Well, maybe my biases took over the longer I listened to it.
I just think he's tilting at windmills a bit here. I'm betting a good chunk of Americans don't even know there IS a Tulsa, Oklahoma, much less where it is or what happened there at ANY time in history.
WW II was the most important, largest event of the 20th century. The population at large know next to nothing about it. To expect that they should or would know something that happened in Tulsa a hundred years ago is naive and to use it as some sort of example as to why people don't care to confront their own or their nation's racist past is just wrong.
if I'm to use a quixotic windmill as something non-existent... I genuinely hope you equating learning about racism within the context of US history isn't you thinking racism is non-existent within the context of US history.
his point is that these are things that have been systemic in our history- but avoided. why? what's gained/lost by learning about them? and we do learn about wwII, whether most people could tell you much about it or not- it's part of the curriculum. but we have avoided issues of race completely outside of: slavery, civil war, civil rights... full stop. teaching about our racist past doesn't exclude learning about other things. this attitude feels akin to being angry at BLM because all lives should matter... and focusing on the black lives somehow means others don't.
I mentioned the lecture I attended in college above. I attended it with two soccer team mates who happened to be black. the visiting lecturer (black CCNY professor) had been in the national spotlight for teaching perceived anti-white and antisemitic sentiments. He quickly explained that away (to my satisfaction) and then proceeded to give a 3+ hour history of the world from a strictly african-centric view. As I sat and listened- 80ish% things I had learned previously at a good HS and Ivy college- I found myself start to grate. yeah... all of this is true, BUT it didn't happen in a vacuum... impossible to jump from this to that without including the greeks, romans and other major parts of world history.
by the end, I was feeling frustrated and looking forward to discussing with my friends how wrong/lacking it was to skip the rest of the world. we walked out and as I was about to bring it up, the other two guy were practically coming out of their skins with amazement/excitement. I decided to let them go first.... they had never heard this info presented in this way- and were overwhelmed with a new-found sense of awareness, pride and excitement of their culture's role in history. Even though they had also learned the same 80% of info previously.
we kept talking, and it got me looking back to my- what I had always considered- fully integrated, liberal childhood growing up, going to school and playing sports with a large community of black kids. but listening and talking more, I realized that even though all of that was fully integrated, and I considered everybody the same... at the end of the day, my best friends were all white, my parties were all white, my entire life outside of those activities were all white.
also got me thinking about those kids- most from a low-income area- who didn't necessarily have the advantage of the education I had... let alone access to this kind of lecture. from our shared education, their place in history was: slaves, civil war, civil rights, full stop. after 3+ hours of hearing what I'd already learned, but in a specifically non-white way... and I was grating against the info. I imagined these kids- 20 years of hearing only about slaves, civil war, civil rights... and only white people have a history outside of that. If' I'm grating after 3hours- what does that mean after 20
hours- (eta- years, not hours) and never getting to hear the rest of it?
this lecture (and subsequent talk with my friends) more profoundly affected and changed my view on race than any other thing in my life.
hearing about tulsa, the NC coup... all got me thinking about that all over again.