Thursday, November 29, 2012

#8 howard zinn


Howard Zinn is one of few authors who dare to write a US History from the perspective of those peoples, in each generation, whose democratic rights have been trampled upon. Mostly, these were minority groups who had little or no voice in the conduct of our public affairs. He has written episode after episode of internal and external actions, and concludes what Pres. Dwight Eisenhower said in his farewell address: beware the growing power of the military/industrial forces in our nation.

During his tenure at Boston University, he taught a very popular class on civil liberties. The class was not a university requirement, but one that many students took as an elective. In doing so, I would suspect that they wanted to challenge themselves to think about civil rights. With certainty, I suspect that Zinn encourage them to “stand up” to civil injustices. I think that Zinn spoke out about the past in an effort to educate the present. Perhaps he recalled the words of the twentieth century novelist George Santayana who stated this concept most eloquently when he said, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." In Zinn’s views, those who forget about the struggles for human rights, the causes of war, and the inequality in society are condemned to repeat history.

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