The truth of who we are, where we came from, and how human beings across time helped shape the world we live in now. Told in maps, visuals, and evidence so the fuller story can be seen by everyone.
History was written by those who won — and validated by those who benefited from the telling.
What you were taught in school contains truth, but it is profoundly incomplete. The gaps are not accidental. They are the result of centuries of deliberate erasure, strategic omission, and the quiet violence of deciding whose story gets told — and whose does not.
Truestory completes the picture. It shows how many peoples, places, and generations shaped the human story we inherited. You deserve a version of history large enough to include all of us.
"The most powerful weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed." — Steve Biko
Current evidence places the deepest origins of Homo sapiens in Africa at least 300,000 years ago. Researchers now describe that beginning as pan-African: multiple connected populations across the continent, not separate origins for modern groups. As humans moved outward over tens of thousands of years, local environments shaped some visible traits, but the origin story remained shared.
Approximate migration routes based on genetics and archaeology. All living humans ultimately trace back to ancestral populations in Africa.
Sources: Smithsonian Human Origins Program · Nature (2017) · migration dates are approximate and simplified for visual understanding.
Modern genomics shows that human beings are far more alike than different. Any two people share the vast majority of their DNA, while a smaller fraction contributes to individual variation. Human diversity is real, but it does not separate us into distinct biological kinds.
NHGRI · Human Genome Project · NatureModern humans have existed for more than 300,000 years. Farming, cities, and states are much newer, emerging in multiple parts of the world during the last 12,000 years. The story of human achievement did not begin in one place or with one people.
Smithsonian Human Origins Program · Archaeological RecordThe usual classroom story often narrows civilization to a few familiar places. The fuller record is broader: Africa, Asia, the Americas, the Middle East, and Europe all contributed major advances in mathematics, medicine, architecture, astronomy, trade, agriculture, navigation, and governance. Human progress has always been plural.
Conventional education focuses heavily on the bottom right. The full picture looks like this.
Sources: Smithsonian Institution · British Museum · UNESCO World Heritage · Oxford History of the Ancient World
Civilization did not rise in a straight line through one people or one empire. It grew through exchange, adaptation, memory, and human imagination across the world.
— Truestory · LoveILoveAllThe concept of zero developed independently in South Asia and ancient Mesoamerica. In India it was formalized mathematically and later transmitted through Arabic scholarship into Europe. Without zero, place-value notation, algebra, and computing would look very different.
MacTutor Archive · University of St Andrews · History of MathematicsUNESCO describes Timbuktu as an intellectual and spiritual capital of Africa in the 15th and 16th centuries. Sankore and other madrasas drew thousands of students, while manuscript culture flourished across law, astronomy, theology, mathematics, and trade. Surviving manuscripts still testify to that scholarly world.
UNESCO World Heritage Centre · Timbuktu ManuscriptsBy 1914, European empires controlled most of the world's land surface. Colonial rule took different forms in different places, but recurring patterns included conquest, extraction, forced labor, border-making, and cultural suppression. Those histories still shape institutions, trade, memory, and inequality today.
These numbers represent human lives, cultural destruction, resource extraction, and generational wealth transfer — not just geographic lines.
Sources: Britannica · historical atlases · Oxford History of the British Empire · Slave Voyages Database
Economist Utsa Patnaik, using British trade and tax records spanning 173 years of colonial rule, calculated that Britain extracted approximately $45 trillion from India between 1765 and 1938. At the time of British arrival, India produced approximately 25% of global GDP. By the time they left, that figure had dropped to 4%. The Industrial Revolution was not simply an invention story — it was financed by the systematic extraction of wealth from colonized peoples.
Dr. Utsa Patnaik, Jawaharlal Nehru University · Columbia University PressBetween 1500 and 1900, approximately 12.5 million Africans were forcibly transported to the Americas as enslaved people. An estimated 1.8 million died during the Middle Passage alone. The labor of enslaved people built the economic foundations of the United States, Brazil, the Caribbean, and directly financed the Industrial Revolution in Britain. The Slave Voyages Database — the most comprehensive scholarly record — documents 36,000 individual slave voyages.
SlaveVoyages.org · Harvard, Emory, and Rice UniversitiesHuman variation is real, but modern racial categories are social and historical systems, not clean biological boundaries. Traits such as skin color, hair texture, and facial variation reflect adaptation, ancestry, and chance across long stretches of time. The racial boxes used in many modern societies hardened through law, custom, and colonial power from the 1600s onward.
A simplified 100-dot visual: most human DNA is shared, while a much smaller slice contributes to visible variation. It is illustrative, not to scale, and is here to keep the big picture easy to feel at a glance.
Sources: NHGRI · Human Genome Project · AAA Statement on Race. Visual is conceptual, while the cards below carry the factual detail.
It is often said that any two humans are about 99.9% genetically identical. NHGRI notes that a fuller accounting of genomic variation places the average closer to about 99.6% identical. Either way, the point is the same: human beings are overwhelmingly alike.
NHGRI · Human Genomic VariationSkin pigmentation tracks long-term exposure to ultraviolet radiation. Darker skin is adaptive in high-UV regions; lighter skin can be adaptive in lower-UV regions where vitamin D synthesis is harder. This is biology responding to place, not evidence of hierarchy.
Nina Jablonski · PLOS GeneticsAnthropology and genetics agree that human variation does not sort cleanly into the racial categories many societies use. Those labels have social force and historical consequences, but they are not precise biological divisions.
American Anthropological Association · NHGRIHuman skin color correlates almost perfectly with UV radiation levels at different latitudes. Darker skin evolved near the equator to protect against UV damage. Lighter skin evolved at higher latitudes to allow vitamin D synthesis in low-sunlight environments. It is a geographic adaptation — identical to how birds develop different plumage in different climates. It says nothing about intelligence, character, or capability.
Source: Penn et al., 2007 · PLOS Genetics · Nina Jablonski, The Natural History of Skin Color
Human variety is real. Human hierarchy is invented. The more accurately we understand both, the harder it becomes to mistake difference for destiny.
— Truestory · LoveILoveAllThe world's major religions — Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and others — have been used for centuries to divide humanity. But at their philosophical and spiritual core, they teach the same fundamental truths: love your neighbor, treat others as you wish to be treated, seek wisdom, live with integrity, and recognize the sacred nature of all life. The differences are largely cultural clothing. The soul is the same.
This single principle — treat others as you wish to be treated — appears in virtually every spiritual and philosophical tradition in human history. This is not coincidence. This is humanity arriving at the same truth through different paths.
The Gospel of Matthew 7:12 and Luke 6:31. Christianity at its core is a teaching about radical love, forgiveness, and the inherent worth of every human being — including and especially those the world rejects.
New Testament · BibleHadith of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), Sahih al-Bukhari. Islam's core teaching of Ummah — universal community — extends the concept of brotherhood to all of humanity, regardless of origin.
Hadith · Sahih al-BukhariRabbi Hillel, when asked to summarize the entire Torah while standing on one foot — this was his answer. The rest, he said, is commentary. Everything else is an elaboration of this single principle.
Babylonian Talmud · Shabbat 31aThe Mahabharata, one of the oldest texts in human history, states this as the summation of right action. Hinduism also teaches Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — the world is one family — a concept that predates modern globalism by thousands of years.
Mahabharata · Anusasana Parva 113.8The Udanavarga 5.18. The Buddha's teaching of Karuna — compassion for all sentient beings — extends the Golden Rule beyond humans to encompass all life. Buddhism is perhaps the most explicitly non-judgmental of all world religions.
Udanavarga · Buddhist ScripturesUbuntu — the Southern African philosophical concept — holds that a person becomes a person through other people. Your humanity is tied to the humanity of everyone around you. This is not just a spiritual teaching — it is a social and governance philosophy that predates modern democracy.
Southern African Philosophy · Archbishop Desmond TutuWhen colonizers arrived, they did not find primitive people. They found sophisticated civilizations with thousands of years of accumulated knowledge about ecology, medicine, agriculture, astronomy, governance, and sustainable living. Much of this was deliberately destroyed. The knowledge systems that survived — often underground, in oral tradition, in ceremony — contain solutions to the most urgent problems facing the planet today.
Indigenous peoples manage or have tenure over territories that contain 80% of the world's remaining biodiversity — despite representing only 5% of the global population. Their land management practices — controlled burning, seasonal harvesting, rotational grazing, polyculture agriculture — are now being studied and adopted by ecologists and climate scientists as solutions to biodiversity loss and land degradation. The knowledge existed. It was called primitive. It is now called urgently necessary.
IPBES Global Assessment · World Resources Institute · IPCC Report 2022Aspirin came from willow bark — used by Indigenous peoples globally for centuries. Quinine (malaria treatment) from Peruvian cinchona bark. Morphine from the opium poppy. Metformin (diabetes drug) from the French lilac plant used in European folk medicine. Taxol (cancer treatment) from the Pacific yew tree, identified by Indigenous plant knowledge. The pharmaceutical industry owes an enormous and largely unacknowledged debt to Indigenous botanical knowledge — much of which was obtained without consent or compensation.
WHO Traditional Medicine Report · National Cancer InstituteMany breakthroughs associated with one nation, one institution, or one celebrated figure were actually the result of wider collaboration, overlooked labor, inherited knowledge, and forgotten contributors. A fuller account gives us a more honest picture of how human progress really works.
Black women mathematicians at NASA performed mission-critical calculations for the early U.S. space program. Katherine Johnson verified orbital calculations for John Glenn's flight, and Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson helped build the mathematical and engineering backbone of the era. Their work was done inside segregated systems, and public recognition arrived much later than the contribution itself.
The double-helix model of DNA drew heavily on Rosalind Franklin's X-ray crystallography, including the now-famous Photo 51. Watson, Crick, and Wilkins later received the 1962 Nobel Prize. Franklin had died in 1958 and Nobel Prizes are not awarded posthumously, but her role is now widely recognized as foundational to the discovery.
Polynesian navigators crossed and settled vast stretches of the Pacific using stars, swells, birds, and oral navigation systems. Long before European arrival, they had already built one of the most impressive seafaring traditions in human history, connecting islands across enormous distances with remarkable precision.
Charles Drew advanced blood plasma preservation and large-scale blood banking, helping transform wartime medicine. Daniel Hale Williams is remembered as a heart-surgery pioneer for his 1893 operation at Provident Hospital. Lewis Latimer improved carbon filaments and electric-light manufacturing, helping make electric lighting practical at scale. Onesimus, an enslaved African man in Boston, shared inoculation knowledge that helped shape early smallpox prevention in colonial America.
No single people built the modern world. The life we live today rests on ideas, tools, and acts of care carried forward by many civilizations, many languages, and many hands.
Writing systems allowed agreements, histories, administration, astronomy, and law to persist beyond a single lifetime. This was one of humanity's great accelerations.
Settlements such as Mohenjo-daro and Harappa used planned streets, drainage systems, and standardized weights, showing that public infrastructure has deep and global roots.
Ancient American knowledge systems produced advanced calendars, astronomical observation, and a concept of zero that emerged independently from the Old World.
Paper changed administration, education, religion, literature, and science. Once it traveled across regions, it helped reshape the intellectual life of the world.
Work associated with Brahmagupta helped clarify how zero behaves inside calculation, strengthening the numerical framework that later enabled algebra, engineering, and computing.
From algebra and optics to medicine and astronomy, scholars working in Arabic connected Greek, Persian, Indian, and other traditions, then passed that learning onward into Africa, Asia, and Europe.
Reading stars, waves, cloud formations, and birds, navigators crossed immense distances and built connected ocean worlds without modern tools.
The conveniences of modern life came from layered human effort across centuries. To live now, with so much accumulated knowledge within reach, is a rare kind of fortune.
Selected references: Smithsonian · UNESCO · British Museum · NASA · NHGRI · American Heart Association · USPTO. This timeline is intentionally representative rather than exhaustive.
The global wealth gap did not emerge from talent alone. It reflects geography, inheritance, policy, law, extraction, conflict, access to capital, and the long afterlife of colonialism and exclusion. Human potential is widespread. Opportunity has never been evenly distributed.
These are not natural outcomes. They are the measurable result of specific historical policies.
Sources: Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances (2022) · Oxfam (2024) · World Bank
"Wealth is not created in a vacuum. It is accumulated. And what was accumulated by some was, in many cases, extracted from others. Understanding this is about accuracy. You cannot fix what you refuse to accurately diagnose."
— Ru · LoveILoveAll · TruestoryGreenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma — known as "Black Wall Street" — was one of the most prosperous Black communities in American history. In 1921, a white mob, supported by the local government and National Guard, burned it to the ground. 35 blocks destroyed. 10,000 Black residents left homeless. 300 people killed. The event was covered up in official records for decades and not taught in Oklahoma schools until 2020. The perpetrators faced no legal consequences. No reparations were paid.
Tulsa Race Massacre Commission Report · Oklahoma Historical Society · New York TimesFrom the 1930s through the 1960s, the US federal government drew red lines around Black neighborhoods on maps — designating them as too risky for mortgage lending. This practice, known as redlining, systematically denied Black families access to homeownership — the primary mechanism of middle-class wealth accumulation in America. The neighborhoods redlined in 1940 are still, in most cities, the poorest neighborhoods today. The current racial wealth gap in the US is a direct, measurable consequence of this explicit policy.
National Community Reinvestment Coalition · Richard Rothstein, The Color of Law · Federal Reserve ResearchThis page is evidence-led and disciplined. It draws from scientific institutions, museums, scholars, archives, and public historical records. It is also a living record: as stronger evidence emerges, dates shift, or scholarship becomes more precise, this page will refine accordingly. Truth deserves humility as much as conviction.
Everyone belongs here. Everyone is welcome here. The only requirement is the Golden Rule: treat others as you wish to be treated. Human history has carried slavery, violence, tragedy, and cruelty, but that is not the consciousness we are here to preserve. No more separation. It is time to unite.
— LoveILoveAllSmithsonian Human Origins Program, Nature on Jebel Irhoud, and genomics references from NHGRI inform the opening chapter and the migration framing.
UNESCO, the British Museum, Smithsonian materials, and the MacTutor Archive inform the civilizations, mathematics, and manuscript references.
Britannica, historical atlases, Oxford histories of empire, and the Slave Voyages Database support the territorial and forced-migration claims.
The American Anthropological Association, NHGRI, and work by Nina Jablonski and related scholars inform the genetics and skin-color sections.
NASA, the National Library of Medicine, the American Heart Association, UNESCO, and broad historical references support the innovation timeline and recognition corrections.
Federal Reserve survey data, Oxfam analyses, World Bank materials, and U.S. historical reporting inform the wealth and policy chapters.
Disclaimer: this archive aims to stay faithful to the best public evidence available at the time of publication. As new research emerges and stronger scholarship is published, LoveILoveAll welcomes revision, correction, and refinement in service of a more complete human story.
Everything on this page points back toward scholarship, archives, museums, and scientific institutions. Its purpose is to widen the frame until the human story feels honest again.
Truestory makes us more accurate, more humble, and more grateful. We inherited medicine, mathematics, navigation, agriculture, language, tools, and wisdom from countless human beings we will never meet. To be alive now, with so much of that inheritance accessible, is extraordinary.
As scholarship grows, this record should grow with it. New discoveries do not weaken the mission. They deepen it.
"Not History. Not Herstory.
Truestory."
— Ru · LoveILoveAll · 2026
Truestory leaves you more awake. When the human story becomes fuller, the self becomes fuller too. Remembrance is historical and personal at once.
To know yourself honestly, you must be willing to know the larger story honestly too. Self-worth weakens when truth is hidden. It strengthens when history becomes whole enough to stand on.
The fuller record widens respect. It shows how many peoples shaped the world, how much was shared, and how small the ego becomes when the human story is finally allowed to breathe.
Every empire, migration, tradition, and civilization unfolded on land, water, soil, and sky. A truthful human story eventually returns us to the Earth that carried it all.
That is the LILA bridge: truth that restores dignity, remembrance that widens compassion, and understanding that changes how a person lives.