DuBois on his test. These writers uncover the agonizing parts of American history, with a specific end goal to give a more honest picture of occasions and how they affected groups other than the white men in authority. As to First Nations or Native Americans, Zinn scrutinizes Columbus' own newsletters and requests that the reader view the developing of colonization from the point of view of the general population whose land, employment, society, and lifestyle would be horribly stolen and assaulted. At the point when "the past is told from the perspective of governments, conquerors, ambassadors, leaders," the outcome is a skewed form of history intended just to support the idea that Europeans by one means or another conveyed enlightening power to the savages they experienced. (Zinn, Chapter 1) Schoolchildren are taught to revere Columbus, and make idols out of slave proprietors like Thomas Jefferson. As DuBois points out, the fact that these statements have for so long stay unchallenged is the core of what isn't right with history – and with the nation. Indoctrinating kids is a certain method for propagating forms of social injustice and
DuBois on his test. These writers uncover the agonizing parts of American history, with a specific end goal to give a more honest picture of occasions and how they affected groups other than the white men in authority. As to First Nations or Native Americans, Zinn scrutinizes Columbus' own newsletters and requests that the reader view the developing of colonization from the point of view of the general population whose land, employment, society, and lifestyle would be horribly stolen and assaulted. At the point when "the past is told from the perspective of governments, conquerors, ambassadors, leaders," the outcome is a skewed form of history intended just to support the idea that Europeans by one means or another conveyed enlightening power to the savages they experienced. (Zinn, Chapter 1) Schoolchildren are taught to revere Columbus, and make idols out of slave proprietors like Thomas Jefferson. As DuBois points out, the fact that these statements have for so long stay unchallenged is the core of what isn't right with history – and with the nation. Indoctrinating kids is a certain method for propagating forms of social injustice and