But it’s based on actual events, and stuff they did to serviceman and public
Tuskegee Syphilis Study - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
The comics even touched on said issues.
Isaiah Bradley - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
If the viewer can’t distinguish fact from history then their was some failure somewhere.... if they find sakovia on the globe or red skull’s family line then we’re part of the MCU, just what flat earth universe are we in.
But seriously, watch this for a more in depth and detailed info on what and why they touched on said subjects
Where did I say the Tuskegee Syphilis Study never happened historically?
Isaiah Bradley is a comic book character. There's no such thing as a "super soldier," yet the writing suggests what happened to Bradley is worse than what historically occurred, thereby trivializing what actually historically occurred. The episode barely makes a mention of the historical injustices and instead focuses on Bradley's treatment.
Suggesting that simply because the comic book did the same thing does not somehow make it non-trivializing.
And yes, there are defects in education, where students are not taught about the injustices that many people faced. These defects are widely known, which makes this conflating of history and fiction even worse. What Marvel should have done was to include a disclaimer or a PSA at the beginning and end of the episode, educating viewers on history, but that still wouldn't make it non-trivializing.