Cecil Rhodes was born #OTD in 1853. Rhodes, a British imperialist whose brutal rule killed and dispossessed millions in southern Africa, inspired White American supremacists, such as the Charleston church shooter and the propagator of “anti-racist is code for anti-White.” A 🧵1/
Rhodes was born on July 5, 1853 in Hertfordshire, England. From 1890 to 1896, he was the Prime Minister of England's Cape Colony, what is now South Africa. He also organized and owned De Beers Consolidated Mines, which had a market share of 90% of the world’s diamonds by 1891. 2/
Rhodes’s company routinely subjected African miners to exploitative and fatal working conditions, practices that aligned with Rhodes's belief that "nine-tenths of [Africans] will have to spend their lives in daily labour... the sooner that is brought home to them, the better." 3/
Rhodes considered it God’s will for him to “paint as much of the map of Africa British Red as possible.” In 1889, he granted a charter to the British South Africa Company, giving it authority to colonize modern-day Zimbabwe and Zambia. The colony became known as Rhodesia. 4/
In Rhodesia and the Cape Colony, the government brutally dispossessed the indigenous African population. A series of laws passed under Rhodes in both colonies prevented African people from land ownership, civic participation, and high-wage labor. 5/
When Rhodes died in 1902, he left a legacy of White supremacy. The racist legislation he put in place tilled the ground for the apartheid system that officially began in South Africa in 1948. The colonies of Rhodesia did not gain independence from British rule until 1980. 6/
People have been organizing against Rhodes's legacy. The Rhodes Must Fall campaign removed a Rhodes statue at the University of Cape Town in 2015. Another campaign is afoot to rename Rhodes University. But the Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford remains coveted around the world. 7/
Rhodesia has now become popular among White supremacists. Merchandise circulates online with slogans such as “Make Zimbabwe Rhodesia Again”. This celebration of Rhodesia is emblematic of the White supremacist desire for a colonial, White ethno-state. 8/
In 2015, Dylann Roof murdered nine Black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina. Roof had a White supremacist website named The Last Rhodesian and posted photos of himself wearing the Rhodesian flag. 9/
Residing in Roof’s hometown was another admirer of Rhodesia, the late Bob Whitaker. He authored an online screed in 2006 called "The Mantra" that rallied White supremacists worldwide. Its most famous line is a GOP talking point: “anti-racist is a code word for anti-White.” 10/10
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African Americans are descendants of enslaved Africans in the U.S. Black Americans encompass African Americans and Black immigrants and their American-born descendants from Jamaican Americans to Nigerian Americans. Some African Americans have joined with racist White Americans like Trump to attack immigrants. I don’t think those African Americans realize that racist White Americans have historically seen us as. . .immigrants.
A thread 🧵
Most U.S. presidents from Thomas Jefferson to Abraham Lincoln supported deporting *free* African Americans out of the United States, as if we were immigrants. This policy plan was known as “colonization” in the 19th century. The American Colonization Society, which lobbied for this mass deportation of African Americans, was larger and more powerful and better funded than any abolitionist society.
During the Civil War, President Lincoln welcomed a delegation of African American men to the White House and asked them to support his mass deportation plan that had been funded by Congress. Lincoln’s successor, Pres. Andrew Johnson, claimed African Americans “are strangers to and unfamiliar with our institutions and our laws” in his his veto of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which granted African Americans birthright citizenship and some limited civil rights. Johnson thought African Americans “should pass through a certain probation, at the end of which, before attaining the coveted prize, they must give evidence of their fitness to receive and to exercise the rights of citizens.”
If the SCOTUS refuses to disqualify Donald Trump from running for POTUS after leading an insurrection on January 6, 2021, then it will be the latest indication that the Confederates lost the military battles but won the legal war. 1/4
The 14th Amendment, adopted in 1868, disqualifies from holding office former government officials who engaged in an insurrection against the U.S. 2/4
But as a neo-Confederate declared around that time during the war against Reconstruction, the 14th and 15th Amendments “may stand forever; but we intend. . .to make them dead letters.” 3/4
The 13th Amendment allowed slavery to continue "as a punishment for crime." #OTD in 1913, prison officers forced 12 Black men into a tiny cell for not picking cotton fast enough on a state-run prison plantation in Richmond, Texas. Eight died because they couldn't breathe. A 🧵1/
Since the 13th Amendment allowed slavery “whereof the party shall have been duly convicted,” prison farms became the new plantations to violently exploit Black labor. In 1910, almost 100% of the population on these Texas plantations were Black when 17.7% of Texans were Black. 2/
Prison plantations were a lucrative state-owned and operated business. By 1910, the majority of profits generated by the Texas prison system were from these plantations. However, they came under fire from reformers who found higher levels of abuse compared to other prisons. 3/
The racist violence of the past is ever present in the racial makeup of numerous towns across the US. On this day in 1903, after failing to lynch a Black man, a racist White mob forced the Black residents to flee Whitesboro, Texas. Today this town is less than 1% Black. A 🧵 1/
The history of many US towns is the history of the violent expulsion of Native peoples and later Black residents. Whitesboro is named after Ambrose White who fought in the Black Hawk War in 1832, when Sauk, Fox, and Kickapoo people crossed into Illinois to reclaim their land. 2/
Between 1882 and 1942, around 700 people were lynched in Texas. In 1901, someone accused Abe Wilder of assaulting a White woman in Whitesboro. Racist White terrorists kidnapped Wilber. Then, a racist mob of 1,500 White people watched Wilder be tortured and set on fire. 3/
The litigants, who have falsely framed #affirmativeaction as anti-Asian before the Supreme Court, have been silent about—or supportive of—a real anti-Asian threat in the United States: laws prohibiting Asian nationals from owning U.S. land. 1/
Nearly half of U.S. states—24 to be exact—have passed or proposed bills that would bar people of several nationalities, particularly Chinese people, from purchasing land. Some laws apply only to land near certain military installations; others ban purchases outright. 2/
The DOJ recently blocked Florida's SB-264, which would've gone into effect on July 1. The bill would restrict nationals from several "foreign countries of concern" from purchasing land. But the harshest restrictions were placed on Chinese nationals. 3/
#OTD in 1898, the US launched its invasion of Puerto Rico as part of the Spanish-American War. Ostensibly begun to help the Puerto Rican people throw off Spanish colonialism, the United States replaced Spain as colonizers. Puerto Rico remains a U.S. colony 125 years later. A 🧵1/
The Spanish-American War was an outgrowth of Cuba's war of independence against Spanish rule. U.S. economic interests, as well as "yellow journalism" that inflamed public sentiment toward Spain's wartime conduct, compelled the US to declare war on Spain on April 25, 1898. 2/
Even before the war, U.S. imperialists had their eyes set on Puerto Rico. As US Secretary of State James Blaine wrote in 1891, "There are only three places that are of value enough to be taken, that are not continental. One is Hawaii and the others are Cuba and Porto Rico.” 3/