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How Slavery Really Ended in America (nytimes.com)
52 points by tmsh on April 3, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 5 comments


Rosa parks did not sit at the back of the bus because she was tired as most histories have it. She sat there as a courageous act of civil disobedience after being carefully selected due to her impeccable character (so that the incident could not be dismissed as an act by a person without good standing).


OK yea so I'm flagging this one. Am I wrong?


I don't know, the 'contraband' term is like the ultimate pivot.


Consider this before you do.

Some time ago, I saw another article on HN that I value greatly: Drowning Doesn't Look Like Drowning [1]. At face value, drowning and slavery -- maybe more aptly, revolution -- don't have much to do with startup culture, but there is a more valuable lesson that is shared between them.

As entrepreneurs we are constantly on the lookout for success and failure. However, just like drowning and revolution, these successes and failures don't always look like we expect them to. Success is often the result of applying good principles, rather than setting out to succeed at a specific task. Butler possessed the ability to "feel" those around him. He knew that -- in principle, and as a practical matter -- he would need the support of his men to succeed in defending the fort. Out of those actions, great things happened.

If that isn't a lesson for entrepreneurs, I don't know what is.

1 - http://mariovittone.com/2010/05/154/


I find it interesting, but you're probably right to flag it.




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