Garfield Got It Right A Century Ago
[January 25th] - James Garfield is one of my favorite presidents. I know, I know. Garfield didn't do anything of note during his presidency to warrant his being anyone's favorite.
Well, it's not so much anything he did that makes me like the guy; it's something he said.
"I love agitation and investigation and glory in defending unpopular truth against popular error."
Education today no longer defends the unpopular truth. History is often rewritten at the expense of political expediency. My daughter heard the following from her high school history teacher: "You must fight to make sure that a woman's right to choose remains the law of the land. If the supreme court over-turns, abortion will be illegal in America." Every teacher should know that if Roe v Wade were to be overturned, each state would then choose what to allow within their borders.
Less than 24% of Southern families owned slaves In 1860. 75% of those who did have slaves owned less than nine. Yet many history books depict a 'Roots' environment where slaves were regularly beaten and starved by ruthless corporate farmers. Would a farmer today slash the tires and cut the spark plug wires of a tractor that wouldn't start one morning? Of course not. So why would a farmer in 1860 beat his slave -- keeping him out of the fields for days or even weeks, leaving the slave-owner to do the hard work. It most certainly did happen, but not to the extent that are texts would suggest.
Sometimes, the truth hurts. Sometimes, what really happened in our past isn't pleasant. That doesn't mean it didn't happen.