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Fourth of July. Independence Day for some. | Paterson Times

Fourth of July. Independence Day for some.

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As a father, educator and public servant, I believe it’s important that we deal honestly and openly with the uncomfortable aspects of our country’s past. While we can never take away what the “Founding Fathers” did to create a country by declaring independence from Britain, writing the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and establishing a bicameral legislature. The facts are on July 4th, 1776, 41 of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence owned African Americans as slaves.

Revered “Founding Fathers” such as George Washington, James Madison, James Monroe, Benjamin Franklin and even Thomas Jefferson, the individual credited with drafting the words “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,” all owned other human beings based solely on the color of their skin. Washington owned over 300 African Americans as slaves at his Mount Vernon plantation and Jefferson owned over 600 at Monticello.

All told, 12 U.S. Presidents including later ones such as Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson and even Ulysses S. Grant all owned African Americans as property and promulgated a Constitution which legalized Black lives as worth only 3/5 of a human being. Capital assets to be used, traded and sold in the creation of wealth with no regard to their humanity, counted only for the purposes of taxation and representation in Congress.

It wasn’t until June 19, 1865 when Union soldiers informed still enslaved African Americans in Galveston, Texas that President Abraham Lincoln “freed them” nearly 2 years earlier with the Emancipation Proclamation. This day now known and celebrated as “Juneteenth” is seen by many of us as our true Independence Day. 89 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence and 246 years since the arrival of the first African slaves in 1619 on the shores of the Virginia colony. Unfortunately, despite being freed African Americans, we’re still not equal and are systematically and legally deprived of the same freedoms and promises made in the constitution to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

Even after the ratification of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the Constitution, it wasn’t until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 that African Americans were truly seen as equal under federal law. However, even after witnessing the 8-minute and 46-second public lynching of George Floyd by law enforcement officials, Congress is debating whether or not to make lynching a federal crime. In 2020 many Americans and some political leaders, including the President, still can’t muster the basic acknowledgment that “Black Lives Matter.”

On this our country’s 244th birthday, it is admirable to see how far we have come with race relations but disappointing that we haven’t come further. There is still hard and necessary work that must be done to deal with the legacy of our country’s first sin and change the unacceptable and unnecessary conditions of our present for many people of color. So, as I celebrate this holiday with my children, I remind them of our county’s true history unedited or whitewashed and let them know of the work done by our ancestors to get to this point. I also recognize my responsibility for making this world better for them as one day they will be the recipients of the torch in the race for a more perfect union. Until that day comes…

God Bless America!

Written by Passaic County freeholder Theodore “TJ” Best.

  • bigron

    Mr. Best if you dislike this country so much to waste your time writing this on July 4 you should consider moving to another country to see if the grass is greener on the other side. This nation has its fault but it's still the greatest country in the world with freedoms you can't find anywhere else.

  • Justice Forall

    Don’t whitewash the history of Ulysses S. Grant by including him in the list of imperfect men, some far more imperfect than others. Grant should be regarded as a national hero for both White and Black Americans, his leadership of the Union Army brought defeat to the Confederacy, and it was that same Union Army that subsequently marched into Galveston on June 19th. Grant’s valiant efforts to make Reconstruction a reality were ultimately unsuccessful but certainly not because of a lack of courage or dedication on Grant’s part. To include Grant as a man who traded and sold African Americans as a means of creating wealth is completely untrue and a statement unworthy of the opinion’s author.

  • http://www.facebook.com/animalabusewar Animal Abuse War

    As far as you still not being equal? There are more programs and opportunities for black people than there ever was for white people.i have plenty of equal black friends & know of many more more I highly respect,starting with Candice Owens,I would be happy to send you an entire list.If a black person today feels not equal,it's because they choose to stay oppressed and instead of choosing the plethora of opportunities available to them,they pick instead to stay uneducated and living in a way and in places that doesn't require effort and hard work to survive.Many of those I respect,black, white,hispanic- came from poverty and lived in ghettos,but they all did what was required to get out of that and live normal lives. If they did it, there are simply no excuses left as to why anyone else can't do it.Its about choices and how an individual conducts and presents oneself,no matter what "color", country,religion,e.t.c-

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