020

Lord Jesus please bring Truth and bind further offense and premeditated division in Jesus Name

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Lisa
May 12, 2020

This is not a prayer but a high recommendation to everyone reading these comments: If you go to Andrew Wommack Ministries, find the TV Archives and choose the first two weeks of February 2020, you will see guest David Barton and his son teaching about our nation’s black heroes, many who were also our Brothers and Sisters in Christ. Throughout, David Barton backs up in even more detail the points of this article, and most of all, the history given is exciting, interesting, and necessary to know!

I join my prayers with others praying against this fabricated hatred and offended-ness based on falsehoods that weaken our country and the people who choose to believe these lies. I pray that truthful history be taught in our schools at all levels and in the public. I pray that our black and brown citizens shed themselves of anger, hurt, and offense–whether justified or fabricated–and take their rightful positions of leadership and honor in America. I pray that all prejudices of both blacks and whites be realized and revoked. Thank You, Lord, that this mountain of prejudice on both sides–this demonic power–will finally be leveled–in Jesus’ Name–THANK You!

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Mari
May 11, 2020

She wrote, “Slavery in the Colonies faced no immediate threat from Great Britain, so colonists wouldn’t have needed to secede to protect it.”

See the Abolition of Slavery speech to the British Government: William Wilberforce’s 1789 Abolition Speech

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Darlene Estlow
May 11, 2020

Father, thank you for this nation and the Constitution you gave us to guide us in liberty. Thank you for truth. Overturn the lies of this document.

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Barbara J Struble
May 11, 2020

“Complete the reformation”

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