August 5, 2025 ‘1619 Project’ is Brazen Deception
in the Service of Statism Phillip Magness’s new book debunks the
political project disguised as history for its deliberate lies and
hidden agenda. George Leef
It is useful to have frequent reminders that people often resort to
deception to peddle their beliefs. The book
The 1619 Project Myth by
Phillip W. Magness is highly valuable in that regard, as it devastates
the historical accuracy of “The 1619 Project” published by The New
York Times.
That long
magazine piece was the brainchild of one of its writers, Nikole
Hannah-Jones, who used it to make her breathtaking claim that the true
date of America’s founding was not 1776, but rather 1619, the year when
the first slaves were landed in North America.
Why say that?
The answer is that, like so many “progressives,” Nikole Hannah-Jones
wants to undermine the idea that the United States was founded to
increase the people’s freedom and replace it with the notion that the
nation’s founding was rooted in slavery and oppression. The American
Revolution was fought, in her telling, to preserve slavery, which the
colonists feared was going to be ended by the British government.
Moreover, she and several of her co-authors maintained, the effects of
slavery are still with us. What better way to get people to think of
America as a terrible nation that’s in need of radical (or revolutionary)
transformation?
Almost immediately after its publication, “The 1619 Project”came
under fire from scholars
(
and not just those on the political right) who found its claims to be
unsupported, implausible, and misleading. Among the first was economic
historian Phillip W. Magness, now a Senior Fellow at
The Independent Institute. He
wrote several
critical
essays about different aspects of the Project, which he compiled into
a book in 2020. Now, with more time to reflect on the issues and respond
to recent spin-offs from the Project, he has put out a new version. It’s
a demolition job of the first magnitude.
Magness writes, “Each new permutation of Hannah-Jones’s work has veered
more heavily into political advocacy, taking greater liberties with
evidence in the process.” But, faced with a mountain of counter-argument,
the New York Times has only made one carefully
hidden concession about the doubtful claims in it, while Hannah-Jones
and her major contributing author, Professor Matthew Desmond, avoid
serious confrontations with those who criticize their work and resort to
ad hominem attacks.
The book is more than a point-by-point refutation of the claims in the
Project. In it, readers also learn a lot about the history of capitalism
in America that they probably would not find anywhere else. Here’s just
one example.
While Hannah-Jones and her collaborators want to make people believe that
slavery and capitalism were somehow in league in early America, that’s
the opposite of the truth. Magness recounts the story of the Tappan
brothers of New York City. They were successful merchants who opposed
slavery. In 1834, they invited Rev. Samuel Cornish, a black American and
abolitionist, to their Sunday worship service. That led to a mob attack
on their business and homes, as pro-slavery New Yorkers called their
gesture of solidarity an invitation to a slave revolt. Between mob
violence and a boycott against them, the Tappans were nearly ruined. But,
just when all seemed lost, Lewis Tappan came up with a brilliant plan to
revive his business by offering to deal on credit with trusted associates
in the abolitionist movement. The result was the New York Mercantile
Agency, the forerunner of Dun & Bradstreet. Capitalism and slavery
were friends? Nothing could be further from the truth.
Or consider the thesis, advanced by Prof. Desmond, that the American
economy was extremely dependent on cotton produced by slavery so
dependent that it was really the driving force behind the nation’s early
growth. Magness demonstrates that his claim is not remotely supported by
the evidence, then turns the tables by informing the readers that one of
the foremost advocates of slavery in antebellum America was one George
Fitzhugh, who ranted against the ideas of Adam Smith and other
free-market advocates. Fitzhugh declared that the South “must throw Adam
Smith, Say, Ricardo & Co. in the fire.”
In short, the philosophy of capitalism was utterly incompatible with
slavery, and the pro-slavery crowd knew it. Of course, you will hear none
of that from Hannah-Jones or her supporters.
Another revealing spin-off from the 1619 Project is how it affected the
American Historical Association (AHA). The president of the AHA, James
Sweet, had the temerity to
cast doubt on the truthfulness of the claims in a tweet, writing, “As
journalism, it is powerful and effective, but is it history?”
Sweet quickly learned that one is not permitted to ask questions about
something so important to the left as this. Magness writes, “Incensed at
even the mildest suggestion that politicization was undermining the
integrity of historical scholarship, the activist wing of the history
profession showed up at the AHA’s thread and began demanding Sweet’s
cancellation.” So great was the uproar that Sweet felt the need to issue
a groveling apology for having “caused harm” with his tweet. The
activists did not bother to engage with Sweet and defend the 1619 Project
they just wanted to see him punished for his apostasy.
If there was ever the slightest doubt as to the political purpose of the
1619 Project, it was erased when Hannah-Jones, in the subsequent Hulu TV
series based upon it, called for the nation to pay reparations for
slavery. That idea has long been dismissed by scholars of all races as
unjust and economically ruinous. Nevertheless, she blithely stated that
reparations were needed to atone for our racist past and, to explain how
we could pay for the trillions it would cost, told viewers that the
government can afford anything it wants just by printing enough money.
How do we know that? Because a few crank economists who subscribe to
Modern Monetary Theory say so. Thus, the 1619 Project combines false
history with ludicrous economics to promote the statist agenda.
It shouldn’t surprise anyone to learn that the American education
establishment has been eager to embrace the 1619 Project and bring its
materials into school and college classrooms. The leftists who say that
the Project is just about teaching students some neglected aspects of
American history are simply lying the materials in it are deceptive
rather than informative.
Magness’s book will be of use to parents or officials who don’t want
students to be indoctrinated with propaganda meant to sow hatred for the
country and mislead students about capitalism.
The next time you hear anything positive about the 1619 Project, reach
for Magness’s excellent book.