But they are taught it. It sounds like some of you have been in academia too long. I knew the entire history of my people before I was 10 years old, it would be another decade before I took a course in it in college. It's called
oral communication or tradition. And it can happen outside of classrooms. You think the people affected in Alabama didn't tell their family members in Mississippi, Louisiana, or Tennessee? And those people don't tell their children and grand children?
Some poor black people in the south:
"Using a convenience sample of 301 African Americans in Durham, North Carolina, Sengupta et al.
37utilized structural equation modeling to explore distrust and other factors that might influence willingness to participate in AIDS research by means of a cross-sectional survey. Respondents were classified by income level (
below poverty vs. lower- to upper-middle class). The investigators hypothesized that impoverished participants would not be able to answer questions about the USPHS Syphilis Study at Tuskegee due to their lack of knowledge. As a result, Sengupta et al.
37 over sampled from the lower- to upper-middle class subgroup to attain statistical power on questions pertaining to the study. Approximately
two-thirds of the sample indicated they had heard of the USPHS Syphilis Study at Tuskegee."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1828138/
Mail and telephone survey outside of the south:
The under-representation of racial/ethnic minorities among medical research participants has recently resulted in mandates for their inclusion by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Therefore, there is a need to determine how history, attitudes, cultural beliefs, social issues, and investigator behavior affect minority enrollment in medical research studies. From January 1998 to March 1999, 179 African-American and white residents of the Detroit Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) participated in a mail and telephone survey designed to examine impediments to African-American participation in medical research studies. Chi-square tests were performed to assess differences between the study groups using the Survey Data Analysis Program (SUDAAN).
Eighty-one percent of African Americans and 28% of whites had knowledge of the Tuskegee Study (p = <0.001). Knowledge of the Tuskegee Study resulted in less trust of researchers for 51% of African-Americans and 17% of whites (p = 0.02). Forty-six percent of African-Americans and 34% of whites indicated that their knowledge of the study would affect future research participation decisions (p = 0.25).
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2568333/
I disagree that it takes "considerable volition" to have knowledge of this event, all it takes is for someone to repeat what they've been told. Rumors are not hard to propagate, especially particularly scandalous ones. And your "travels" are irrelevant as that would not be the primary mode of communicating this event to the population in question, unless you were polling poverty level blacks in America.
I do not subscribe to this dogma, I'm not sure the scientific community at large does either. You might be lonely on this hill.
If those same people get accepted to medical school and harbor contempt toward all of their URM classmates over perceived, not proven, admissions preference then we have huge problems, I'd agree. I don't think this is reality though.