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Week 11 Blog

Power and Purity

Wokeism, like communism and the new left movements of the past, is a quasi-religion centered around a single set truth. In the case of wokeism, this truth is moral absolutism, the belief that there are certain things that are inherently good and others that are inherently bad. Adherents to wokeism are expected to ascribe to these moral absolutes and actively work to root out any perceived instances of immorality in society.

At first glance, this might seem to align with the non-relativist worldviews of certain religions, such as Puritan Christianity. However, while Puritans were serious about their beliefs and strict in their moral code, they understood that salvation took place in the afterlife, not on Earth. In contrast, wokeism and other quasi-religions like communism believe in the possibility of redemption and transformation on Earth.

This focus on earthly redemption is perhaps why wokeism has been able to gain a foothold among the intelligentsia, who are attracted to the idea of using their intellect and education to bring about positive change in the world. However, as we have seen with communism and the new left, this pursuit of a single set truth can quickly turn into moral totalitarianism, with those who do not adhere to the prescribed moral code being ostracized or silenced.

This is evident in the way that wokeism promotes self-expression and inclusivity, yet at the same time aggressively fights against any views that differ from its own. This type of identity politics ultimately leads to a form of moral puritanism where anyone who does not conform to the woke moral code is deemed unacceptable.

The question then arises: why do people believe in these quasi-religions, and how can we explain the decline in religiosity among the younger generations? One possible explanation is that, in a world where objective truth is increasingly seen as relative, people are drawn to belief systems that offer a sense of moral certainty. Additionally, the rise of individualism and the decline of traditional institutions may have led people to seek out alternative sources of meaning and purpose.

However, as history has shown us, the pursuit of moral absolutism and purity often leads to destructive outcomes. It is important for individuals to critically examine their beliefs and the sources of their moral framework, rather than blindly adhering to the latest ideology or movement. 

Some notes below:

Truth is used as tools to gain power

Relativism

  • All claims depend on the position? 

Puritan Christianity vs. Nietzsche 

Christianity has set morality standards

  • Newer religions and movements attempt to strip away christianity yet keep the part about there being things that are good and bad.

Wokeism is similar to communism or social justice movements we studied earlier

  • There is one set truth. Here the truth is morality. Certain things are good, others are bad. And people must ascribe to these moralities. 
  • In earlier studies of communism, the one set truth is that all societies will eventually enter communism. And also communism viewed that there is only one truth: the proletariat truth is right, the bourgeha truth is bad and corrupted.
  • There is no such thing as relativism. No to each their own. They all eventually become secular.

How are smart people adhering to wokeism?

Christain worldview – non-relativist.

  • Puritans were very serious about what they believed
  • They have to either believe in their “common truth” or be expelled.

While both religion and quasi-religion / gnosticism have certain redemption outcomes, the difference is that most religions understand salvation takes place in another world, but gnosticisms believe that the redemption should happen on earth. 

  • This is why communists believed that they should be actively trying to revolutionize and change the societies, so that all societies will reach communism.

Self-expression is the source of sacredness

  • Ad

Why would those Middlebury students believe that a talk can be so harmful?

  • Like Gad Saad’s argument – there is a trend of over-protection (trigger warnings) that actually in turn make people more sensitive. Because people see them not often enough in regular life, they might misinterpret some usual unharmful statements as harmful.

Wokeism seems to be somewhat contradictory

  • They claim to be promoting expression, yet for the views different from their own, they try hard to fight against it.

Wokeism: identity politics

  • Moral puritanism

Moral totalitarianism produce quite the opposite outcome

Communism -> new left -> wokeism

Question

  • So we have talked a lot in class about how wokeism is similar to communism and the new left movements that we studied earlier.
  • But, I still have this question about why people really believe in these quasi-religions. 
  • Why do people believe in it? Why do people think that 
  • Or, why do people believe in religions in general? Also, how can we explain the decline in religiosity in the new generations?
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Book Reviews

1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project Book Review

To begin this review of Peter Wood’s book, 1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project, we must first understand the premise of the 1619 Project and what its aim is in the context of American history. The 1619 Project is the initiative to “reframe the nation’s history” by altering the birth year of the United States from 1776 to 1619. 1619 was the year in which two ships arrived in Jamestown, Virginia from West Africa carrying slaves. The goal of this project was to embed slavery into the core principles of which our country is built upon and transform the way we think about the United States. This project was delivered to the public in August of 2019 by Nikole Hannah-Jones and a group of intellectual journalists and historians to back up her argument in The New York Times magazine. This article gained traction right away from all people, whether that be intellectual or lay people in society, even though it had almost no documentation or “rigorous scholarship”, as Wood describes in his book. Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, Wood took it upon himself to respond to such an abrasive and seemingly controversial article released by one of the most prestigious and influential news platforms in the world. Wood attempts to argue that the actual year that set the stage for how our country was laid out and core beliefs and principles on which we stand should be 1620: the year in which the pilgrims arrived on the Mayflower on Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts. He argues that the Mayflower Compact was the major document and dictator in steering our country to self-government and to ultimately separate from the King across the Atlantic. Throughout this book he aimed to clarify the history of America and expose the falsehoods and hypocrisies within the language of the 1619 Project. 

Wood begins his critique of the 1619 Project by setting the stage with his argument of 1620 being the first influential year within American history. He begins by citing the Mayflower Compact by depicting the specific wording and historical context in which they wrote this document. The forty-one signers of the document utilized Old Testament scripture and their religious background to fortify and combine themselves into what they call “a civil body politic”. This united, single civil body politic is simply a cohort of people that agree to govern themselves under a common set of rules and laws through peaceful debate. The 1619 Project however, claims the actual start year of our nation begins when English pirates landed in Jamestown, Virginia with thirty some African slaves. The New York Times declared that the arrival of these slaves established the institution of chattel slavery in the Americas that would have not been present had these ships never landed there. Wood attempts to refute this claim by stating that the 1619 Project authors did not take into account historical context of slavery and its role in the world. He writes that slavery was not a novel institution in the Old World nor the New World, it had been present long before the year 1619. He explains that many African tribes willing sold their people into slavery in return for goods. By this, Wood means that indentured servitude and slavery were common practice for much of history and although most would agree it is immoral, it did serve its purpose during that time. Slavery was a much different institution from the time of the Pilgrims to prior to Civil War slavery. Wood defends this further by denouncing the vernacular term “dehumanization” and its misuse in regard to treatment of black slaves. He claims that slave owners did not deny that slaves were human and that people do not need to deny someone their humanity in order to perform hateful acts towards them. 

With the inability to put history into context and the cultural landscape at the time, post-modernism takes hold in the argument of the 1619 Project. Wood defines postmodernism as the idea that all facts and truths of society are up for interpretation based on a person’s background. People who ascribe to this mentality believe there are no universal truths in the world and one’s own truth is just as valid as another’s. As we have learned from early on in the semester, intellectuals base their entire existence on finding and deducting the truth. They also pride themselves in that they frown upon ambiguity and believe all things have one meaning and one meaning only, as Gouldner describes it in Chapter 6 of his book. During our discussion with Peter Wood, he claimed that this idea of post-modernism has a Marxist edge to it in that one interpretation can be favored more heavily than another. This idea favors the interpretation made by intellectuals that the oppressed must be liberated from the shackles of society by shutting down the privileged class. In the context of the 1619 Project, recognize that black Americans and their enslaved ancestors are the foundation of our country and must be given reparations for their suffering over all others. Along with that narrative, those white Americans are the privileged class that must be shut down and provide those reparations to the oppressed class of black Americans. Those who oppose this interpretation of the 1619 Project are labeled as white supremacists and racists, as Wood points out in his book. 

Peter Wood criticizes the 1619 Project in several other manners that would be difficult to cover in this one review. He brings up five main points of contention, such as the American Revolution being fought to protect the rights of American slave owners from abolition by the British, that Lincoln was a racist whose intent was to keep blacks and whites separate, that “black Americans fought back alone”, that plantation slavery was the foundation for American capitalism, and that our nations history is best thought about as a struggle by black Americans against white supremacy. Each of these points he refutes in their own chapter by breaking down the history and context of culture during that period of American history. He disputes these claims through consultation with the Declaration of Independence and the inalienable rights each human being has, the 1960’s Civil Rights Movement that brought all races together to fight for equal rights, and that slavery did not make America wealthier in the capitalist system, it decreased GDP of all things. 

One main argument he makes throughout the book however is that the 1619 Project simply has no scholarly backing. Much of these claims made by Nikole Hannah-Jones and others were reviewed by other historians who openly stated that much of their interpretation was false and meanwhile gave no footnotes or research citations for any of their claims. As an example, Wood states that Leslie Harris, a well-versed historian on slavery and black history, distinctly told the writers they were wrong but they did nothing to change it. As a basic intellectual piece of literature this in itself should pose some concern and warrants criticism, Wood writes. Open discourse forms the groundwork for intellectual analysis of any issue as we learned from Gouldner’s piece on the Culture of Critical Discourse. There must be a level of clarity and scholarly evidence to back up a claim no matter how small. The claim must also be subject to severe scholarly scrutiny and discourse to decipher its validity and truth. Wood finishes out his book by stating that slavery is a complex issue that Americans should understand and should be discussed in schools. However, the notion of reframing an entire historical basis is not logical or practical and may lead to generations of animosity toward our country.

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Book Reviews

1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project Review

For my book review, I will be taking a deeper look into Peter Wood’s Novel 1620: A Critical Response to the 1619 Project. 1620 is a critical response to The New York Times 1619 project, the goal of this project as Jake Silverstein put it in the opening remarks of the project: “The goal of The 1619 Project, a major initiative from The New York Times that this issue of the magazine inaugurates, is to reframe American history by considering what it would mean to regard 1619 as our nation’s birth year. Doing so requires us to place the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are as a country.” While this was the goal of the articles, Woods’ goal which he successfully achieved was to take the reader through the main points of 1619 and show the historical inaccuracies and critique the work in a non-biased way. The main parts of this novel are spent looking at claims that the project made and going back to look at the historical context of the claims in the project, more specifically Wood looks at the claims by date and finds contradictions in the projects and to be effective in his rebuttable he goes to historical text himself and brings in historians to analyze the text as well. 

In this review, I do not want to solely summarize the novel but rather look at the main concepts that Wood is trying to analyze and synthesize them. A goal I also have is to not look at how Wood thinks about history because it is not something that is up for interpretation (the main point that Wood is arguing). By starting the novel with the historical background the point in which I believe that Wood is trying to make is that it is much harder to reframe the way in which we think about history. Wood uses this narrative throughout the novel but most convincingly in the first and seventh chapters. These chapters take place after 1619, in 1620 and 1621, in these two chapters Wood gives the historical context of the time period while at the same time not focusing on slavery or the black experience during that time which I did find interesting since the main topic of the 1619 project is surrounding that topic. 

 The point that Wood is making about the difficulty of reframing history holds true and he tries to prove this throughout the novel by quoting excerpts from many historical documents to refute the claims made by Nikole Hannah-Jones. The critique that I have for this aspect of the novel is that some, not all, of the historical documents that are quoted when put against parts of 1619 are slightly taken out of context. But nevertheless, they still accomplish Woods’s goals of showing some contradictions and inaccuracies in Hannah-Jones’s work, showing that while the goal of 1619 might be along the lines of history it shows more of an opinionated journalistic style. 

Some of the chapters that are worth reviewing are the ones that are in the novel placed in modern times. These chapters highlight August 2019, March 2020, January 2020, and September 2020. Wood’s use of these chapters rounds out the rest of the novel so it is not just a recount of historical events that Wood says are incorrect in 1619. In these chapters, the most important concept that Wood is showing of the present-day is the response to the 1619 project and also looking at the language that the project uses. Something that has stuck out throughout is the words that the project uses to invoke emotions, Wood highlights this “dialogue” and as he puts it is an advertisement that is “mostly of Nikole Hannah-Jones’s monologues and conversations with the like-minded.”(53) The analysis by Wood to weed out what is a conversation versus fact and what is stated on emotion as well helps his argument. This is highlighted most clearly in the chapter titled March 2020, he was writing this in July after the 1619 project was released and in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd.  He continues this argument by looking at the present and seeing the emotional response to acts of racism, where Wood uses his background as an academic to see the connection between the project and these acts which he says is open for debate. 

Wood does note that the project is based on an ideology that he does not share, and in the chapter about the future he looks at how to move forward after reading. Wood spends this chapter laying out his final thoughts as a form of a conclusion, and answering larger questions about what should be done in the aftermath of the project. Something that Wood is arguing that should be done is for Americans to truly understand their history and that the 1619 project is not a viable source of this education on the topic. In this chapter, a large part of what Wood is saying is that schools should not use this as a way to teach students but rather go back to what he says is the discipline of history, a part of this chapter that I believe encapsulates the true meaning of the novel comes on page 221:

Let’s take several steps back. History is not just a collection of facts about the past, nor is it just “what happened.” The study of history has standards and approved methods. It is a discipline. It is also the way in which our civilization thinks itself into existence. By means of history, we recognize how we came to be, what we are, and why that matters. The term that contrasts most strikingly with history is mythology, that is, stories of the past that express key values but that are not grounded in fact. Humanity the world over possesses mythology, but history is a cultural rarity. 

Wood, Peter, 1953- author. 1620 : a Critical Response to the 1619 Project. New York, New York :Encounter Books, 2020.

By Wood explaining the difference between history and mythology, the main takeaway I had from this is while yes it is apparent that Wood does not agree with the majority of the 1619 project and the majority of the novel is spent looking at the inaccuracies and contradictions, Wood is making an example of the project. He makes it clear at the end of this novel that he does believe that black Americans have a right to be upset about the oppression that they have faced and that the country is responsible for its wrongdoings but people should accurately know their history and not rewrite it to fit a narrative that they want to believe.

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Student Posts

Blog post #11 week of 11/2

I personally liked the concepts in the power and purity readings from Mark Mitchell. They really made me think hard about Nietzsche’s theories and concepts. I thought the opening that he chose was perplexing since I do remember when the California congresswomen publicly told people to harass members in trumps cabinet on the news. Its one thing to hold up signs and do a peaceful protest while someone is giving a speech but harassing people in the public domain while their not in work (such as a restaurant) is going way too far. 

All of these examples that Mark Mitchell provides only strengthen the ideas of Nietzsche. Politics is definitely mixing with everyday life. 

When Mitchell says “we have lost faith in the very ideals that made us who we were.” that got me thinking about the constitution since even though its outdated those are our ideals and people keep saying we need to change them. We may have talked about this concept in the Wood reading from last week in class. Mitchell goes on to say that America is a Puritan at its heart.

I thought that the Nietzschean will to power concept was interesting and how he links it to Puritanism and Christianity.  The ideas of truth, or how we once thought about it reminded me of some of the concepts that Gad Saad talked about in his book. 

When Nietzsche declared that God was dead in the sense that the idea of God was no longer plausible, I did not quite know what to think, but it started to make more sense the further i got into the reading. If I’m understanding this correctly, Nietzsche believes that life is the will to power and not the will to truth (and the will to morality plays a part in that). 

A question that I had was since Nietzsche saw Christianity and Christian morality as the mortal enemies of life itself, Why was that the case? Was it because the ideals of Christianity are confining and therefore not allowing our liberal democratic society to produce the one powerful individual who will ascend above everyone else? (then again liberal institutions are confining for those reasons (page 47) 

Other connections that I made from the other readings were on victimhood and the 1619 project, one talked about in Gad’s book and the other in Peter Wood’s book. I also thought the concept of identity politics since Mitchel describes it as a politics that unites to divide. 

(page 54)

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Student Posts

Week 10 Blog

Peter Wood’s 1620, addressed the goal of the 1619 Project which was to essentially reframe the country’s history through the publication of newspapers. The aim of this was to put slavery and the black American experience at the heart of our country’s political identity and origin. Rather than incorporating and adding the black experience into our education of American history, it strived to entirely replace our traditional understanding of American history. The proponents of 1619 further argued that America began with the arrival of slaves. They view the planation system and slave market as the origins of modern day capitalism. They also wanted to revamp our entire perspective on Abraham Lincoln. They claim that he was not a hero to the salves and did not have the slaves’ best interest at heart. I personally think that this claim is too extreme to make. I agree that there were still injustices and formal laws in place that prevented the equality of citizenship that slaves should have been granted during his presidency. However, I think that their claim is too extreme and undermines the progress that Lincoln did make in aiding slaves. I further thought that it was interesting that the 1619 goal aligns with the perspectives of the New Left. This is because it promotes the radicalization and transformation of society. Yet, I think there are many complications with claiming that America began with slavery. On one hand in can make it wrongly seem like we have moved on from slavery and that racism is in the past. On the other hand it can make it seem like racism is ingrained in the roots of our history and is something that is inescapable. Woods agrees more with the later conclusion. He says that even though we should create laws in society that are “colorblind” we will always have the tendency to congregate within certain racial groups. His reasoning for this is that we have shared qualities and cultural affinities which result in these group formations. This makes me wonder; however, is the bonding of racial groups an example of racism? Or is it just us expressing our identity with like minded individuals? This leaves our interpretation of how racist and oppressive American society is and has been in the past ambiguous. Surely we should work to create laws in society that offer equality for all races of citizens, yet it is difficult to tell how much of these oppressions are the direct result of the American government itself. To determine the start of American history and how it should be taught we have to evaluate the facts themselves. Although, plantation systems have many correlations with how we operate modern day capitalism in turns of production and exploitation, we must also recognize that slavery arose in British Northern American colonies, but it did not arrive in Virginia until nearly half a century later. It is difficult to pinpoint a specific year of American history’s origin if we try to use slavery as the start of the timeline. The dates can get very messy so I think we should proceed with caution before proceeding with the 1619 Project.

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Book Reviews

Book Review of Paul Hollander’s From Benito Mussolini To Hugo Chavez: Intellectuals And A Century Of Political Hero Worship

For my book report I will be analyzing Paul Hollander’s From Benito Mussolini To Hugo Chavez: Intellectuals And A Century Of Political Hero Worship. This book evaluates how political dictators were not only popular within their own countries ,but also how they were admired by highly educated Western intellectuals. Hero worship of dictator examples that the book includes but is not limited to include: Benito Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin, Mao Zedong, Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez. The overall goal of this book seeks to understand the sources of the political misjudgments and misperceptions of intellectuals to idealize dictators. It also discusses their affinity for wishful thinking and how they were influenced by the charisma of the dictators. It helps us better understand the political disposition of western intellectuals and also the personality of those political leaders who encouraged or helped design the cult surrounding their rise to dictatorship. Another goal of the book is to understand the relationship between the personal and political realms as well as the spirituality associated with  modernity.

An overarching theme that the book tackles is the “cult of personality.” It claims that we are more likely to have positive sentiments about the political system if the person that represents it has a charismatic personality. It then talks about how this admiration can turn into hero worship. He also clarifies that the intellectual class are not the only ones that have admired dictators, they were popular among ordinary people as well. Believe in a utopian social system of the future. 

A contradiction that the book tackles is: how could intellectuals that are people who value free expression admire dictators that limited free expression? Questions that the book seeks to answer: Is the admiration of dictators by intellectuals similar or different from the admiration by ordinary ppl (non-intellectuals)? Do intellectuals admire dictators because of their personality, ideas, or the political system they symbolize and represent? What particular attributes of the dictators do intellectuals find the most appealing? How do we justify the admiration of dictators in light of dissonance between their supposed commitment to free expression and the policies they pursued? How can we explain these conflicting attitudes? Do larger cultural political trends account for them or are they rooted in the nature or personality of intellectuals in their shared attributes that include ambivalence about their social role, identity problems, and an unease about being thinkers and talkers rather than doers? What is it in the nature of many intellectuals, especially the public or political intellectuals, that makes them susceptible to the appeal of dictators and the political systems they represent?

 To answer these questions one needs to recognize that they are chronically dissatisfied with their own society. Gouldner also discusses this sense of alienation in a broader social historical context. He claims that this isolation is not a recent event and has directly blocked intellectuals’ ability for upward mobility. Therefore, many Western intellectuals believed in idealized totalitarian dictatorships because they thought it would solve their identity issues and they would be more integrated into society. They yearned for guaranteed authenticity and integration and thought that these systems would achieve this. They were also influenced by their hatred of capitalism so this resulted in hero worshiping the perceived enemies of capitalism. 

A common thread among dictators was their proclaimed commitment to secular-religious beliefs. Many of their speeches had religious undertones and religion was often a source of motivation for their agendas. Crimes committed in socialism were forgiven and not punished because that would be an example of  “bad faith.”  In many cases ints and socialism fused together with religious hope. Another theme was the disillusionment with or questioning of modernity. In an attempt to rebel against modernity intellectuals sought refuge in radical alternatives that challenged modernity.

Hollander then goes on to note the similarities among facsism and communism. Both had the goal of creating a utopian society. Also much of their support came from economic difficulties and low morale after WWI. After losing the war there was a decline in social cohesion which made life seem meaningless. Another appeal was their adversity for modernity, yet there was a contradiction here.Dictators often flaunted their technological accomplishments as sources of legitimacy. Both fascist italy and nazi germany introduced economic policies that were more efficient than former policies. 

The personalities of the leaders themselves was a major reason for their success in rising to power. Charismatic leaders typically arise in times of severe political and economic crises when people are longing for a quick solution. Intellectuals were wishful thinkers who thought that these dictators were capable of producing this change. They viewed dictators as sacred and put them on a pedestal to worship them. Collins also talks about the affinity for intellectuals to view certain objects or people as sacred. He claims that intellectuals produce sacred objects in the attempt to enhance their own status in the intellectual community. I think this directly relates to how intellectuals sacralized dictators in an attempt to guarantee their own social status. 

In regards to specific dictators a lot of Hitler’s following from Western intellectuals came from the fact that he was an artist. The new position of the artist under National Socialism resonated with the longings of alienated intellectuals who dreamed of becoming integrated into a communitarian socialist society. He was also very charismatic and was able to connect to the masses and was viewed as a selfless individual trying to bring salvation to Germany. The admiration of Stalin came from his “success” with the rapid industrialization of an underdeveloped country. Unlike Hitler, he was not charismatic and rarely spoke to crowds. He resembled a father-figure and  had a remarkable ability to deceive those that he met. Westerners admired Stalin because they admired a political leader with accomplishments and personal qualities that were better than leaders in their own country. Castro appealed to the New Left because he was a young, handsome, powerful speaker, a genuine revolutionary and guerilla fighter who overthrew an oppressive government. There was a strong appeal for Castro from westerners because they considered him a victim of American imperialism. He also gained popularity in the U.S. from his famous interview with the New York Times. There was also a historical trend associated with his rise to power. By the time he rose to power the soviet system was largely discredited.

In more recent times there have been many notable new dictators that have risen to fame and performed progressive communism. North Korea specifically is developed and institutionalized with modifications of extreme quasi religious cults of its leaders. Western intellectuals have sympathy for North Korea because of the “unfriendliness” of the U.S. They also praise the alleged accomplishments of the regime such as “free education and health care to everyone.” Hugo Chavez of Venezuela became popular partly because of his close relations with Castro. He thought like other dictators that he was carrying out an earthly mission guided by a superhuman force. Westerners admire that he provided substantial economic assistance to Cuba. Yet westerners are unaware  that ~1.3 million venezuelans left the country after his rise to power. They also were unaware of serious deterioration of public safety and high crime levels. 

Overall an overarching theme of this book was the lack and resistance of knowledge of the true policies that these dictators represented. Intellectuals were  not anxious to gain access to information  that would have undermined their own beliefs. They also were influenced by their alienation from society and tendency for wishful thinking. This allowed for the persisting and predisposition to misjudge both the character and policies of these dictators throughout history.

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Student Posts

The 1619 Project

The conversation from last week made me rethink a lot of the concepts we have discussed throughout the class thus far. I think discussing the idea of the 1619 project, and the troublesome false facts that were written brings up a lot of conceptual issues relating to the intellectual class. Something interesting that came up was the idea of someone’s morals being more important than fact. I believe that this is something troubling that happens a lot within the intellectual class. We talked about the moral reasoning behind the 1619 project, and how when intellectuals choose to use their morals in place of following facts it can completely discount their journalism, research, or whatever it is that they are expressing their thoughts through. I talked about the idea that the 1619 project opened the door for a bigger conversation, including allowing Black creators to be able to speak their truths about their ancestry including their experiences with slavery. After discussing this, I realized that even if this was the intention of the 1619 project, a lot of the intellectuals writing for this project stated that their intentions were to completely rewrite history. By stating this, it shifts the narrative, changing the intention of the project whether that is what they intended to do or not. It brings up the point of intellectuals realizing how important what they state is, and the impact it can have. The 1619 project is now being taught in schools, even though a lot of the information that is stated is wrong and incorrect. I think it is teaching younger generations that even if their morals are in the right place, and they want to expose something like the brutality of slavery and how it affected the United States, they are allowed to use false facts to back up their claims. I think this is the downfall of the 1619 project. It is true that there are many false facts taught in schools when younger kids are learning about history. We have seen this in the teachings of Christopher Columbus. This is an entirely different conversation, because there are intellectuals who are creating the textbooks taught to younger kids in schools. When there is false information taught, it allows for misinformation to spread. I believe that the reason why people do not talk about the 1619 project more and how the misinformation in it discounts the idea that more children should be taught about slavery, is because it is about such a sensitive topic. Black intellectuals should be allowed to speak their minds and what they believe on a matter such as slavery. As a country, we should allow for Black people to be able to speak their minds. As a white person, it becomes uncomfortable when having to discount someone on speaking on a matter I know nothing about. Similarly, that is why I believe the conversation was so difficult to have. I am not an intellectual, nor am I knowledgable on the beginnings of slavery, more specifically the factual evidence. This is exactly what harm the 1619 project can do, people like myself who do not know enough about the subject can be influenced easily by such a large news source such as the New York Times deciding to publish and share such an influential piece of information. This also points to another important idea, the fact that the average person trusts what intellectuals say even though the facts may not be correct. It begs the question, how many other sources like this are out there? How can one be sure that they are reading facts? Because this is a subject that people make out to be political, it also creates another problem. There are many people that just because a piece of journalism may suggest it leans a certain way politically automatically deem it incorrect or do not want to continue reading or understanding the work. This is something that has lead to the polarization in our country today. Even if there are certain works of journalism or research that do have some form of politics in them, that does not deem it incorrect. The 1619 project has to do with this. Since Republicans have been deemed racist by some groups of people, more specifically the far left, people do not care to understand if the facts in it are correct. It is just deemed correct because of the moral content that is in it. This is something hard to comprehend in the society we live in today. When reading content, it can be easy to comprehend that the person’s morals are in the right place, such as the 1619 project wanting to expose slavery and allow Black voices to be heard about an issue that is still so prevalent in today’s society. However, it is important to further understand the facts and whether they portray the correct historical evidence. Furthermore, it just goes back to my original point that because of the incorrect nature of the 1619 project, it just completely discounts the entire point of the project, whatever that point may be.