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This time, you've wandered way off the trail. If you look through the whole proposal to whitewash black history in Florida, you find that it wants students to learn that "everybody else" was into enslavement, and "many did it much worse" and then "so, really, what we did wasn't so bad, see?"

There is no "good" enslavement, there is no "bad" enslavement. There is enslavement. Period. I think you people in Canada might not understand it because you didn't have to deal with the institutionalization of enslavement, with a basic political document that affirmed white supremacy by declaring slaves were "3/5 of a person" and a Supreme Court dominated for the first 80 years by enslavers, who constantly ruled in favor of enslavers, and who finally declared that African Americans could never be citizens and no rights a white man had to recognize. And then after the country's bloodiest war, the enslavers were allowed to recreate their antebellum system as "home rule" - as the Florida "guidance" calls it (the rest of us know it as Jim Crow) which the new rules really don't want people to study too well (because they don't want them noticing how they're working 24/7/365 to recreate that).

You might look up how it is that all the black Canadian citizens got there. Most of their ancestors got there because people like my three-times-great-grandfather, a Quaker Abolitionist, were willing to ignore the rulings of the allegedly-"supreme" court (a similar version of which no exists today) and operate the Underground Railroad to help all those former slaves get to Canada where their "vocational training" on the plantation could be put to good use for their self-advancement.

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