Saturday 24 August 2019

Colossal volcano behind 'mystery' global cooling finally found

Sheet-Pan Szechuan Chicken and Brussel Sprouts

Sheet-Pan Szechuan Chicken and Brussel Sprouts
Sheet-Pan Szechuan Chicken (or Tofu) with Brussel Sprouts takes only 15-20 minutes of hands on time before baking in the oven. A full-flavored weeknight dinner your whole family will love!



Author: Sylvia Fountaine https://www.feastingathome....
Prep Time: 20 mins, Cook Time: 30 mins, Total Time: 50 minutes, Yield: 4 Servings
Category: main, vegan main, chicken , sheet pan dinner
Method: baked, Cuisine: Chinese

Ingredients
2 lbs chicken thighs ( bone in, skin on) or tofu – see notes for more options!
1 – 1 ½ lbs medium brussel sprouts, halved ( see notes)
Szechuan Marinade:
¼ cup honey
¼ cup soy sauce ( or use GF soy sauce like Braggs)
1 tablespoon rice vinegar (or use black vinegar)
1 tablespoon sesame oil
2-3 teaspoons Garlic Chili Paste ( or sub sriracha)
4 fat garlic cloves, finely minced ( use a garlic press)
1 tablespoon fresh ginger, finely minced or ginger paste
1 teaspoon salt, more for sprinkling
1 teaspoon Szechuan peppercorns, crushed (or substitute black pepper, see notes)
a few dried red chilies- just for “looks” – optional
Garnish with scallions, serve on its own, over rice, cauliflower rice, or a whole grain.
Instructions
Preheat oven to 425F
Make the marinade by stirring all ingredients together in a medium bowl. Pour half of the marinade over the chicken, either in a bowl or zip lock bag. Let chicken
marinate while you prep the brussel sprouts, or marinate overnight ( for even more flavor) .
Cut the brussels sprouts in half. The brussels sprouts pictured here are ping-pong ball sized, so depending on size, you may need to quarter, or leave them whole. If using very very small brussel sprouts, leave them whole. If extra- large, like a golf
ball, then quarter.
Place brussel sprouts in a bowl and pour the remaining marinade over brussel sprouts and toss. Add a few dried chilies if you like ( just for looks) and spread them out out on a large, parchment or foil-lined sheet pan. Nestle the chicken thighs ( or tofu) in between, and spoon any remaining marinade over the chicken.
Season the chicken or tofu (only) with a little salt.
Bake it in the hot oven, for 30 minutes, checking at 20 minutes, rotating if need
be, and spooning a little of the pan juices over the chicken or tofu. If using a different cut of chicken see notes.
After 30 minutes, double check for doneness ( either use a thermometer, should read 170 F) or cut into one.
Serve by dividing the brussel sprouts and top with the chicken. Sprinkle with
scallions and serve with more chili paste for extra spicy.

Notes
If using tofu, either cut into “filets” ( a square or rectangular slab) about a ¾ inch thick, strips or cubes. Marinate the tofu, in a bowl for 10 minutes, or in a bag if overnight.

You can use skinless boneless thighs, or even chicken breast ( reducing calories
significantly) but cooking times will shorten. Check after 15- 20 minutes, and if chicken is done but brussels sprouts need longer, just remove the chicken, letting brussels sprouts cook until tender, probably the full 30 mins.
I also really like this recipe with Black Cod, baking the cod for only 10-15 minutes, letting the brussel sprouts continue cooking until done.
You can cook both chicken and tofu for mixed households, keeping the chicken on one side of the pan and thetofu on the other side of the pan.

🍔🍟☕ Please recommend this page and be sure to follow TCW 🍔🍟☕



Collusion Obsessed CNN Hires

Collusion-Obsessed CNN Hires Andrew McCabe, Fired from FBI for Collusion Leaks

On Friday, CNN hired Andrew McCabe, former deputy director at the FBI. The FBI fired McCabe last March for leaking classified information to the media in order to bolster the false narrative that Donald Trump colluded with Russia to win the 2016 election. Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report debunked that narrative, but it was long a favorite on networks like CNN.
CNN Senior Reporter Oliver Darcy broke the news of McCabe's hiring on Twitter.
Donald Trump Jr. reminded the world that McCabe "was fired for the FBI for leaking and getting caught lying about it." He also claimed that the hiring revealed CNN as "a fully integrated anti-Trump propaganda network and they don't even try hiding it anymore."
Mollie Hemingway, senior editor at The Federalist, illustrated the collusion connection. "Andrew McCabe, one of the central figures of the 'Russia collusion' hoax, who was fired from the FBI for lying about his leaks to the media, has been hired by CNN, one of the media outlets that did the most to perpetuate the damaging hoax," she tweeted.
McCabe is suing the Department of Justice and the FBI over his dismissal, claiming that the agencies bowed to political pressure from President Trump. It seems the FBI went easy on McCabe, however.
In a trove of documents released to Judicial Watch, the FBI's Office of Professional Responsibility appeared to characterize McCabe's lying under oath as a lack of "candor." The referral in question was closed on March 20, 2018, four days after McCabe was fired. The document notes that Attorney General Jeff Sessions made the final decision to dismiss the employee — without prosecuting him — and noted that he had "a remarkable performance record" and "was facing unprecedented challenges and pressures."
In fact, the documents released to Judicial Watch show that while 14 FBI officials leaked to the media, only four were fired, including McCabe.
In light of this, CNN's hiring of McCabe seems to dash whatever credibility the outlet had left.
"CNN kills the remainder of its credibility (what little it had left) by hiring Andrew McCabe, former acting director of the FBI WHO WAS FIRED FOR LEAKING STORIES TO THE MEDIA TO BENEFIT HIMSELF AND LYING UNDER OATH. I can't believe this is real," humorist Tim Young tweeted.
WMAL host Vince Coglianese noted that this news "raises the question: How should former FBI officials who misled the public be treated when they seek positions of fame and privilege?"
Apparently, CNN thinks such people should be rewarded.
Follow Tyler O'Neil, the author of this article, on Twitter at @Tyler2ONeil.

The $137B Machine ..

The $137B Machine David Koch Helped to Build 'Will Endure' After His Death

David Koch's death early Friday marks the end of an era in the worlds of business, politics, philanthropy and high society.

The $137B Machine David Koch Helped to Build 'Will Endure' After His Death
David Koch’s death early Friday marks the end of an era in the worlds of business, politics, philanthropy and high society. For Koch Industries, the conglomerate he helped his brother Charles transform into the second-largest privately held U.S. company, the founding family retains firm control as a generational shift takes hold.
“Nothing changes,” Koch spokeswoman Christin Fernandez said in an email. “David’s shares remain with his family.”
Koch Industries won’t detail its succession plan beyond saying that one is in place, and that roles are filled by those most qualified. One candidate is Charles’s son, Chase Koch, 42. He’s the only member of the family from the next generation that works at the company. His sister Elizabeth Koch runs a publishing house, Catapult.
Chase oversees Koch Disruptive Technologies, a venture capital subsidiary that has invested in futuristic technologies including ultrasound-guided surgery and metal 3-D printing.
David Koch, who was 79, and Charles, 83, built Koch Industries from a minor oil player into a powerhouse with annual revenue of about $110 billion from businesses such as oil refining, pipelines, commodities trading, ranching and paper pulp that are at the heart of the American economy.
The two brothers -- with stakes of about 42% each -- have been the central figures in a firm as vast as it is stable. Charles has headed the company since 1967 and remains chief executive officer. Before retiring last year, David led Koch Chemical Technology Group.
The company is worth about $137 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. David’s stake comprised the bulk of his $59 billion fortune, which tied him with his brother as the world’s seventh-richest person.
Chase Koch took a somewhat unusual path to the firm. Unlike his father and uncle, both of whom studied chemical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chase studied marketing at Texas A&M University. After graduating, he spent several years in Austin trying to break into the city’s emerging tech scene. He moonlighted in a classic rock band covering Grateful Dead and Pink Floyd tracks.
When he returned to Wichita to rejoin Koch Industries, Chase began a rotation of high-level jobs, including stints in mergers and acquisitions, tax structuring, agronomics and trading. It was designed as an MBA-like experience to familiarize him with various parts of the operation.
If he does take over eventually, he’ll inherit a company with an impressive track record. His grandfather Fred Koch was an MIT-trained chemical engineer whose innovations in oil refining helped the firm flourish after he founded it in 1940. After his death in 1967, Charles took the helm, and David joined in 1970. At the time, the company was still a relative minnow that focused on oil refining and services.
Koch Heirs
Under their stewardship, Koch Industries reinvested about 90% of profits back into the business as it expanded into new sectors, such as fertilizers, fabrics and forestry products. Their purchase of Georgia-Pacific for $21 billion remains one of the biggest corporate acquisitions, and cemented Koch Industries’ position atop the ranks of the most valuable private companies whose main expertise was in turning raw materials into consumer products.
With David Koch’s death, his nephew’s role at the company is likely to draw more attention, as will the heirs who inherit shares. David is survived by his wife, Julia Flesher Koch, and their children David Jr., Mary, and John. Julia could become one of the richest and most influential figures in corporate America, assuming she inherits control of the estate.
She has largely avoided the spotlight since marrying David Koch in 1996. She was born in Indianola, Iowa, in the early 1960s, and her family owned a furniture store, the New York Times reported in a 1998 profile. She moved to Arkansas eight years later when her parents opened a store in Conway, north of Little Rock. She attended the University of Central Arkansas before taking a job as an assistant to fashion designer Adolfo Sardina and ultimately being introduced to her future husband in 1991.
History is littered with examples of family ventures laid low by succession problems, but those familiar with the Kochs say they’re prepared.
“It is hard to see any scenario where this company falls apart or does poorly for any extended period of time,” said Christopher Leonard, author of “Kochland,” a new book about the firm. “They built a machine that will endure.”
© Copyright 2019 Bloomberg News. All rights reserved.

Recession by Someday

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2019/08/recession_by_someday.html

August 23, 2019
Recession by Someday

"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."

Lies beget other lies, and with them come anger and division.  That's what has been happening ever since Donald Trump was elected: false witness against the president.  The latest is the charge that Trump's policies will bring economic ruin to the country.  He's setting us up for economic Armageddon worse than the Great Depression and all that preceded and followed it.  Hard to believe that one man could cause such havoc, but that's the Left's contention.

There was talk during the 2016 campaign of an economic meltdown should Trump be elected, but we can dismiss that as political chatter.  The really nasty stuff came after Trump entered office.  Even well respected economists such as Yale's Robert Schiller seemed to join in.  Schiller told CNBC in March that there was a "greater than average chance of a recession in the next eighteen months."  That would put the recession just ahead of the 2020 presidential election.  How convenient.

To his credit, Professor Schiller is more circumspect than most economic commentators on the Left.  Everyone from Joseph Stiglitz in the New York Times to Shane Croucher at Newsweek and Joe Scarborough at MSNBC has been breathlessly awaiting a recession, fearful at the same time that it won't happen in time.  Croucher quoted two bearish economists, one of whom predicted a 40% chance of recession in 2020, before turning to Janet Yellen, former chair of the Federal Reserve, who concluded that "the odds have clearly risen" for a recession, though one may not be imminent.  Don't get your hopes up, Newsweek.

On Aug. 19, MSNBC's Morning Joe reported that "signs of a possible recession" were worrying the president (adding the non sequitur that "some of the things the president has said are racist").  Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough quoted the AP, the New York Times, and other familiar sources on the Left, interspersing their gloomy economic forecasts with more charges of racism.

From what the Left has to say, you'd think the economy had already collapsed.  It's hard to reconcile that view with what's happening in the real economy.  Retail sales are booming, restaurants are crowded with diners, and services are so much in demand that providers are stretched.  Walmart is predicting a strong Christmas sales season.  Seven million job positions are unfilled for lack of workers.

According to the American Institute for Economic Research, economic growth in the U.S. "rebounded sharply in the second quarter," rising at 4.1%, even as consumer prices slowed.  That, by any measure, is an indication of a booming economy.  AIER concludes that "the very solid report suggests the U. S. economic expansion remains healthy."  Although residential housing fell slightly, overall business and residential investment grew by 5.4% — hardly the sign of an imminent downturn.  Surprisingly, perhaps, exports grew by 9.3% despite the impression that Trump's tariff policy has restricted trade.  AIER sees "continued economic expansion in the months and quarters ahead."  The chances of a recession before November 2020 continue to decline.
Still, liberals can't pass up the opportunity to bear false witness.  No recession in 2017, 2018, or 2019 — there's always 2020...or 2021.  It's obvious that liberals are eager for a recession or worse — anything to prevent Trump's re-election.

Something on the magnitude of the Great Depression would be especially helpful.  After all, it wouldn't harm those tenured academics at Harvard and Yale, or those high up in the media and the political elite.  They always land on their feet.  It's the ordinary American who would suffer, but the Left shows no interest in extending the Trump bonanza that has benefited American workers for the past two and a half years.  They're deplorables, anyway.  They deserve to be hunted for sport.

The problem is that the economy just keeps getting better and better, despite the necessity of forcing China into a fair trade deal and Pelosi's foot-dragging on the USMCA trade deal already agreed to, one that would benefit American workers across the economy.  The Left has launched a full-out media assault intended to talk down business and consumer confidence and bring about a recession that otherwise would not happen. 

Now it appears that a recession before the election is less and less likely.  President Trump is probably going to be able to run on full employment, higher wages, and an expanding economy.  But can he promise there won't be a recession sometime in 2021 or at any time in his second term?  As ludicrous as it sounds, that is the new liberal talking point.  The Trump recession that liberals have been predicting ever since the summer of 2016 has now been deferred until after 2020, and Trump is supposed to take responsibility for it.

According to recent polling by the National Association of Business Economics, there is some confidence among economists surveyed that a recession will arrive "by the end of 2021."  Just a few months ago, it was "by the end of 2020."  Which is it?  Or is it 2024 or 2028?  The "dismal science" seems even more dismal, and less of a science, when applied to the Trump presidency.         

Economists have cited a number of factors supporting their prediction of an impending recession, among them the dreaded inversion of the yield curve.  What's not discussed is the fact that the recent yield curve inversion is minimal and not sustained — along with the fact that the average lag time between inversions and recessions, should they occur, is 22 months. 

America has never experienced a significant economic pullback without a decline in employment, and yet employment figures just keep getting better and better.  What with 7 million jobs going begging, wages are rising at a faster pace than at any time in a decade.

The truth is that there is no way to predict the start of an economic recession.  A recession is coming, someday, but no one can say exactly when — especially those who allow their political views to interfere with their judgment.  Another word for that kind of economic forecasting is false witness, and false witness is not a very flattering quality, not even for a liberal.

Jeffrey Folks is the author of many books and articles on American culture including Heartland of the Imagination (2011).

Slavery In America Did Not Begin In 1619, And Other Things The New York Times Gets Wrong






The 1619 Project isn’t mostly about helping Americans understand the role
 of slavery in our history. It’s mostly about convincing Americans
 that ‘America’ and ‘slavery’ are synonyms.
Lyman Stone

The New York Times has published a series of essays about slavery, race, and American politics under the heading “1619 Project.” These essays cover an enormous amount of terrain: music, constitutional theory, economics, management, ethnic identity, and more.
Many conservatives responded negatively, which at first perplexed me. Slavery was a huge part of American history and has affected every facet of our society. A collection of articles outlining this history seems as good a topic as any to write about.
But zoomed out from the mostly mundane minutiae of individual articles — in the absence of slavery and thus without as much African influence in our music, what would American music sound like? — a larger concern animates the 1619 Project. The project’s central purpose is not simply to educate Americans about the history of labor accounting from plantation to data visualization, or an account of the history of brutal sugar cultivation, but to give a specific narrative about what America is.
The project’s summary makes the aim quite clear: “[The 1619 Project] aims to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.”
Considered this way, the 1619 Project looks very different. It isn’t mostly about helping Americans understand the role played by plantation agriculture in American history. It’s mostly about convincing Americans that “America” and “slavery” are essentially synonyms.
It’s mostly about trying to tell readers they should feel sort of, kind of, at least a little bit bad about being American, because, didn’t you hear? As several articles say explicitly, America, in its basic DNA, is not a liberal democracy, constitutional republic, or federation. It’s a slave society.

Let’s Start with the First Thing Wrong Here

There are a lot of ways to attack this story. But the simplest place to start is the central conceit of the project: that year, 1619.
1619 is commonly cited as the date slavery first arrived in “America.” No matter that historians mostly consider the 1619 date a red herring. Enslaved people were working in English Bermuda in 1616. Spanish colonies and forts in today’s Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina had enslaved Africans throughout the mid-to-late 1500s: in fact, a slave rebellion in 1526 helped end the Spanish attempt at settling South Carolina.
The presence of Spanish power continued to inhibit English settlement of the deep south basically until the Revolutionary War. In some sense, the 1526 San Miguel de Guadeloupe rebellion cleared the way for English settlement of South Carolina.
Of course, when the English did arrive in South Carolina, they struggled to make a living. Early settlers survived on a trade of buckskins and vegetables. It was not until South Carolinians fought the Yamasee Wars of 1715-1717, and sold between 20,000 and 50,000 kidnapped Native Americans into slavery into New England and the Caribbean, that South Carolinians had the capital to buy enough African slaves to get rice and indigo plantations up and running.
But before 1526, slavery was already ongoing in the eventual United States. The earliest slave society in our present country, and our most recent slavery society, was in Puerto Rico. The island’s Spanish overlords were enslaving the Taino natives by 1500. By 1513, the Taino population had shrunk dramatically due to brutal violence and disease. Thus, Spain brought the first African slaves to Puerto Rico.
Chattel slavery in Puerto Rico continued, despite many “Royal Graces” easing life for free blacks and sometimes promising eventual emancipation, until 1873. Even then, slaves had to buy their own liberty. It’s not clear when the last slave was free in Puerto Rico, but it would still have been a fresh memory in 1898 when the United States gained control from Spain.
Slavery in America did not begin in 1619. It began in 1513. Any argument for a 1619 date implicitly suggests that the American project is an inherently Anglo project: that other regions, like Texas, California, Louisiana, and Puerto Rico, have subordinate histories that aren’t really, truly, equal as American origin stories.
In essence, the 1619 date for the beginning of slavery sets up a story of America as an essentially Anglo project that African-Americans were forced into and now claim their share of. But in reality, our country has many origins: French Cajuns and Huguenots, Swedes in Delaware, Dutch in New York, Russians in Alaska, Mexicans in the southwest, Spanish in Florida and Puerto Rico, and of course Native Americans everywhere.

Missing Essential Stories of American Slavery

Native Americans point to another vital reality: African-American identity and a personal history of enslaved ancestors are not synonymous. Some African-Americans, like President Obama, have no ancestry among enslaved Africans in America. Many people enslaved in America, most notably the first slaves, Native Americans, are not of African descent.
Furthermore, “unfree labor” did not end with the end of race-based chattel slavery. Unfree Asian labor in Hawaii and the Pacific west continued almost until the 20th century, while today prisoners of all races are often press-ganged into underpaid labor.
This is not to diminish the African-American experience of slavery: the overwhelming majority of enslaved people in America were of African descent, and the overwhelming majority of people of African descent in America are descended from ancestors who were enslaved. Today, it is reasonable to speak of the African-American experience and the experience of enslavement as essentially and inexorably connected.
But when we talk about history and origins of our society, when we try to untangle the web of events that brought us to where we are today, we have to be more careful. Slavery in America began with Spanish enslavement of Native Americans. In the most enslaved parts of America like South Carolina, slavery largely began with the enslavement of Native Americans.
Like Americans whose origins are in non-Anglo colonies, so too the 1619 Project’s narratives seem to miss a significant part of the legacy of slavery: Native Americans, who remain significantly poorer than African-Americans, less educated, and often with shorter life expectancies. Undoubtedly the 1619 Project’s writers have genuine sympathy for Native Americans. I’m sure they would read my comment here as disingenuous: do I really support Native American rights to land and reparations? For the record, yes, I do.
The 1619 Project’s narratives seem to miss a significant part of the legacy of slavery.
But beyond that, the 1619 Project bills itself as helping Americans see the real story of American origins. And the real story as the 1619 Project tells it is that slavery began in 1619 with 20 Africans. This isn’t true. This ignores the experience of Puerto Rico, where slavery began earlier, and lasted longer.
Furthermore, a serious accounting for slavery has to wrestle with the experience of Native Americans and Hawaiian islanders, and especially the status of their ancestral lands and sovereign rights. More broadly, to wrestle adequately with the painful historical reality of America’s “labor freedom,” we have to be able to talk about less-than-free Asian migrant workers in California and Hawaii, as well as the indenturehood of the Scots-Irish and subsequent Appalachian poverty.
That these peoples are not treated as subaltern today to the same extent that Native Americans or African Americans still are should not exclude them from a project concerned with history. Plus, many poor whites in Appalachia with accents still experience a version of ethnic subaltern status. We should let them speak without writing it off as white racial grievance.

The United States Was a Footnote in Slavery’s History

Finally, it’s worth exploring the specialness of American slavery. The New York Times is an American publication, so it makes sense to explore the American experience. But a wider-angle lens can help us understand that experience.
Those early slaves in 1619 that The New York Times focuses on arrived on the San Juan Bautista. If that name doesn’t sound English, that’s because it isn’t. It was a Portuguese ship en route to Spanish Mexico. Off the coast of Mexico, it was attacked and captured by English pirates masquerading as Dutch. They sold their enslaved human cargo at Jamestown.
Slavery is no more ‘native’ to the American experience than, well, anything.
From its earliest moments in the Spanish colony of 1526, Puerto Rico in 1513, or even Jamestown in 1619, the truth is that America was a footnote to a larger world of slavery. We did not invent this evil. We enthusiastically embraced it.
But when we explain the role played by slavery, we have to recognize that slavery is no more “native” to the American experience than, well, anything. We stole the first slaves from Portugal. Slavery struggled to “take off” in much of the South because managing a plantation is extremely technical and complicated, and many Americans were not good at it. It was an influx of experienced human traffickers, slave-torturers, and large-scale agribusiness experts from Haiti and other Caribbean colonies in the 1700s that gave much of the Deep South enough “expertise” in the abuse of humanity to develop a thriving slave economy.
Lacking much home-grown ingenuity, U.S. slavery had reached an economic bottleneck by the 1780s: tobacco destroyed soil nutrients and was unsustainable, rice and indigo couldn’t be widely cultivated, the colonies had a bad climate for sugar, and the de-seeding process for “upland cotton” was prohibitively expensive, meaning only Caribbean-style “Sea Island” cotton could be cultivating on a large scale. It took a clever abolitionist New Englander, Eli Whitney, to invent the cotton gin.
He thought he was sparing slaves the tedious work of de-seeding Sea Island cotton. He didn’t realize he was opening the door to cotton cultivation, and thus a slave economy, throughout the interior south.
The history of slavery is not one of some evil creativity unique to Americans.
In other words, the history of slavery is not one of some evil creativity unique to Americans. We emulated models of slavery pioneered elsewhere. We “improved” on it, of course; the American zeal for “efficiency” drove escalating brutality (although Anglo cotton plantations never reached the perigee of inhumanity achieved by the Francophone sugar plantations of Haiti and Louisiana).
We are covered in the blood-guilt of millions of enslaved people. But when we try to tease out the strands of American identity, slavery, like so many other pieces of America, is an immigrant. To the southern Tidewater colonies, to their eternal ignominy, it was a welcome one. But many inland southerners and to many northerners, slavery was a baleful evil they—perhaps incorrectly—saw as forced upon them by Britain.

America’s Story Is of Increasing Refusal to Tolerate Slavery

This story of slavery as something somehow “foreign” to many Americans will read as a bit much to many enthusiasts of the 1619 Project. If Americans were so unhappy with slavery, why didn’t they abolish it?
My answer is simple: we did. At the risk of historical absurdity, it must be noted that when Georgia was founded in 1732, slavery was banned, making it the first place in the Western hemisphere to ban slavery. But alas, the appeal of plantation wealth was too great, and by 1752 the King George II (the father of the George we rebelled against) had taken over Georgia as a royal colony, and instituted slavery.
In 1780, still amidst the guns of war, Massachusetts’ constitution rendered enslavement legally unenforceable, and the judiciary soon abolished it.
Thus, in 1775, there was no free soil anywhere in the Western hemisphere. Slavery was a universal law. While I cannot say for certain, it is possible there was no free soil in the entire world—that is, no society that categorically forbade all slavery.
But then something changed. Revolutionary agitation led to war in 1776, and by 1777, Vermont’s de facto secession from New York and New Hampshire created the first modern polity in the western hemisphere to forbid the keeping of slaves. In 1777, war with Britain was barely begun.
Vermont was hardly secure. But in their opening salvo to a watching world, Vermonters made clear what they thought America was about: liberty for all mankind. In 1780, still amidst the guns of war, Massachusetts’ constitution rendered enslavement legally unenforceable, and the judiciary soon abolished it.
Numerous states followed suit. Their exact procedure varied: some immediately emancipated all slaves, some used gradual emancipation, and some tried other “creative” methods. But the point is that, unlike in some early-abolition countries like France or Peru, or in Georgia’s early free status, abolitionism stuck in America.
The fledging Confederation Congress set aside the majority of the land ceded from Great Britain as free soil. Despite concerted attempts by southerners to “flip” both Indiana and Illinois as slave states, the early commitment to abolition held fast. Likewise, the United States was the second country, by a matter of weeks, to outlaw the international trade in slaves, after Great Britain. Countries like Spain and Portugal continued thereafter to trade slaves for decades, and Brazil did not outlaw slavery until 1888.
In other words, Americans were early adopters of abolition. We were the first to establish formally abolitionist constitutions and states, the second to ban the trade in slaves, and middle-of-the-pack in achieving uniform abolition of slavery.

No, Slavery Does Not Define America

Undoubtedly, we still must atone for much. Slavery lasted longer than any conscience should have allowed. The Christian consciences of America’s founders should have stirred them to intolerance of a single day of slavery on our shores. Alas, it did not. This is a moral failure.
The history of America is not defined by some romance with enslavement, as the 1619 Project seems to suggest.
But the history of America is not defined by some romance with enslavement, as the 1619 Project seems to suggest. The high points of American history, the ones we celebrate, memorialize, emphasize, and teach to our children as who we are, and as examples to be emulated, are moments of liberation.
The Jamestown founding of America has no national holiday, in part because most Americans sense that slavers looking for gold is, while part of our history, not the part we want our children to emulate. But when Thanksgiving comes, we celebrate the Plymouth colony: religious dissidents seeking liberty.
While fictionalized to some extent, it speaks well of Americans that Thanksgiving is presented as a collaboration between religious dissidents and Native Americans: the story we tell to our children, the example we hold up as how Americans ought to live, is that they ought to tolerate diversity of opinion and actively seek cooperation and peace with extremely different neighbors.
The history of America is indelibly marked by the sin of enslavement of many peoples, African and Native American. To remind Americans of this, and to carefully trace how slavery has impacted our society today, is a good thing.

What Defines Us Isn’t Our Worst Moments

America has been blessed by courageous black voices for centuries reminding the mostly white body politick of this sin, and calling us to repentance and reconciliation. This call to repentance has often come at considerable cost to those African-Americans who speak up in a society that, like all human societies, dislikes being reminded of its sins.
The American story is not a story of a country defined by slavery, but a country defined by trying to figure out what it means to live with liberty and self-government.
Much of the straight history presented in the 1619 Project is good, insightfully presented, and will be news to many Americans. As a Lutheran, I applaud the authors of the 1619 Project for confronting Americans with the law of God, holding a mirror to our sins, past and present.
Yet I also wonder if that mirror of our ugliness is truly who we are. Is a person who he is in his darkest moment? If we record people in their most vicious hour, when they most succumb to the temptations that nag on all of us, is that video who they truly are?
I think not. I think we are not defined by who we have been, and we are not defined by our worst national sins. The American story is not a story of a country defined by slavery, but a country defined by trying, in fits and starts, with faltering and hesitance, but also with moments of glory, to figure out what it means to live with liberty and self-government.
It is altogether fitting, then, to conclude as a great, glorious, flawed, struggled, penitent, but courageous American concluded, when discussing what it meant to be American in a time of great division. “We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”
Lyman Stone is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Family Studies, and an Advisor at the consulting firm Demographic Intelligence. He and his wife serve as missionaries in the Lutheran Church-Hong Kong Synod.
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