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ERIC FONER looks at the changes in the social studies curriculum approved by the Texas Board of Ed – and what the new standards tell us about conservatives’ vision of American history. Their favorite topics: the Confederacy, the military, and religion; topics they cut include slavery, labor, and feminism. WATCH Eric on “The Colbert Report” on Comedy Central Tuesday night HERE; READ the Texas curriculum changes HERE.
Also: Columnist HAROLD MEYERSON says “the road to America’s economic recovery starts in LA”: with a sales tax increase passed in November 2008 by L.A. County’s voters to construct new rail and bus lines — a major environmental and stimulus program that won’t add to the federal deficit. He wrote about it in his column for for the Washington Post op-ed page.
And historian IRA BERLIN analyzes four epic migrations of African-Americans: the slave trade; then the relocation of a million slaves to the interior of the antebellum South; then the move by six million blacks to northern cities a century later; and since the late 1960s, the arrival of black immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean.
Ira teaches at the University of Maryland; his new book is The Making of African America: The Four Great Migrations.

Plus: Debunking 9-11 Conspiracy Theories:
“It is hard not to be intimidated by New Left Review,” Stefan Collini wrote recently in the Guardian. He’s right: first there is the intellectual range and analytical power of the NLR writers, and now there’s the fact that it has been publishing for fifty years. The fiftieth anniversary issue–the 299th–reviews the magazine’s history, announces its current agenda and displays the qualities that have made it so significant over the past half-century.
Also: The past and future of capitalism: historian
Forty historians testify for Big Tobacco when they are sued by smokers with cancer; two testify against. Why the disparity?
Also: we remember
(Guest-hosted by Alan Minsky while I was on jury duty–thank you Alan!) Our president gives his first State of the Union speech tonight at 600pm, and apparently Obama will call for an across-the-board three-year spending freeze to placate Republicans who say the deficit is a big problem. Question: Do ordinary people really care about the deficit? And don’t we need a much bigger deficit right now?
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