Once again, South Bend, Ind. mayor and presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg finds himself under the microscope and under fire for recently unearthed video of him saying something trash.
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You may remember that last month, The Rootโs own Michael Harriotย blasted Buttigieg over past comments about why black kids fail in school so often, saying, โKids need to see evidence that education is going to work for them.โ Harriot later sat down for an interview with Buttigieg and the two kinda, sorta, but not really hashed things out and everything was kinda, sorta, but not really right with the world again.
Well, now Buttigieg is up against it again; this time for an old clip from his appearance on a childrenโs public television show in 2014.
โSimilarly, the amendment processโthey were wise enough to realize that they didnโt have all of the answers and that some things would change. A good example of this is something like slaveryโor civil rights. Itโs an embarrassing thing to admit, but the people who wrote the Constitution did not understand that slavery was a bad thing and did not respect civil rights.โ
Oh Jesus Christ, Pete.
First of all, if they โdid not respect civil rightsโ I think itโs safe to say that they knew when they were doing a bad thing, they just didnโt care.
In fact, writer Aleia Woods of NewsOne did a fine job of pointing out a direct refutation of this Buttigiegโs statement by one of the framers himself.
In fact, James Madison, one of the โpeople who wrote the Constitutionโ and owned as many as 118 slaves, according to White House History, admitted to knowing just how immoral and barbaric slavery was. He referred to slavery as a โdreadful calamityโ in a private letter written to Frances Wright in 1825.
โThe magnitude of this evil among us is so deeply felt, and so universally acknowledged, that no merit could be greater than that of devising a satisfactory remedy for it,โ he wrote, according to the Founders Archive.
The core issue here is that people, especially U.S. politicians, are afraid to admit a simple truth: a lot of the founders were pretty trash. They insist on feeding us this โthose were the timesโ explanation as if it werenโt true that, regardless of how far back in history weโre talking about, evil is as evil does.
Slavery, at all points in time, was inherently evil. Regarding human beings as less than human (or at least not more than 3/5 as such) is inherently evil. Itโs preposterous to assume slavers, nation leaders and slavery advocates didnโt understand that owning other people as property is wrongโat least in the eyes of those being owned. But the bad thing didnโt matter because the hate was the point. The cruelty was the point. The subjugation was the point. And if those campaigning to lead us and asking for our votes and our confidence would simply be real about things like this, they might not find themselves falling out of our favor so easily and so often.
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