[lbo-talk] re: holocaust denial, bill cosby, and good americans (was: Ahmadinejad will not speak at CU)

Aaron Shuman maruta_us at yahoo.com
Sun Sep 24 09:49:04 PDT 2006


--- Yoshie Furuhashi <critical.montages at gmail.com> wrote:


> Campus Zionism in action! -- Yoshie

Angelus Novus wrote:

Refusing a platform to Holocaust deniers is standard Antifascist praxis.

The left should not be leaving this sort of thing to Zionist groups. And if they do, well, then, SSKM.

AS: Does this mean that U.S. politicians who deny the impact of slavery on contemporary life in the U.S. should be denied a platform? How about those who insist the U.S. has abolished slavery--even though the 13th Amendment allows it as punishment for a crime?

http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/09/22/cosby.civil.war.ap/index.html

Cosby: Let's all give $8 each to build slavery museum POSTED: 10:52 p.m. EDT, September 22, 2006 Adjust font size:

RICHMOND, Virginia (AP) -- Bill Cosby on Friday called on each American to contribute $8 to help build a national slavery museum amid the battlefields of the Civil War.

Cosby, who already has committed $1 million to the project, joined Richmond Mayor L. Douglas Wilder on Friday in launching a new campaign to raise $100 million toward the Fredericksburg museum's $200 million price tag.

"The incentive is that they would join in with the rest of the United States of America in saying yes, as an American, I gave $8 to help build something that tells the story," he said in a teleconference with Wilder.

In a nation of some 300 million people, even a tepid response would surpass the $100 million goal, Cosby said.

He admitted this kind of campaign "generally fails badly."

"But I'm going to try again because I'm going to present this national slavery museum as a jewel that's missing in a crown."

The campaign marks the latest attempt at fundraising for the U.S. National Slavery Museum, a project in the works for more than a decade.

Wilder struggled to find a location before settling on a site near the Rappahannock River, a region where many Civil War battles were fought.

For Wilder, $8 has symbolic significance in a campaign to create what is billed as the first national museum dedicated solely to telling the story of American slavery.

"The figure 8, in shape, is both of the shackles, which is the symbol of slavery," said Wilder, a former Virginia governor and the grandson of slaves. He thought up the museum concept during a visit to Goree Island, the infamous slave shipping post in West Africa.

"If you turn it on its side, it's the symbol of infinite freedom," he said.

Wilder said the museum has about $50 million on hand.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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