How do we Rewrite the History of America? w/ Michael Harriot and Dr. Sheryl Evans Davis

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 ก.ค. 2024
  • The prominent Black intellectual, writer, and political commentator Michael Harriot will join Sheryl Davis, Human Rights Commission Executive Director, in conversation at Manny's on a wide range of topics, including reparations, the force and power of Black women, and the anniversary of the MegaBlack S.F. collective.
    About Michael Harriot:
    Michael Harriot is a columnist at theGrio and a staff writer on The Amber Ruffin Show. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, the Atlantic, and BET; he is a frequent political commentator on MSNBC and CNN known for his biting observations and investigative reporting. Michael’s work has earned National Association of Black Journalists award for digital commentary and recognition for TV news writing. He holds degrees in mass communications and history from Auburn University and a master's degree in macroeconomics and international business from Florida State University. His book Black AF History: The Un-whitewashed Story of America is expected to be released this year.
    Harriot’s work has influenced presidential politics and pop culture. He originated the phrase “invited to the cookout” and his social media posts contextualizing history are shared by millions. He served as the sole writer for BET's Midterm Election Special as well as "Young, Gifted and Broke," an examination of the student debt crisis. Although he has jokingly billed himself as a “wypipologist” for years, Michael Eric Dyson hails Harriot as "one of the funniest men out there, taking no prisoners on the subject of white supremacy".
    About Sheryl Evans Davis:
    Sheryl Evans Davis, EdD is a changemaker who leads relationship-driven, community-centered initiatives. Named Executive Director of the San Francisco Human Rights Commission in 2016, Dr. Davis is a passionate advocate for equity, access, and educational opportunity for all. For nearly three decades, she has made contributions as an educator and leader with expertise in community outreach and engagement, workforce development, youth development, and violence prevention.
    Dr. Davis worked to build out an equity framework with San Francisco community stakeholders and City departments, resulting in the Office of Racial Equity. She also oversees the Equity Studies Task Force, the Blue Ribbon Panel for Juvenile Justice Reform, and the Dream Keeper Initiative, among other programs of the SFHRC. Dr. Davis is frequently requested to speak on issues of community wellness, equity, and strategic change work. She holds a BA from San Francisco State University, an MPA from the University of San Francisco, and an EdD from USC Rossier; in 2019, she was awarded an honorary doctorate from USF.

ความคิดเห็น • 68

  • @marilynnjones951
    @marilynnjones951 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I bought my book from Octavia's Bookshelf-Black Owned Bookstore in Pasadena, CA--she had to reorder it after it sold out-thank you for our TRUTH and the illusion of the manufactured lies, called America. It should be required reading by all Black Churches( great chapter) and Saturday Schools) instead of the sports complex) to elevate and educate the minds of current and future generations, peorid!

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The whole Truth and nothing but the Truth!

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    His book Black AF should be right along with the Gideon Book!

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    They owned people that built this country

  • @justmyopinion9883
    @justmyopinion9883 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I am currently reading “Black AF History “. It’s an excellent book; Micheal is a very gifted writer.

  • @GlobalFreeLiving
    @GlobalFreeLiving 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Fantastic... will buy his book.

  • @buster9106
    @buster9106 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    His analogies are fantastic. They really bring the point home, e.g. the moving out of your house because you need a new roof and having to solve who stole your tv instead of the police.

  • @Niayolonda777
    @Niayolonda777 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It is what it is! Let's not dress it up! The fact is there is enough to share for everyone! Those who do not want to share are very selfish. PERIOD!

  • @ogyaherd9667
    @ogyaherd9667 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing! Selective "memory" vs selective use of facts - uncovered, helps me understand why these folks are so mad, & protective of this selective narrative they've spun...

  • @amarbyrd2520
    @amarbyrd2520 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    oh, darn -- as much mindblowing as was in the talk, I was still so distressed that the video cut off before the last round of questioning was completed

  • @musclehead8649
    @musclehead8649 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great interview. But is that a rat i saw behind him at the 1.16 :30mark.😂😂

  • @nadinehall9631
    @nadinehall9631 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm going to do a collaboration with MH someday....I'm just putting it out in the universe. Thanks for your remarkable work, sir. I applaud you.

  • @user-tn6pu6gv3u
    @user-tn6pu6gv3u 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    UMFORGIVABLE TO SAY THE LEAST. UNFORGIVABLE INDEED !

  • @siriuslyspeaking9720
    @siriuslyspeaking9720 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    History is only useful if you learn from it. History is important, but making new positive history is more important. History cannot be re-written. A diffirent perspective of it is what can be done and what has always been done to some degree. Again what makes it useful is in the hands of those who apply it to their lives.

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    And that's a damn shame we have to stay alert and aware of the bs at all times that's life

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Create a better system with heart is reparations for me!
    Resource based economy!

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ultimately it is what it is you can't sugar coat it man

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We just need to get away from them!

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A Lie by Omission!

  • @rev.jahmeanchrist5221
    @rev.jahmeanchrist5221 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    IT'S A FACT U.S.A. HISTORY TRUTH don't Buy the Lie!!!!!!!!(So SAD!!!!!!!:.❤

  • @user-mp9jq4lf4k
    @user-mp9jq4lf4k 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    AFRICAN PEOPLE HAVE A LOT OF WORK TO DO WE HAVE TO RERIGHT HISTORY THE REAL AFRICAN HISTORY

  • @evek2572
    @evek2572 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Call it like it is.

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ¿How can We Build Our Own Network Systems?

  • @bertthompson7342
    @bertthompson7342 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    43:38 Nah.
    Lineage and ancestral registration as negro, black, colored, i.a., from enslavement onwards is enough to prove disadvantage: census registration as white means automatic federal and societal benefits; census registration as negro, etc. means restricted or no benefits.
    As an "economist" Mr. Harriot is expected to formulate and execute the requisite rules.
    So far he has shown himself incapable of doing so.
    Excuses, excuses is all he has offered so far.
    No other group has been targeted like we have.
    As an influencer recently put it -- in her "Will Black America Ever Forgive Her for This?" -- regarding Kamala's rejection of benefits/reparations solely for Blackfolk:
    ▪Slavery was just for us,
    ▪Jim Crow was just for us,
    ▪redlining was just for us,
    ▪the peonage system was just for us,
    ▪segregation was just for us,
    ▪discrimination based on race was just for us.
    So they've done all of these things in America that were just for us, things that did damage to our families, did damaged our freedom, set us back economically -- well, didn't set us back economically because we never got on an economic footing in the first place, because of all of these policies, government policies written into law. So it's not like they could even pretend these things didn't happen -- and they were just for Black people."
    These are outrageous crimes that must be redressed.
    And Michael would have them get away with it Scot free.
    47:33 Deflection upon deflection upon deflection.
    We solve the case and we make the demand.
    Pettiness prevails here: Most who could pass for white DID pass (and had access to the concomitant benefits), most who couldn't didn't because they couldn't.
    Only those who didn't/couldn't pass for white are qualified for reparations.
    56:01 He exposed his ineptitude when he revealed the producers-suppliers-managers to be not of the black middle class, namely, they were white.
    They were the "feeders," and it is the feeders who are at liberty to define those they feed as "useless eaters" and treat them accordingly.
    Mr. Harriot is evidently content being a (useless) eater.
    And that, for me, is the nail in his coffin:
    1:02:59 He has now just admitted to schizophrenia: White people have taken the place of God in his mind.
    1:09:43 The issue is that white people did indeed "make it up"!
    And because they have wilfully created injustice (see the bullet points above), it is up to us to wilfully create justice.
    Thanks for your thought-provoking broadcast.

  • @ninadaly7639
    @ninadaly7639 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To keep your roof analogy going, everyone else is not responsible for getting you a new roof, right?

  • @karensteele-hart9782
    @karensteele-hart9782 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Begin with the Moors/where their diverse/accepting of 😢diversity/academia. Etc while Europe was turmoil. We as westerners give far plant european western civ was our foundation etc..
    Black history erased early on.
    Namaste

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Say it

  • @siriuslyspeaking9720
    @siriuslyspeaking9720 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Harriot addressed the obvious contradictions in the use of the acronym ADOS, but he did not address the most fundamental one, which is, to loosely use the word descendant in this informal usage. It does not point to a person's family bloodline, which is indicated by a surname. This casual usage of descendant does not do what the creators of it says it is intended to do. It does not distinguish those who are due reparations from the U.S. government from those who are not. To say Slaves would have done a relatively better job, but that is still problematic, as Harriot has pointed out. I have from the beginning been pointing this out on social media. When taken literally White people are also descendants of "slavery", because it takes a person who is enslaved as well as a person who enslaves another. It begs the question why would someone jump over using the word slave to settle on slavery? I have said the government is hardly going to pay anyone they are not legally or morally obligated to. It will be difficult enough to get them at all. Some legal term like plaintiff will be the word used to denote who is to receive reparations. It will be spelled out in many sentences exactly what the qualifications are to get them. This seems a case of making a fuss/fight where there is obviously none.
    Critical thinking must always be used in everything a person does. Black people especially, must do this. We must go beyond the normal considerations of most people/groups. That is what the two people who laid the foundation of the original CRT, (Mr. Neeley Fuller Jr. and the late Dr. Francis Cress Welshing) and who made the terms 'White supremacy', (which really is 'White hegemony') and 'systemic racism' household words among us, advocated we do in face of the forces of racism in all its forms working against us. They simply said we must compensate for what is working against us. We always have done this but have for a long time now not done nearly as much as is required of us. The saying we have to be twice as good to get ahead was known by most of us. We understood it was unfair, but it was our reality and we responded better to it in the past.
    Today among woke activists, it seems to ask anything like personal responsibility and initiative is to ask too much. They have the attitude that to do so is to blame the victim. They have the mindset that it is more productive to make demands from the government and racist, without the necessary power to make it/them do anything. They demand other people be not just not-racist, but to be more proactive for our benefit, than we expect and ask of ourselves and each other. They complain of people being anti-Black, but don't see Black on Black crime/violence as being anti-Black. They ignore common sense and use stupid terms/phrases like BLM and 'Defund and Abolish the police', when it is obvious how the opposition will weaponize them for their advantage.
    I'll give one more glaring example of us not applying critical thinking. The Afrocentric argument that the word Kemet translates to mean "Land of the Blacks" and not "The Black Land" as White scholars have concluded, raises a basic question. Why would they call their country 'The Black Land", when it is said by Black scholars that all the other people around them were also Black? It suggests that some non-Black people called them that and they may have started calling their country that, at some later time. That would put non-Back people in the area at a very earlier period, which would support the Eurocentric claim of the people who brought about that civilization were White or non-Black. Then there are comments said by many Afrocentric people like “the Greeks learned everything they knew from Kemet”. This is stupid. They obviously were smart enough to make use of what they learned, if that was the case. These kinds of claims don't hold up under honest scrutiny. The statement that “we built this country” is another that has little value. There is the labor that builds something and there is the idea that conceived it, and the blueprint that lays out its design. Do we really want to claim the idea that became this country and the history that goes along with that? We did a lot of the labor that produced goods and services and wealth and of course we conceived and designed many things as well, but it begs the question what have we conceived, designed, and built lately for ourselves?
    These are logical questions. Do they come out of a way of thinking that is Black or White? Do the questions about how much our lives matter and to whom do they matter come out of a Black or White way of thinking? If genes can pass down through trauma, what should we expect genes to do regarding their normal function?
    We have not been real with ourselves let alone be awakened with some greater insight. Talk of revolutions is folly. They just bring back around what previously existed. When was the last successful one of those? Talk of a "reset" is also folly. When was a previous state of human existence ever adequate, especially for us?
    What is needed is the evolution of humanity. Humanity is due reparations for the historic inhumanity we have inflicted on each other. A global fair/just economic order would be reparations to the world. We also would do well to give ourselves a 'peace dividend'. The best way to defund anything is to make it largely unneeded. We cannot not escape each other. We all exist in a state of interconnection and varying degrees of interdependence. Global warming and pandemics should convince anyone who did not alright understand and respect this reality. Not doing so only shows immaturity or just plain hatred. Will we ever see an evolution in our discussion of all the problems we have with each other and with the environment we live in?

    • @stephencarter744
      @stephencarter744 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      *Word to the wise:* _Less is more_ !
      A youtube comment section is no place for an essay about your _personal take_ on the current state of black folks.
      You want to write a PhD thesis? Go back to University, where people get PAID to read _excrutiating_ lengthy personal opinions.
      To paraphrase a popular meme: *ain't nobody got time for this!!!*

    • @TWLogik
      @TWLogik 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      WP were not subjected to the same slavery as BP. Indentured servitude had an expiration date in the near future while chattel slavery was indefinite. Also WP were also given acres of land and other tools to build a homestead where very few former Blk slaves were not. Those same Indentured wyt servants also got the wyt privilege and their ancestors that BP are still not afforded today. There is no comparison. Imo reparations is simple to dole out. Give it to those who are 25 yrs or older and that can show proof they were born here and any of their grandparents were born on the east coast in the 1800's b4 1880 or earlier. And you have always been checking the Black ⚫️ box. There would be 4 levels of pmts. Age 25-40; 41-64; 65+ and anyone 18-24 would get the smallest amount + this can include immigrants who faced discriminatory in justice from 1940-70's and they check the Black box. If your family decided to pass for wyt not our problem. If there are any outliers. Then they need to take a DnA test showing at 65% African ancestry and born in this country. And governments gave paid slaveholders for the losso of their slaves. No one else gets paid if their industry goes under bcse of changing times.

    • @stephencarter744
      @stephencarter744 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TWLogik Black folks aren't getting reparations until we're SMART enough and weathy enough to TAKE IT. Forget about pleading, begging , crying and threatening to withhold "votes" (that can easily be STOLEN). We best prepare our children to compete in fields outside of sports and entertainment.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you for sharing your splendidly shortened summary of thoroughly thought out and thought-provoking connection of details and facts that seek the truth.
      You have included some interesting considrrations that fit well into the interview.
      It is commendable that you have introduced a few questions that link to the initial statements related to demonstrate and hopefully stimulate robust critical thinking, designed to resolve problems through critical dialogue, that leads to critical actions designed to produce justice, so that folks can get down with the real business of the Human Imperative, through Human endeavor and Human progress.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@stephencarter744 On the contrary, it is only the patient who take time and invest in the to examine and analyze whether the content is of value and contextualize the extent of the value of the comment.
      Serious comments about serious topics sometimes require more than a phrase or a protest that neglects examination and analysis of the content.
      Please share something of similar significance about the presentation and/comment?

  • @user-tn6pu6gv3u
    @user-tn6pu6gv3u 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    ATROCIOUS HISTORIES OF THE so/called new world.

  • @ninadaly7639
    @ninadaly7639 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This man doesn’t even know what he doesn’t know. My god, don’t let him teach kids ANYTHING!!

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ain't no dismantling it it's in the soil that's the way it is you almost have to ignore it and seek people who are regular people that's about it what's funny is watching a racist that wants people to think their not racist

  • @bryndachambers186
    @bryndachambers186 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You rewrite history by telling the truth.our history is so full of dark deceptions and untruths,the truth is the only way to make it right,even the Bible there's so many discrepancies and contradictions add ons take aways,and the father creator knew this was going to happen,he states anyone who adds or take away from these pages,will have to contend with him,but the devil don't care he gonna do what he and they do,for there advantage,but you see that's why you must do your own research and diligence,the truth of all things is the only thing that will make us free from this bondage of darkness peace to all.

    • @siriuslyspeaking9720
      @siriuslyspeaking9720 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      True! but counteracting negative history is even better.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you for sharing these details.
      The advice to do one's own research is relevant to critical thinking initially mentioned in the interview.

  • @ninadaly7639
    @ninadaly7639 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What the hell is this guy talking about? He’s a good reason NOT to homeschool.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Please explain the details your question and statement of your perceptions?

    • @ninadaly7639
      @ninadaly7639 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@komiczar The guy is clueless. Can you imagine allowing this guy to gaslight kids by “re-writing” history according to his poor understanding of it? It would be child abuse. CRT is nothing but a debunked, discredited social theory that has no basis in fact or social science. That is why it was rejected soon after its initial proposal in the 80s.

  • @kennethmueller5840
    @kennethmueller5840 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It's common to see a sister with 5 kids and 5 fathers. I recently met a brother who just got out of jail, nice guy, out on parole, of a 15 yr sentence. For some reason we were talking kids. I asked him how many he had and he said 17 yr old, cool, where she at, no man, I've got 17 kids. WHF, he's 52, been inside for 13 years, so when he was 39, he already had 17 kids from 7 different women. The point here is Thomas didn't rape that slave girl, the slave girl rape Thomas. A breeze blows by and the slave girl is in heat and there was no stopping her. I've had my run-ins with a few sisters and it's true, they are as advertised. So ease up on the rape charges clown, you weren't there which makes you a lying, race hustling pimp.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      How is this comment significant to the interview?

    • @musclehead8649
      @musclehead8649 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The truth ALWAYS HURTS eh. No wonder you big mad... You'll get over it.

  • @reemdawg5980
    @reemdawg5980 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Michael, Sheryl, I suggest you free yourselves from thinking about how white people perceive you. Let that be their burden, not yours.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Please explain the details of your comment with examples?

    • @reemdawg5980
      @reemdawg5980 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@komiczar in short, how you see/perceive yourself is what matters most, if you feel good about yourself and your image, you're good to go. It is easier to control your thoughts, than other peoples' thoughts.

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @reemdawg5980 Thank you very much for elaborating with detailed clarity of the path to emotional maturity that accepts adult responsibility to attain self-mastery.

  • @gary-vh1zn
    @gary-vh1zn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Most intelligent black people don't care one way or the other because it's always in our face so so what

    • @komiczar
      @komiczar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Please explain the details of your comment with examples?

  • @KOKAYI69
    @KOKAYI69 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Propaganda . . .

  • @imnotanalien7839
    @imnotanalien7839 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Read the Bible, the history of America is in those pages. The stories will fly out of that book and hit you in the face! That’s human history you will recognize.