Goose
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If you need an easy example of the lasting impact of white supremacy in the US, make a list of all the songs and nursery rhymes you grew up with. Then circle the ones that were originally racist, but we kept teaching them in schools anyway with the tiniest change possible to whitewash them.
11:47 AM - Feb 12, 2023
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DeepDarkAbyss
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In response to Goose.
Having 2 young daughters, I've come across this and tried to educate my daughters as to what they mean and why it's not good song to play w/ anymore. so they started making up their own. IM SO PROUD. key difference? their songs are not racist but INCLUSIVE. well... inclusive of their toys of moment.
11:55 AM - Feb 12, 2023
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Goose
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In response to Goose.
“Eeney meenie miney moe” and “5/10 little monkeys” are still common, and just replaced the N-word with animal names, which is possibly the laziest and most racist way to try to remove racism
11:48 AM - Feb 12, 2023
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Goose
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In response to Goose.
“Oh Susannah,” “Camptown Races,” “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad,” “Jimmy Crack Corn,” and many others had their origins in blackface minstrel shows and were only lightly modified since then.
11:50 AM - Feb 12, 2023
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