| > I'm not really sure why that quote would give anyone the impression that American culture was built for blacks. The difference between James Baldwin and the persona you've adopted for your comments here is that Baldwin was able to see things from another person's perspective. You could probably do that too, if you tried, but you haven't in this case. You're simply asserting that the ideals used to justify the American war of independence are a sham, and everybody should know it and accept it as resolutely as you choose to interpret it Did you watch the video of Baldwin at Cambridge Union? He gives the audience a first hand account of what it is to be a 4 year old black kid in America. The audience didn't know what that experience was like. It was literally foreign to them. They were surprised and enlightened by what they heard. Why do you think the Cambridge Union gave Baldwin a standing ovation? What do you think they were responding to? What do you think those people, drawn from the 1% of the country that America broke from with Jefferson's words to become its future ruling class, learned from that 40 year old son of a drug addict from Harlem? |
I would be shocked if that was actually the first time they learned that being a member of a conquered or enslaved people was really not very nice in a variety of different ways. Maybe they did not know about some of the particular ways in which it is bad, but these are as you noted young members of the elite class in a rapidly decolonializing empire. I would expect them to know the ethical debate over imperialism like the back of their hand, and would expect them to generally be unfavorable toward it.
These people knew about the history of slavery, not just in Europe and the Americas, but about, for instance, slavery in the middle east, where, despite bringing in huge numbers of African slaves, there are virtually no descendants of African slaves today, due to the customary treatment of slaves there.
As for whether Jefferson's ideals are a sham, clearly they are to some degree. Maybe the people who signed that document believed all men are created equal, and believed that applied also to their slaves, but if they did believe that, they clearly did not see much of a problem with ignoring their inalienable rights. This contradiction has been discussed since before the ink was dry, and is quite well known. They were not laying out a carefully reasoned philosophical treatise, they were trying to rally their own side in a political debate.
An ignorant person could believe that American ideals mean that American society was built for all Americans equally, but the audience members were not ignorant people. So I don't know, you tell me what you think they learned, and why you think they gave a standing ovation.