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Mar 25, 2020 10 tweets 3 min read Read on X
A #LessonsFromHistory thread!

1/ The #Olympics are postponed, but athletes around the world have trained for 4 years to perform at their peak this July. In 10 tweets, a history of times Olympic athletes couldn’t compete: Image
2/ Summer 1916: The Berlin Games are canceled due to WW1. (The next time Berlin is picked as Olympic host is 1936, the Games overseen by Adolf Hitler just before the outbreak of WW2.)
3/ Summer and Winter, 1940-1944: Four Games are canceled because of WW2. The 1940 Games, set for Japan, would have been the first time a country outside Europe and the US was the host.
4/ Summer 1956:
-Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon withdraw over the Suez Crisis.
-Spain, Switzerland, Netherlands don’t go in protest of the Soviet Union crushing the Hungarian revolution.
-China starts boycott over Taiwan’s inclusion that would last until 1980.
5/ Summer 1964: Indonesia and North Korea back out of Tokyo Games after officials banned their athletes who’d participated in the Games of the New Emerging Forces, a competing event in Jakarta mounted largely by decolonizing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
6/ Summer 1972: 8 Palestinian terrorists break into the Olympic Village in Munich, killing 11 Israeli team members and a police officer in a hostage standoff. The Games are suspended for 34 hours. The Israeli team and athletes from other nations withdraw.
7/ Summer 1976: Nearly all African countries boycott after the IOC allows New Zealand to compete. Earlier that year, in defiance of the UN, New Zealand’s national rugby team had toured South Africa, which was banned from the Olympics over its apartheid policy.
8/ Summer 1980: The US leads a boycott of the Moscow Games in protest of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The boycott includes Japan, which had planned to honor those athletes this summer.
9/ Summer 1984: With US-USSR relations still tense, the Soviet Union and its allies back out of the Games in Los Angeles. The concurrent Friendship Games is held across the Eastern Bloc for the boycotting countries and others.
10/ Summer 1988: Ahead of the Seoul Games, N. Korea blows up a S. Korean plane, killing 115 people, in an alleged attempt to derail the event. Cuba joins N. Korea in skipping the Games, the last countrywide boycotts until the withdrawals from Tokyo due to #COVID19.

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More from @RetroReport

Dec 21, 2022
1/ 2023 is almost here. As we wrap up another year, we’d like to celebrate some of the accomplishments of our fellow @retroreport journalists from 2022 ⬇️.
2/ A finalist for the @NIHCMfoundation awards in Journalism and Research, our film with @sciam examined how stigmas about weight could play a role in the quality of medical care received by heavier patients.retroreport.org/video/the-weig…
3/ “How Saba Kept Singing” premiered at the @hotdocs festival, bringing it to an international audience. The film reveals how love and music helped two young people survive the concentration camp at Auschwitz. hotdocs.ca/whats-on/hot-d…
Read 8 tweets
Dec 19, 2022
1/ In 2022, we produced and updated over 20 videos and films. Take a look at some of our highlights from over the past year ⬇️. Image
2/ Produced in partnership with @frontlinepbs, “American Reckoning” covers a lesser-known story of the civil rights movement and Black resistance to racist violence in Mississippi. retroreport.org/video/american…
3/ We documented the lasting legacy in Latin America from revolutions, coups, and uprisings that became commonplace during the Cold War. #Teachers can find our classroom materials related to this video here: retroreport.org/education/vide…
#teachersoftwitter #edchat Image
Read 14 tweets
Jan 7, 2021
1/ As pro-Trump rioters stormed the US Capitol Wednesday, Senate staffers carried the electoral ballots to safety. It’s not the first time an item of historical significance has been rescued.
2/ During the War of 1812, the first time the Capitol was stormed, War Office clerks hid the original parchment Constitution in a linen sack and carried it to a mill in Virginia, saving it from British troops who burned much of DC.
3/ Dolley Madison did some quick thinking during the War of 1812. As the British approached the White House on Aug. 23, 1814, she ordered household workers to remove a full-length portrait of George Washington from its frame so it could be spirited to safety.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 5, 2021
Drug overdose deaths have risen to the highest level ever.
Maybe someday, we’ll be able to treat addicts with a vaccine. retroreport.org/video/why-this…
1/ We heard objections to our tweet pointing to a Retro Report video about changing attitudes toward addiction. Specifically, our tweet overstated the potential benefit of a vaccine in development, and the tweet and the video title used the word 'addicts,' which carries a stigma.
Read 7 tweets
Oct 26, 2020
1/8 How is it that the highest office in the land - the US presidency - is one where the person who gets the most votes can still lose the election? 50 years ago, Congress came close to changing that. Why did the effort fail?
Thread 👇
2/8 Twice in the last 20 years (2016 Trump, 2000 Bush), and 3 other times, presidents took office by winning enough electoral college votes (270 or more) but losing the popular vote. This arcane, some say undemocratic, system dates back to the nation’s founding.
3/8 In 1787, most of the men writing the new nation’s rules wanted the president chosen by Congress (men like them.) Direct election was pushed by James Madison but seen as leading to mob rule. The electoral college was the cumbersome compromise.
Read 8 tweets
Sep 21, 2020
In October 2019, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was asked which #SupremeCourt cases during her tenure had done the most harm. She cited three. #SCOTUS
vox.com/2020/9/18/2091…
First was Shelby County v. Holder.

In 2013, #RBG issued a blistering dissent in the case: “Throwing out preclearance when it has worked and is continuing to work to stop discriminatory changes is like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet."
Ginsburg’s dissent referred to the protections in the 1965 Voting Rights Act which she believed were being rolled back.

Here we look at how the ruling in that case is playing out today:
Read 5 tweets

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