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Erasing History: The Tulsa Massacre and State Power
jdw463
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“They burned the city and then lied about how many people died. That’s state power.” Follow and comment yes, if this should be in the history books. Estimates put the Tulsa deaths at 100–300—nobody knows exactly because officials suppressed evidence and undercounted bodies. Why? Because low numbers protect perpetrators: insurers deny claims, prosecutors drop charges, and politicians avoid responsibility. that’s policy in action—record-keeping and official reports are weapons. If institutions can erase people here, they can erase any powerless neighborhood. This isn’t distant history. It’s a legal playbook that still works today. Drop “Not again” if you refuse to let
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Wes Anderson
fiction, cultural or historical