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  • 2019-04-29 (xsd:date)
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  • Does a 'New' School Textbook Describe President Trump as Mentally Ill and His Supporters Racist? (en)
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  • On 23 April 2019, Fox News commentator Todd Starnes took to his personal blog to revive a 2018 manufactured controversy over a history textbook that contained a chapter covering the 2016 presidential election. The story went viral but also failed to accurately describe the book's contents. Despite the story's headline, New High School Textbook Describes Trump as Mentally Ill, Supporters as Racist, the book is not new. The second edition of the Advanced Placement history book entitled By the People A History of the United States initially appeared in early 2018. At that time, a high school student from Minnesota sent images of pages from the chapter entitled The Angry Election of 2016 to Fox News, claiming to be appalled. Phrases from the book that contained negative characterizations of President Donald Trump were swept up in a fracas in which some media commentators claimed the book represented an effort going on in public schools to indoctrinate kids with an anti-conservative agenda. But articles shared then, as well as Starnes' April 2019 story, leave out key context in an effort to play up partisan animosity. The book doesn't offer its own description of Trump. Instead, it reports how Trump's supporters and those of his opponent Hillary Clinton viewed each other and the two candidates. As Pennsylvania University history Professor Jonathan Zimmerman stated in 2018, For the record, the book did not claim that Trump supporters were racist or that Trump was unstable; it said that some of his opponents believed that. Starnes' take on the book, although a year late, employed many of the tactics trotted out during the 2018 outburst over the issue. He took out of context passages that described how Clinton supporters viewed Trump while misinforming his readers that the assertions were those of the book's author, rather than a historical recording of the actual national discourse during the 2016 election cycle. For example, Starnes quoted a passage in the book that states, Clinton’s supporters feared that the election had been determined by people who were afraid of a rapidly developing ethnic diversity of the country, discomfort with their candidate’s gender and nostalgia for an earlier time in the nation’s history. They also worried about the mental stability of the president-elect and the anger that he and his supporters brought to the nation. Starnes failed to note that immediately preceding that phrase, the book states, Trump’s supporters saw the vote as a victory for the people who, like themselves, had been forgotten in a fast-changing America — a mostly older, often rural or suburban, and overwhelmingly white group. (The characterization of Trump voters as mostly older, often rural or suburban and overwhelmingly white is a matter of statistical fact, not a point of controversy.) In another example, Starnes quotes the book as saying that, Most thought that Trump was too extreme a candidate to win the nomination, but his extremism, his anti-establishment rhetoric, and, some said, his not very hidden racism connected with a significant number of primary voters. But he failed to report that it also describes criticism of Clinton levied by Trump supporters, who chanted 'lock her up' at political rallies, believing that Clinton’s use of her private e-mail account was not only a serious mistake — which many believed it was — but also a crime. Many within Trump’s base saw Clinton and the Democratic Party as elite snobs out of touch with many Americans’ economic pain or, perhaps even more, many Americans’ anger at being dismissed as not worthy of serious consideration. The book's author, New York University history and education Professor James Fraser, expressed frustration at the stories from both 2018 and 2019. The stories focused on certain phrases that reinforced confirmation bias, he said, without considering the sum total of his effort to fairly characterize the historic levels of animosity roiling the nation in the lead-up and aftermath of the 2016 election. The Trump people did say that and the Clinton people did say that [about each other] — I didn't say either side was right or wrong, Fraser told us. That was the hardest [chapter] of the book to write, but I really tried to provide a balanced view. As the author of a textbook, it’s not my role to tell students what to think. It’s my role to tell students that they ought to be thinking, In a 2018 statement on the same controversy, Fraser had stated, Keeping facts from students rightly makes them distrust all textbooks. Laying out the facts as clearly as I know how and doing so in comparison to other information or facts is the best way to encourage the kind of thoughtful engagement with history that every historian should work for. The book's publishing company, Pearson Education, also released a statement voicing its continued support for the book, noting that it was developed by an expert author and underwent rigorous peer review to ensure academic integrity. The statement reads: We sent questions to Starnes by email about his article and left a voice message at the phone number listed on his website, but got no response by the time of publication. (en)
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