Posts

"An eighteen year old boy is carried into the shock ward, and he looks up at me trustingly asking, "How am I doing, nurse?"

Image
"An eighteen year old boy is carried into the shock ward, and he looks up at me trustingly asking, "How am I doing, nurse?" I just kiss his forehead and say, "You are doing just fine soldier." He smiles sweetly and says, "I was just checking," Then he dies. We all cry in private.  But not in front of the boys. Never in front of the boys." June Wandrey June Wandrey Mann (1920–2005) was a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps from Wautoma, Wisconsin. She was the author of Bedpan Commando, an account of her military service in Africa, Sicily, Italy, France and Germany from 1942 to 1946, during which she was awarded eight battle stars.

๐ŸŒด FRONTLINE REPORT: MERRILL'S MARAUDERS

Image
๐ŸŒด FRONTLINE REPORT: MERRILL'S MARAUDERS When people think of the war against Japan, they usually picture aircraft carriers, island invasions, and famous battles across the Pacific. But deep inside the jungles of Burma, a small American volunteer force fought one of the most brutal campaigns of World War II. Officially designated the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional), they became known simply as Merrill's Marauders, named after their commander, Frank Merrill. Their mission sounded straightforward: Advance deep behind Japanese lines. Cut enemy supply routes. Capture the strategic airfield at Myitkyina. The reality was something else entirely. ๐ŸŒด THE GREEN HELL Burma was unlike any battlefield most American soldiers had ever seen. ๐ŸŒก️ Temperatures often exceeded 100°F (38°C) ๐ŸŒง️ Monsoon rains turned trails into rivers of mud ๐ŸฆŸ Malaria spread through the jungle ⛰️ Mountains, rivers, and dense vegetation blocked movement Most importantly: There were almost no roads. The Marauder...

SLAVERY WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT LABOR:

Image
SLAVERY WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT LABOR:  If it were, there would have been no need to sexually violate enslaved women. No need to force reproduction. No need to turn Black women’s wombs into profit centers. No need to strip them of the legal right to refuse, to testify, or to be protected. Under American chattel slavery, sexual violence was not incidental it was systemic, legal, and economically rewarded. Enslaved women were forced to give birth to more enslaved people, automatically increasing the wealth and power of enslavers while ensuring generational control. Children born from this violence were not protected they were owned. This is not opinion. This is documented history. Discomfort does not equal dishonesty. Silence does not equal innocence. Education is not hate. It is accountability. If the truth unsettles you, ask yourself why and who benefits when this history is ignored.

Gordon, the man who never gave up on freedom, 1863 -

Image
Gordon, the man who never gave up on freedom, 1863 - This picture here shows a former African American slave called Gordon or "Whipped Peter" and the extent of the brutal whippings he received during his time as a slave.  The picture is known as "The Scourged Back" and it became one of the most important and recognisable pieces of Union material during the American civil war. It exposed the physical injuries slaves often received while being held prisoners. It inspired the populations of the Union in the civil war to continue the fight, and to aim to end slavery, which had become a stain on American society.  Gordon escaped John and Bridget Lyons cotton plantation in Louisiana in 1860. The plantation had about 40 slaves in total at the time of Gordon's run for freedom. He was chased after by bloodhounds but confused them by rubbing his body with onions that he stole and by jumping over a creek or going through a river. This messed up his trail of scent, which al...

One of the cruelest realities of the transatlantic slave trade was the forced “dancing” imposed on enslaved Africans aboard slave ships.

Image
⚠️ One of the cruelest realities of the transatlantic slave trade was the forced “dancing” imposed on enslaved Africans aboard slave ships. Historical records show that enslaved men, women, and children were often forced to jump, move, or “dance” while chained during the Middle Passage — not for joy, but as a brutal method used by captors to keep prisoners physically active enough to survive the voyage and maintain their sale value. ๐Ÿ•ฏ️ Refusal could bring whipping, beatings, or other punishment. Some historical accounts describe captives being “whipped into cheerfulness,” forced to move under armed supervision despite exhaustion, illness, starvation, and trauma. Historians emphasize that these acts were part of the wider dehumanization built into the Atlantic slave trade system. Enslaved women faced additional layers of abuse. Historical research documents how many women were subjected to humiliation, sexual exploitation, coercion, and public inspection during transport and slave auct...

Were enslaved people forced to 'breed' like livestock—or is that one of the most misunderstood parts of slavery history?"

Image
"Were enslaved people forced to 'breed' like livestock—or is that one of the most misunderstood parts of slavery history?" Few topics in American history create more debate than this one. Images like this are often shared with claims that enslaved men were routinely selected, inspected, and forced to father large numbers of children for profit. The reality is complicated, disturbing, and still discussed by historians today. What is well documented is that enslaved people were legally treated as property in much of the United States. Because the status of a child followed that of the mother, every child born into slavery increased an enslaver's wealth. Human beings became financial assets on paper. Some slaveholders encouraged births among enslaved people. Others used coercion, threats, sexual violence, or forced relationships to increase the enslaved population after the transatlantic slave trade ended in the United States in 1808. What remains debated is how wide...

Slavery was never just chains.

Image
Slavery was never just chains. Sometimes it was iron collars designed to make sleep impossible. That is the part of history many people never learned in school. These brutal punishment devices were forced onto enslaved Black people for weeks or even months at a time. Heavy iron spikes dug into the body, prevented rest, made field labor unbearable, and turned basic movement into constant pain. And often, the so-called “crime” was something small: Trying to escape. Speaking back. Resting too long. Wanting freedom. Wanting dignity. Wanting to be treated like a human being. The cruelty was intentional. These collars were not only physical punishment — they were psychological warfare meant to break the spirit of enslaved people and remind everyone else what happened when Black humanity challenged the system. That is why slavery cannot honestly be described as simply “hard labor.” It was organized terror. A system built not only on stolen work, but on humiliation, fear, surveillance, and vio...

Pop