Jun 17, 2021 12:00:00 AM
This making Juneteenth a federal holiday is some gaslighting shit if I’ve ever seen it. And I can feel some of y’all reading this and saying, “Black people are never satisfied”—well, you’re damn right. We won’t be satisfied with table scraps labeled “liberty and equality,” tossed at us as an attempt to silence us or make us ignore hunger pains for justice—because that’s what this legalizing Juneteenth as a holiday really is. And we won’t be satisfied until all Black lives truly matter to and in this country.
Riddle me this—How do you justify making Juneteenth a federal holiday when there are large pockets of people determined to protect their privilege and guard white kids from the nasty truths of this country by fighting to ban the teaching of history and conversations about race in classrooms? Please make that make sense for me!
So #JuneTeenth2021 is now a federal holiday but y'all still don't wanna teach about it in schools--leaving our kids to think all Black people were "free" when Lincoln dropped the Emancipation Proclamation?
— PeeplesVoice (@PeeplesVoiceChi) June 16, 2021
Make it make sense. Better yet, make the history make sense for once!
Florida—as if we are surprised—was the most recent to join the “Injustice League” of states to ban the teaching of “critical race theory.” And, of course, because it’s extra ghetto, they took it a step further also to outlaw the use of the 1619 Project for instruction. They basically said, “McGraw Hill’s doing a good job feeding our kids half-truths, fraud patriotism, and whitewashed history—let’s keep that going.”
This was the kicker for me. Governor DeSantis—who’s in a competition with Mitch McConnell to be Donald Trump’s side-chick— justified the ban by saying, “Critical Race Theory teaches kids to hate our country and to hate each other. It is state-sanctioned racism and has no place in Florida schools,".
Florida's education system exists to create opportunity for our children. Critical Race Theory teaches kids to hate our country and to hate each other. It is state-sanctioned racism and has no place in Florida schools. pic.twitter.com/ludv7ARgNP
— Ron DeSantis (@GovRonDeSantis) June 10, 2021
Bruh, are you kidding me!!!!???? This coming from the state whose own teachers say that these conversations are necessary because white kids are sitting in classrooms calling Arabic students terrorists.
Critical race theory debate distracts from racism in Florida's schools. Maybe that's DeSantis' goal | Opinion https://t.co/3C2TX9pDyp
— Sharif El-Mekki (@selmekki) June 12, 2021
It’s also the state that’s seen an increase in student arrests due to the addition of more SROs in schools, with Black students in Miami being disproportionately targeted. What about that state-sanctioned racism, Ron?
The most audacious insult is, that this is being said in a country that continuously turns a blind eye to state-sanctioned violence, particularly violence at the hands of police that’s taken the lives of 181 Black people since George Floyd was murdered. We’re not even going to get into the willful neglect and mortality rates of Black women at the hands of the healthcare industry, assaults on Black men in the criminal justice system, and the daily spirit murdering of all Black people suffering from trauma just trying to survive in America.
And let’s be very clear … lawmakers didn’t just make Juneteenth a federal holiday out of the kindness of their hearts.
Activists had to raise hell for this recognition—similar to how we fight for reparations.
On the subject of reparations, riddle me something else—how was it so easy for y’all to make Juneteenth a federal holiday acknowledging that at least from 1619 to 1865, Black people were wronged but still scratchin’ y’all heads on reparations? Especially when they were paid to slave owners for them to agree to free their slaves??? Make it make sense for me—somebody, please!
But when I think about it, the 85% of Americans that oppose reparations for Black people—believing the government can make it right with an apology—are probably the ones instigating fights to ban activism in classrooms in fear that advocacy and activism might actually get that shit done.
From the Medfield , MA summer reading page. This is one set of options, not mandatory.
— Erika Sanzi (@esanzi) June 16, 2021
It has sent up red flags for some parents. (Some of these books are for very young children.)
Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/DiD37W4yTB
I have one final question beyond the gross attack on teaching history and denial of reparations. How can a country acclaim itself for commemorating Black “freedom” when, overall, it consistently blocks a proven pathway to self-determination in public education?
Our kids are sitting in educational plantations disguised as public schools. Schools where their genius is stifled by staff who don't believe in them. Buildings where they’re dehumanized and terrorized by overseers in SRO and police uniforms. They’re redlined according to ZIP code—their access to quality and investment are determined by their race and socioeconomic status. They’re “property” to a system that values them for their per-pupil funding because they are now the new cotton. This is not freedom.
America, you tried it. Whether or not Juneteenth was recognized as a national holiday, we're still going to celebrate it and fight for our freedom.
We’re not going to forget about or let go of the fact that you owe us and our history so much more—and we don’t want your feigned ass policies as a settlement for the kidnapping, enslavement, murder, erasure and present-day brutality against our people.
So, thanks for the acknowledgment 156 years later, but no thanks—it’s not good enough.
Tanesha Peeples is driven by one question in her work—“If not me, then who?” As the former Deputy Director of Activist Development for brightbeam, Tanesha merges the worlds of communications and grassroots activism to push for change in the public education system. Her passion for community and relentless mission for justice and liberation drive her in uplifting and amplifying the voices and advocacy of those that are often ignored. Tanesha wholeheartedly believes that education is the foundation for success. Her grand vision is one where everyone—regardless of ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender or ZIP code—can have access to a comfortable quality of life and enjoy the freedoms and liberties promised to all Americans. And that's what she works towards every day.
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