GMA Clown Show Pumps Up 1619 Author, Want Kids To Watch Her New Series
It's time to face the facts: The 1619 Project is one of the biggest frauds in recent memory. It's been thoroughly debunked by historians, academics, and other experts, yet it's still being pushed by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones and her allies.
Recently, ABC's Good Morning America aired an interview with Hannah-Jones, with co-anchor Robin Roberts eagerly praising her work. Roberts happily praised the project for being "groundbreaking" and for being "for everyone," without giving any real thought to the fact that it's been largely debunked by historians.
This is especially concerning considering that Hannah-Jones is pushing for the project to be included in school curriculums across the country. Roberts, who is a co-anchor of a major morning news show, should have taken the time to accurately inform her viewers of the project's many issues. Instead, she declined to mention any criticism and ended the segment by letting Hannah-Jones have the final word: "Truth."
The 1619 Project is nothing more than a blatant attempt to rewrite history and push Critical Race Theory (CRT) in the classroom. It's dangerous to allow false information to be spread unchecked, and it's up to journalists like Robin Roberts to make sure that the truth is always brought to light.
I'm not alone in my criticism of The 1619 Project. Many historians, academics, and other experts have come out and denounced the project, pointing out its inaccuracies and false histories. And yet, it's still being promoted in the mainstream media.
The 1619 Project is a dangerous attempt to push the woke agenda, and it's up to us to make sure that the truth is heard. We need to reject this project and its revisionist history, and make sure that our children and grandchildren are being taught accurate and unbiased information.
Trancript
ROBERTS: We going to turn now to my conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-jones, whose The New York Times best-selling book The 1619 Project is about to debut as a docu-series. And just like the book, Nikole says the series is a show for everyone.
[Cuts to video]
NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES: I feel excited and I feel anxious. You never know how something will go out into the world but I know how hard we worked on it.
ROBERTS: Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nikole Hannah-jones is back again with her most ambitious endeavor yet.
HANNAH-JONES: As a woman in my 40s, I am part of the first generation of black Americans in the history of the United States to be born in a society in which black people have full rights and citizenship.
ROBERTS: Hosting a new Hulu original docu-series adapted from her landmark The New York Times magazine anthology and best-selling book, The 1619 Project.
HANNAH-JONES: The very first enslaved Africans were brought here over 400 years ago. Since then, no part of America's story has been untouched by the legacy of slavery.
ROBERTS: You feel that in all aspects of American -- of who we are.
HANNAH-JONES: Yes.
ROBERTS: It can be traced back and has the remnants of slavery? Do you think that's something that people will understand with this series?
HANNAH-JONES: Absolutely, I mean, that is what the series argues, so it's not just a historical documentary, it's actually a documentary about contemporary society.
ROBERTS: Jones traveling across the country sharing the stories of everyday people from all walks of life.
HANNAH-JONES: We follow real-life Americans as, you know, the unionization fight with Amazon workers in Alabama and New York. We follow a black mother who lost one of her twins she was pregnant with because of racism in health care.
[From series] In about 22 weeks, things started to physically change for you.
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: I'm in pain. I can't walk down a flight of steps or up a flight of steps. I can't walk down a block. And she's aware of all those things and still doesn't make her check me further.
ROBERTS: What resonated with you most?
HANNAH-JONES: What resonated with me most is just the enduring spirit of black people in this country.
ROBERTS: The thought-provoking series also introducing viewers to Jones and her family on a personal level.
HANNAH-JONES: My father, he always flew a flag in our front yard. One thing about dad, he was patriotic.
UNIDENTIFED MAN: He was part of that United States Army. They served their country. But hey, you served your country, don’t mean your country gonna serve you.
ROBERTS: And although the show is told through the lens of black Americans, Jones says this is something for all Americans to watch and reflect on.
HANNAH-JONES: This is the American story. We've tried to segregate these histories, there's black history and then there’s American history. But you can't understand America if you don't understand the role of black Americans, the role of slavery, the role of racism.
ROBERTS: Premiering at a time when heated debates about how history is taught in our children's schools are erupting across the nation. Just last week, the Florida Board of Education made headlines after it rejected the addition of an advanced placement African American studies course.
HANNAH-JONES: This medium of television is democratizing. You can ban what someone can learn in a classroom but you can't stop them from watching this documentary series and getting that information. So, I think it is really coming at a critical time.
ROBERTS: One word to describe, okay, if I say, The 1619 Project is --
HANNAH-JONES: Truth.
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ROBERTS: And from the moment The 1619 Project hit the shelves, it has become Nikole's life's work. She also told me she's truly loving her time now at Howard University where she's teaching classes once a week in her tenured position there. Nikole has also advocated for her work and similar journalism to be included in school's history curriculums across the country and says those who disagree have not kept her from continuing her work.
And she makes it abundantly clear that she wants this to be in addition to, not in replace of what is being taught.
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Yeah. She didn't hesitate at all on that one word.
ROBERTS: I know! She is so thoughtful in how she responds to things. But yes, yeah. And The 1619 Project premieres tomorrow on Hulu.