weeping willow

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    1. rishonan reblogged this from olehughr and added:
      (I hate to end Black History Month on this note: but this should be publicized!)
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      Putting this back on my blog. Want to know why I’m so angry? Want to know why it’s hard for me not to be prejudiced? 400...
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      Tell me again about how the founding fathers and their bootstraps or whatever the fuck built this country and negroes...
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      I just sat here and cried.
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      Stuff like this just makes you realise what people will do for the “noble” quest for scientific knowledge and insight.
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      This is what I study so I’ll have to add that although these barbaric doctors were under the impression that enslaved...
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      This made me want to vomit. How horrible…
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    Reblogged from: thespunkywallflower
    Originally posted by: thespunkywallflower

    thespunkywallflower:

J. Marion Sims is called “the Father of Gynecology” due to his experiments on enslaved women in Alabama who were often submitted as guinea pigs by their plantation owners who could not use them for sexual pleasure. He kept seven women as subjects for four years, but left a trail of death and permanently traumatized black women. Anarcha was one of the women Sims experimented upon. A detailed history of this monster is in Harriet Washington’s book, Medical Apartheid.Sims believed that Africans were numb to pain and operated on the women without anesthesia or antiseptic. The procedures usually happened this way. Black female slaves who were guinea pigs would hold one subject down as Sims performed hysterectomies, tubal ligation, and other procedures to examine various female disorders.Sims also performed a host of operations on other slave populations. The following excerpt details his “practice” on enslaved infants.Sims began to exercise his freedom to experiment on his captives. He took custody of slave infants and, with a shoemaker’s awl, tried to pry the bones of their skulls into proper alignment.
 

what they don’t teach you in your Social Science, Human Biology, History, Anatomy and Physiology class, and why it’s so important for public education to actually be diverse, and for people to stop complaining when a class on racial oppression wants to be instructed (nod to Arizona’s Mexican Studies class), and why we need to stop looking at history through a white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchal lens, and actually fucking begin studying history and society through the POV of POC

    thespunkywallflower:

    J. Marion Sims is called “the Father of Gynecology” due to his experiments on enslaved women in Alabama who were often submitted as guinea pigs by their plantation owners who could not use them for sexual pleasure. 

    He kept seven women as subjects for four years, but left a trail of death and permanently traumatized black women. 

    Anarcha was one of the women Sims experimented upon. A detailed history of this monster is in Harriet Washington’s book, Medical Apartheid.

    Sims believed that Africans were numb to pain and operated on the women without anesthesia or antiseptic. The procedures usually happened this way. 

    Black female slaves who were guinea pigs would hold one subject down as Sims performed hysterectomies, tubal ligation, and other procedures to examine various female disorders.

    Sims also performed a host of operations on other slave populations. The following excerpt details his “practice” on enslaved infants.

    Sims began to exercise his freedom to experiment on his captives. He took custody of slave infants and, with a shoemaker’s awl, tried to pry the bones of their skulls into proper alignment.
     

    what they don’t teach you in your Social Science, Human Biology, History, Anatomy and Physiology class, and why it’s so important for public education to actually be diverse, and for people to stop complaining when a class on racial oppression wants to be instructed (nod to Arizona’s Mexican Studies class), and why we need to stop looking at history through a white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchal lens, and actually fucking begin studying history and society through the POV of POC

    --- 4 weeks ago --- 2,601 notes ---