New York Times Looks Over 1619 Project Falsities To Amplify Nikole Hannah-Jones’ Whining About Tenure – The Federalist

Posted: June 27, 2021 at 4:14 am

The New York Times published an article brushing over the historical inaccuracies present in the 1619 Project to fawn over Nikole Hannah-Jones and her fight to be awarded tenure at the University of North Carolina.

The Times glossed over the fact that the paper has issued major corrections to Hannah-Joness 1619 Project, describing it as an ambitious series that reframed the history of the United States through the lens of slavery.

The 1619 Project, whose name is derived from the year that enslaved Africans were brought to the English colony of Virginia, drew early criticism from five prominent historians. The series became the center of a cultural debate partly because of a series of 1619 Projectschool lesson plans developed by the Pulitzer Center and offered on its website, the Times article stated, noting the projects permeance into the critical race theory battle in schools around the nation.

Nowhere in the article does the author mention that the 1619 Project is littered with corrections. Instead, the author amplifies Hannah-Joness refusal to join the universitys faculty as planned next month unless she is granted tenure and her threats to possibly file a discrimination suit over the boards failure to approve tenure.

The 1619 Project, lead by Hannah-Jones, seeks to portray America as a racist nation founded for the sole reason of oppressing black people. In its early days, the project claimed that the desire to protect slavery was held by all of the colonists who fought in the Revolutionary War. The Times was later forced to issue an update revising the allegation to only some of the colonists.

While embroiled in disputes with respectedhistorians about the projects historical inaccuracies, the corporate media outlet also quietly omitted the controversial founding claim understanding 1619 as our true founding from the description of the project sometime after August 2019. At the time of this revisions discovery, Hannah-Jones tried to defend her comments as rhetorical without acknowledging the long list of previous instances where she made the same exact claim that Americas true founding occurred in 1619 when the first African slaves arrived in Virginia, as opposed to 1776.

Hannah-Jones was originally hired to teach at UNC-Chapel Hills Hussman School of Journalism in Media starting next month as the Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism but her legal team is insistent that she will not begin employment with the university without the protection and security of tenure.

Jordan Davidson is a staff writer at The Federalist. She graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism.

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New York Times Looks Over 1619 Project Falsities To Amplify Nikole Hannah-Jones' Whining About Tenure - The Federalist

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