Justice ReDesigned Podcast
In this episode of Justice ReDesigned, Steve Teske continues his examination of memory, accountability, and the moral inversion at the heart of the modern backlash against diversity, equity, inclusion, and historical truth. Part One asked whether enslavers and Confederate leaders deserve grace because they were “products of their time.” Part Two asks a different question: What happens when a society continues to honor them? Drawing on history, law, civic responsibility, and personal family history, Teske explores the difference between remembering the past and celebrating it. He argues that museums teach history, textbooks provide context, but public honors—school names, monuments, and commemorations—communicate values. This episode examines: • Why naming a school is an act of honor, not historical documentation• The difference between remembrance and celebration• How Confederate symbols continue to communicate exclusion and hierarchy• Why “wokeness” has become a slur for awareness and historical accountability• What Germany’s confrontation with its past can teach us about public memory• Why discomfort is not oppression—and why accountability is not humiliation Teske also shares a deeply personal reflection about his own family’s connection to slavery and explains why acknowledging history honestly is not an act of self-condemnation, but an act of civic integrity. At its core, this episode asks a simple but profound question: What belongs in memory—and what belongs in places of honor? Because some things belong in museums. Some things belong in textbooks. Some things belong in memory. But not everything that belongs to history deserves celebration. And when we confuse remembrance with honor, we do not preserve history. We rehearse humiliation. Steve Teske is a retired judge from Georgia and currently is legal counsel to the Department of Social Services for the Pascua Yaqui Pueblo Tribe. He has testified before Congress on four occasions and numerous state legislatures on issues involving civil rights, reducing racial disparities in justice systems, and juvenile justice reforms. Teske has authored several articles published in professional and peer-reviewed journals and is the recipient of numerous awards including the Juvenile Law Prize Award. He hosts The Teske Brief podcast at www.youtube.com/@judgeteske Justice ReDesigned is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Thanks for reading Justice ReDesigned! This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Justice ReDesigned at steventeske.substack.com/subscribe [https://steventeske.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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