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Originally Posted by
dankrutka
Of course, and that's a problematic part of our history. But there is absolutely no comparing the genocidal brutality of Columbus to the owning of slaves by Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin. It's important to note that even in his historical time, Benjamin Franklin realized slavery was immoral, freed his two slaves, and fought with Quakers to abolish it at the Constitutional Convention. Washington and Jefferson admitted slavery was immoral, but were only willing to part with slaves after their own lives. But there is no doubt that white supremacy was accepted in the day and written into the Constitution in the 3/5th Compromise (not undone until the Reconstruction Amendments that finally made equality a legal aim in the U.S.).
An important aspect of historical thinking is understanding values, morals, and issues in their proper time period. By any historical time period, Columbus was exceptional for his brutality and greed. Much of Columbus' acceptance comes from mythical tales told about him that were invented to create an American origin story. Unfortunately, if you just read Bartolome de las Casas' History of the Indies (which was written in Columbus' Day by someone who was there - but this history was whitewashed by American nationalists) you will find that he found what Columbus did to be so inhumane that it was utterly unthinkable. It's hard to understand this point unless you have actually read the history, but the way that Columbus and his men would test their swords by cutting of the ears of Arawak people (who were a very peaceable and generous people in Columbus' accounts), cut off the arms of Arawak people who could not provide certain amounts of gold, torture and kill the Arawaks, and, in the end, complete a full genocide of the Arawak peoples, is almost unprecedented historically. Basil Davidson credits Columbus with the starting of the Atlantic Slave Trade. Columbus was a product of his time in some ways, but there are few men in history with such blood on their hands.
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