Lincoln and Emancipation - Howard Zinn

Historian Howard Zinn on Abraham Lincoln and the eventual abolition of slavery in the US. Which shows that Spielberg's new film, Lincoln, is far from historically accurate.

Submitted by Steven. on January 30, 2013

John Brown1 was executed by the state of Virginia with the approval of the
national government. It was the national government which, while weakly
enforcing the law ending the slave trade, sternly enforced the laws providing
for the return of fugitives to slavery. It was the national government that, in
Andrew Jackson's administration, collaborated with the South to keep
abolitionist literature out of the mails in the southern states. It was the
Supreme Court of the United States that declared in 1857 that the slave Dred
Scott could not sue for his freedom because he was not a person, but property.

Such a national government would never accept an end to slavery by rebellion.
It would end slavery only under conditions controlled by whites, and only when
required by the political and economic needs of the business elite of the North.
It was Abraham Lincoln who combined perfectly the needs of business, the
political ambition of the new Republican party, and the rhetoric of
humanitarianism. He would keep the abolition of slavery not at the top of his
list of priorities, but close enough to the top so it could be pushed there
temporarily by abolitionist pressures and by practical political advantage.

Lincoln could skillfully blend the interests of the very rich and the
interests of the black at a moment in history when these interests met. And he
could link these two with a growing section of Americans, the white,
up-and-coming, economically ambitious, politically active middle class. As
Richard Hofstadter puts it:

Thoroughly middle class in his ideas, he spoke for those millions of
Americans who had begun their lives as hired workers-as farm hands, clerks,
teachers, mechanics, flatboat men, and rail- splitters-and had passed into
the ranks of landed farmers, prosperous grocers, lawyers, merchants,
physicians and politicians.

Lincoln could argue with lucidity and passion
against slavery on moral grounds, while acting cautiously in practical politics.
He believed "that the institution of slavery is founded on injustice and bad
policy, but that the promulgation of abolition doctrines tends to increase
rather than abate its evils." (Put against this Frederick Douglass's statement
on struggle, or Garrison's "Sir, slavery will not be overthrown without
excitement, a most tremendous excitement") Lincoln read the Constitution
strictly, to mean that Congress, because of the Tenth Amendment (reserving to
the states powers not specifically given to the national government), could not
constitutionally bar slavery in the states.

When it was proposed to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, which
did not have the rights of a state that was directly under the jurisdiction of
Congress, Lincoln said this would be Constitutional, but it should not be done
unless the people in the District wanted it. Since most there were white, this
killed the idea. As Hofstadter said of Lincoln's statement, it "breathes the
fire of an uncompromising insistence on moderation."

Lincoln refused to denounce the Fugitive Slave Law publicly. He wrote to a
friend: "I confess I hate to see the poor creatures hunted down . .. but I bite
my lips and keep quiet." And when he did propose, in 1849, as a Congressman, a
resolution to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, he accompanied this
with a section requiring local authorities to arrest and return fugitive slaves
coming into Washington. (This led Wendell Phillips, the Boston abolitionist, to
refer to him years later as "that slavehound from Illinois.") He opposed
slavery, but could not see blacks as equals, so a constant theme in his approach
was to free the slaves and to send them back to Africa.

In his 1858 campaign in Illinois for the Senate against Stephen Douglas,
Lincoln spoke differently depending on the views of his listeners (and also
perhaps depending on how close it was to the election). Speaking in northern
Illinois in July (in Chicago), he said:

Let us discard all this quibbling about this man and the other man, this
race and that race and the other race being inferior, and therefore they
must be placed in an inferior position. Let us discard all these things, and
unite as one people throughout this land, until we shall once more stand up
declaring that all men are created equal.

Two months later in Charleston, in southern
Illinois, Lincoln told his audience:

I will say, then, that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing
about in any way the social and political equality of the white and black
races (applause); that I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of making
voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to
intermarry with white people.. . .

 

And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there
must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any other
man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race.

Behind the secession of the South from the Union, after Lincoln was elected
President in the fall of 1860 as candidate of the new Republican party, was a
long series of policy clashes between South and North. The clash was not over
slavery as a moral institution-most northerners did not care enough about
slavery to make sacrifices for it, certainly not the sacrifice of war. It was
not a clash of peoples (most northern whites were not economically favored, not
politically powerful; most southern whites were poor farmers, not
decisionmakers) but of elites. The northern elite wanted economic expansion-free
land, free labor, a free market, a high protective tariff for manufacturers, a
bank of the United States. The slave interests opposed all that; they saw
Lincoln and the Republicans as making continuation of their pleasant and
prosperous way of life impossible in the future.

So, when Lincoln was elected, seven southern states seceded from the Union.
Lincoln initiated hostilities by trying to repossess the federal base at Fort
Sumter, South Carolina, and four more states seceded. The Confederacy was
formed; the Civil War was on.

Lincoln's first Inaugural Address, in March 1861, was conciliatory toward the
South and the seceded states: "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to
interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I
believe I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no inclination to do so."
And with the war four months on, when General John C. Fremont in Missouri
declared martial law and said slaves of owners resisting the United States were
to be free, Lincoln countermanded this order. He was anxious to hold in the
Union the slave states of Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, and Delaware.

It was only as the war grew more bitter, the casualties mounted, desperation
to win heightened, and the criticism of the abolitionists threatened to unravel
the tattered coalition behind Lincoln that he began to act against slavery.
Hofstadter puts it this way: "Like a delicate barometer, he recorded the trend
of pressures, and as the Radical pressure increased he moved toward the left."
Wendell Phillips said that if Lincoln was able to grow "it is because we have
watered him."

Racism in the North was as entrenched as slavery in the South, and it would
take the war to shake both. New York blacks could not vote unless they owned
$250 in property (a qualification not applied to whites). A proposal to abolish
this, put on the ballot in 1860, was defeated two to one (although Lincoln
carried New York by 50,000 votes). Frederick Douglass commented: "The black baby
of Negro suffrage was thought too ugly to exhibit on so grand an occasion. The
Negro was stowed away like some people put out of sight their deformed children
when company comes."

Wendell Phillips, with all his criticism of Lincoln, recognized the
possibilities in his election. Speaking at the Tremont Temple in Boston the day
after the election, Phillips said:

If the telegraph speaks truth, for the first time in our history the slave
has chosen a President of the United States. . . . Not an Abolitionist,
hardly an antislavery man, Mr. Lincoln consents to represent an antislavery
idea. A pawn on the political chessboard, his value is in his position; with
fair effort, we may soon change him for knight, bishop or queen, and sweep
the board. (Applause)

Conservatives in the Boston upper classes wanted reconciliation with the
South. At one point they stormed an abolitionist meeting at that same Tremont
Temple, shortly after Lincoln's election, and asked that concessions be made to
the South "in the interests of commerce, manufactures, agriculture."

The spirit of Congress, even after the war began, was shown in a resolution
it passed in the summer of 1861, with only a few dissenting votes: "... this war
is not waged . . . for any purpose of... overthrowing or interfering with the
rights of established institutions of those states, but... to preserve the
Union."

The abolitionists stepped up their campaign. Emancipation petitions poured
into Congress in 1861 and 1862. In May of that year, Wendell Phillips said:
"Abraham Lincoln may not wish it; he cannot prevent it; the nation may not will
it, but the nation cannot prevent it. I do not care what men want or wish; the
negro is the pebble in the cog-wheel, and the machine cannot go on until you get
him out."

In July Congress passed a Confiscation Act, which enabled the freeing of
slaves of those fighting the Union. But this was not enforced by the Union
generals, and Lincoln ignored the nonenforcement. Garrison called Lincoln's
policy "stumbling, halting, prevaricating, irresolute, weak, besotted," and
Phillips said Lincoln was "a first-rate second-rate man."

An exchange of letters between Lincoln and Horace Greeley, editor of the New
York Tribune, in August of 1862, gave Lincoln a chance to express his
views. Greeley wrote:

Dear Sir. I do not intrude to tell you-for you must know already-that a
great proportion of those who triumphed in your election ... are sorely
disappointed and deeply pained by the policy you seem to be pursuing with
regard to the slaves of rebels,... We require of you, as the first servant
of the Republic, charged especially and preeminently with this duty, that
you EXECUTE THE LAWS. ... We think you are strangely and disastrously remiss
. .. with regard to the emancipating provisions of the new Confiscation
Act....

 

We think you are unduly influenced by the councils ... of certain
politicians hailing from the Border Slave States.

Greeley appealed to the practical need of winning
the war. "We must have scouts, guides, spies, cooks, teamsters, diggers and
choppers from the blacks of the South, whether we allow them to fight for us or
not.... I entreat you to render a hearty and unequivocal obedience to the law of
the land."

Lincoln had already shown his attitude by his failure to countermand an order
of one of his commanders, General Henry Halleck, who forbade fugitive Negroes to
enter his army's lines. Now he replied to Greeley:

Dear Sir: ... I have not meant to leave any one in doubt. .. . My paramount
object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or
destroy Slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I
would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do
it; and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would
also do that. What I do about Slavery and the colored race, I do because it
helps to save this Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not
believe it would help to save the Union. . .. I have here stated my purpose
according to my view of official duty, and I intend no modification of my
oft-expressed personal wish that all men, everywhere, could be free. Yours.
A. Lincoln.

So Lincoln distinguished between his "personal wish"
and his "official duty."

When in September 1862, Lincoln issued his preliminary Emancipation
Proclamation, it was a military move, giving the South four months to stop
rebelling, threatening to emancipate their slaves if they continued to fight,
promising to leave slavery untouched in states that came over to the North:

That on the 1st day of January, AD 1863, all persons held as slaves within
any State or designated part of a State the people whereof shall then be in
rebellion against the United States shall be then, thenceforward and forever
free. . . .

Thus, when the Emancipation Proclamation was issued
January 1, 1863, it declared slaves free in those areas still fighting against
the Union (which it listed very carefully), and said nothing about slaves behind
Union lines. As Hofstadter put it, the Emancipation Proclamation "had all the
moral grandeur of a bill of lading." The London Spectator wrote
concisely: "The principle is not that a human being cannot justly own another,
but that he cannot own him unless he is loyal to the United States."

Limited as it was, the Emancipation Proclamation spurred antislavery forces.
By the summer of 1864, 400,000 signatures asking legislation to end slavery had
been gathered and sent to Congress, something unprecedented in the history of
the country. That April, the Senate had adopted the Thirteenth Amendment,
declaring an end to slavery, and in January 1865, the House of Representatives
followed.

With the Proclamation, the Union army was open to blacks. And the more blacks
entered the war, the more it appeared a war for their liberation. The more
whites had to sacrifice, the more resentment there was, particularly among poor
whites in the North, who were drafted by a law that allowed the rich to buy
their way out of the draft for $300. And so the draft riots of 1863 took place,
uprisings of angry whites in northern cities, their targets not the rich, far
away, but the blacks, near at hand. It was an orgy of death and violence. A
black man in Detroit described what he saw: a mob, with kegs of beer on wagons,
armed with clubs and bricks, marching through the city, attacking black men,
women, children. He heard one man say: "If we are got to be killed up for
Negroes then we will kill every one in this town."

The Civil War was one of the bloodiest in human history up to that time:
600,000 dead on both sides, in a population of 30 million-the equivalent, in the
United States of 1978, with a population of 250 million, of 5 million dead. As
the battles became more intense, as the bodies piled up, as war fatigue grew,
the existence of blacks in the South, 4 million of them, became more and more a
hindrance to the South, and more and more an opportunity for the North. Du Bois,
in Black Reconstruction, pointed this out:

.. . these slaves had enormous power in their hands. Simply by stopping
work, they could threaten the Confederacy with starvation. By walking into
the Federal camps, they showed to doubting Northerners the easy possibility
of using them thus, but by the same gesture, depriving their enemies of
their use in just these fields....

 

It was this plain alternative that brought Lee's sudden surrender. Either
the South must make terms with its slaves, free them, use them to fight the
North, and thereafter no longer treat them as bondsmen; or they could
surrender to the North with the assumption that the North after the war must
help them to defend slavery, as it had before.

George Rawick, a sociologist and anthropologist, describes the development of
blacks up to and into the Civil War:

The slaves went from being frightened human beings, thrown among strange
men, including fellow slaves who were not their kinsmen and who did not
speak their language or understand their customs and habits, to what W. E.
B. DuBois once described as the general strike whereby hundreds of thousands
of slaves deserted the plantations, destroying the Smith's ability to supply
its army.

Black women played an important part in the war,
especially toward the end. Sojourner Truth, the legendary ex-slave who had been
active in the women's rights movement, became recruiter of black troops for the
Union army, as did Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin of Boston. Harriet Tubman raided
plantations, leading black and white troops, and in one expedition freed 750
slaves. Women moved with the colored regiments that grew as the Union army
marched through the South, helping their husbands, enduring terrible hardships
on the long military treks, in which many children died. They suffered the fate
of soldiers, as in April 1864, when Confederate troops at Fort Pillow, Kentucky,
massacred Union soldiers who had surrendered-black and white, along with women
and children in an adjoining camp.

It has been said that black acceptance of slavery is proved by the fact that
during the Civil War, when there were opportunities for escape, most slaves
stayed on the plantation. In fact, half a million ran away- about one in five, a
high proportion when one considers that there was great difficulty in knowing
where to go and how to live.

The owner of a large plantation in South Carolina and Georgia wrote in 1862:
"This war has taught us the perfect impossibility of placing the least
confidence in the negro. In too numerous instances those we esteemed the most
have been the first to desert us." That same year, a lieutenant in the
Confederate army and once mayor of Savannah, Georgia, wrote: "I deeply regret to
learn that the Negroes still continue to desert to the enemy."

A minister in Mississippi wrote in the fall of 1862: "On my arrival was
surprised to hear that our negroes stampeded to the Yankees last night or rather
a portion of them.... I think every one, but with one or two exceptions will go
to the Yankees. Eliza and her family are certain to go. She does not conceal her
thoughts but plainly manifests her opinions by her conduct-insolent and
insulting." And a woman's plantation journal of January 1865:

The people are all idle on the plantations, most of them seeking their own
pleasure. Many servants have proven faithful, others false and rebellious
against all authority and restraint. .. . Their condition is one of perfect
anarchy and rebellion. They have placed themselves in perfect antagonism to
their owners and to all government and control.. . . Nearly all the house
servants have left their homes; and from most of the plantations they have
gone in a body.

Also in 1865, a South Carolina planter wrote to the New York Tribune
that

the conduct of the Negro in the late crisis of our affairs has convinced me
that we were all laboring under a delusion.... I believed that these people
were content, happy, and attached to their masters. But events and
reflection have caused me to change these positions.. .. If they were
content, happy and attached to their masters, why did they desert him in the
moment of his need and flock to an enemy, whom they did not know; and thus
left their perhaps really good masters whom they did know from infancy?

Genovese notes that the war produced no general rising of slaves, but: "In
Lafayette County, Mississippi, slaves responded to the Emancipation Proclamation
by driving off their overseers and dividing the land and implements among
themselves." Aptheker reports a conspiracy of Negroes in Arkansas in 1861 to
kill their enslavers. In Kentucky that year, houses and barns were burned by
Negroes, and in the city of New Castle slaves paraded through the city "singing
political songs, and shouting for Lincoln," according to newspaper accounts.
After the Emancipation Proclamation, a Negro waiter in Richmond, Virginia, was
arrested for leading "a servile plot," while in Yazoo City, Mississippi, slaves
burned the courthouse and fourteen homes.

There were special moments: Robert Smalls (later a South Carolina
Congressman) and other blacks took over a steamship, The Planter, and
sailed it past the Confederate guns to deliver it to the Union navy.

Most slaves neither submitted nor rebelled. They continued to work, waiting
to see what happened. When opportunity came, they left, often joining the Union
army. Two hundred thousand blacks were in the army and navy, and 38,000 were
killed. Historian James McPherson says: "Without their help, the North could not
have won the war as soon as it did, and perhaps it could not have won at all."

What happened to blacks in the Union army and in the northern cities during
the war gave some hint of how limited the emancipation would be, even with full
victory over the Confederacy. Off- duty black soldiers were attacked in northern
cities, as in Zanesville, Ohio, in February 1864, where cries were heard to
"kill the nigger." Black soldiers were used for the heaviest and dirtiest work,
digging trenches, hauling logs and camion, loading ammunition, digging wells for
white regiments. White privates received $13 a month; Negro privates received
$10 a month.

Late in the war, a black sergeant of the Third South Carolina Volunteers,
William Walker, marched his company to his captain's tent and ordered them to
stack arms and resign from the army as a protest against what he considered a
breach of contract, because of unequal pay. He was court-martialed and shot for
mutiny. Finally, in June 1864, Congress passed a law granting equal pay to Negro
soldiers.

The Confederacy was desperate in the latter part of the war, and some of its
leaders suggested the slaves, more and more an obstacle to their cause, be
enlisted, used, and freed. After a number of military defeats, the Confederate
secretary of war, Judah Benjamin, wrote in late 1864 to a newspaper editor in
Charleston: ". . . It is well known that General Lee, who commands so largely
the confidence of the people, is strongly in favor of our using the negroes for
defense, and emancipating them, if necessary, for that purpose. . . ." One
general, indignant, wrote: "If slaves will make good soldiers, our whole theory
of slavery is wrong."

By early 1865, the pressure had mounted, and in March President Davis of the
Confederacy signed a "Negro Soldier Law" authorizing the enlistment of slaves as
soldiers, to be freed by consent of their owners and their state governments.
But before it had any significant effect, the war was over.

Former slaves, interviewed by the Federal Writers' Project in the thirties,
recalled the war's end. Susie Melton:

I was a young gal, about ten years old, and we done heard that Lincoln gonna
turn the niggers free. Ol' missus say there wasn't nothin' to it. Then a
Yankee soldier told someone in Williamsburg that Lincoln done signed the
'mancipation. Was wintertime and mighty cold that night, but everybody
commenced getting ready to leave. Didn't care nothin' about missus - was
going to the Union lines. And all that night the niggers danced and sang
right out in the cold. Next morning at day break we all started out with
blankets and clothes and pots and pans and chickens piled on our backs,
'cause missus said we couldn't take no horses or carts. And as the sun come
up over the trees, the niggers started to singing: Sun, you be here and
I'll be gone

Sun, you be here and I'll be gone

Sun, you be here and I'll be gone

Bye, bye, don't grieve after me

Won't give you my place, not for yours

Bye, bye, don't grieve after me

Cause you be here and I'll be gone.

 

Anna Woods:

We wasn't there in Texas long when the soldiers marched in to tell us that
we were free. ... I remembers one woman. She jumped on a barrel and she
shouted. She jumped off and she shouted. She jumped hack on again and
shouted some more. She kept that up for a long time, just jumping on a
barrel and back off again.

Annie Mae Weathers said:

I remember hearing my pa say that when somebody came and hollered, "You
niggers is free at last," say he just dropped his hoc and said in a queer
voice, "Thank God for that."

The Federal Writers' Project recorded an ex-slave
named Fannie Berry:

Niggers shoutin' and clappin' hands and singin'! Chillun runnin' all over
the place beatin' time and yellin'! Everybody happy. Sho' did some
celebratin'. Run to the kitchen and shout in the window:

 

"Mammy, don't you cook no more.

You's free! You's free!"

Many Negroes understood that their status after the war, whatever their
situation legally, would depend on whether they owned the land they worked on or
would be forced to be semislaves for others. In 1863, a North Carolina Negro
wrote that "if the strict law of right and justice is to be observed, the
country around me is the entailed inheritance of the Americans of African
descent, purchased by the invaluable labor of our ancestors, through a life of
tears and groans, under the lash and yoke of tyranny."

Abandoned plantations, however, were leased to former planters, and to white
men of the North. As one colored newspaper said: "The slaves were made serfs and
chained to the soil. . . . Such was the boasted freedom acquired by the colored
man at the hands of the Yankee."

Under congressional policy approved by Lincoln, the property confiscated
during the war under the Confiscation Act of July 1862 would revert to the heirs
of the Confederate owners. Dr. John Rock, a black physician in Boston, spoke at
a meeting: "Why talk about compensating masters? Compensate them for what? What
do you owe them? What does the slave owe them? What does society owe them?
Compensate the master? . . . It is the slave who ought to be compensated. The
property of the South is by right the property of the slave. . . ."

Some land was expropriated on grounds the taxes were delinquent, and sold at
auction. But only a few blacks could afford to buy this. In the South Carolina
Sea Islands, out of 16,000 acres up for sale in March of 1863, freedmen who
pooled their money were able to buy 2,000 acres, the rest being bought by
northern investors and speculators. A freedman on the Islands dictated a letter
to a former teacher now in Philadelphia:

My Dear Young Missus: Do, my missus, tell Linkum dat we wants land - dis
bery land dat is rich wid de sweat ob de face and de blood ob we back. . . .
We could a bin buy all we want, but dey make de lots too big, and cut we
out.

 

De word cum from Mass Linkum's self, dat we take out claims and hold on
ter um, an' plant um, and he will see dat we get um, every man ten or twenty
acre. We too glad. We stake out an' list, but fore de time for plant, dese
commissionaries sells to white folks all de best land. Where Linkum?

In early 1865, General William T. Sherman held a conference in Savannah,
Georgia, with twenty Negro ministers and church officials, mostly former slaves,
at which one of them expressed their need: "The way we can best take care of
ourselves is to have land, and till it by our labor. . . ." Four days later
Sherman issued "Special Field Order No. 15," designating the entire southern
coastline 30 miles inland for exclusive Negro settlement. Freedmen could settle
there, taking no more than 40 acres per family. By June 1865, forty thousand
freedmen had moved onto new farms in this area. But President Andrew Johnson, in
August of 1865, restored this land to the Confederate owners, and the freedmen
were forced off, some at bayonet point.

Ex-slave Thomas Hall told the Federal Writers' Project:

Lincoln got the praise for freeing us, but did he do it? He gave us freedom
without giving us any chance to live to ourselves and we still had to depend
on the southern white man for work, food, and clothing, and he held us out
of necessity and want in a state of servitude but little better than
slavery.

The American government had set out to fight the slave states in 1861, not to
end slavery, but to retain the enormous national territory and market and
resources. Yet, victory required a crusade, and the momentum of that crusade
brought new forces into national politics: more blacks determined to make their
freedom mean something; more whites-whether Freedman's Bureau officials, or
teachers in the Sea Islands, or "carpetbaggers" with various mixtures of
humanitarianism and personal ambition-concerned with racial equality. There was
also the powerful interest of the Republican party in maintaining control over
the national government, with the prospect of southern black votes to accomplish
this. Northern businessmen, seeing Republican policies as beneficial to them,
went along for a while.

The result was that brief period after the Civil War in which southern
Negroes voted, elected blacks to state legislatures and to Congress, introduced
free and racially mixed public education to the South. A legal framework was
constructed. The Thirteenth Amendment outlawed slavery: "Neither slavery nor
involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall
have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place
subject to their jurisdiction." The Fourteenth Amendment repudiated the prewar
Dred Scott decision by declaring that "all persons born or naturalized in the
United States" were citizens. It also seemed to make a powerful statement for
racial equality, severely limiting "states' rights":

Excerpted from A People's history of the United States

  • 1 Libcom note: John Brown was an American abolitionist who attempted to lead a violent uprising against slavery.

Comments

Tian

11 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Tian on January 30, 2013

That picture...

Too much internet for me, perhaps?

TheJurysOut

11 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by TheJurysOut on February 1, 2013

This extract, from Derrick Jensen's book Endgame, is very relevant to the above text:

"Those in charge have always understood - and have often been explicit
about it - that it's difficult to control people who have access to land.
Depriving them of this access puts them at your mercy. Without access to
land there can be no self-sufficiency: land provides food, shelter,
clothing. Without access to land people obviously have no place to stay. If
you can force people to pay just so they can be alive on the earth -
nowadays these payments are usually called rent or mortgages - you've
forced them into the wage economy. The same holds true for forcing them to
pay for materials the earth gives freely: the salmon, bison, buckleberries,
willows, and so on that are central to the lives, cultures, and communities
not only of indigenous peoples but to all of us, even if we make believe
this isn't the case. To force people to pay for things they need to survive
is an atrocity: a community - and nature - destroying atrocity. To convince
us to pay willingly is a scam. It also, as we see around us - or would see
had we not been so thoroughly convinced - causes us to forget that
communities are even possible.

"Those in power have rarely hidden their intentions. Indeed, as I've
written elsewhere, the need to separate the majority of people from their
food supplies - thus separating them also from their freedom - was central
to the design of civilization's early cities. I've written, too, how slave
owners described the landownership conditions under which chattel slavery
was the optimal means to control a workforce, and described also the
conditions under which not chattel but wage slavery was the
owners'/capitalists best option. If there's a lot of land and not many
people, you'll need to use force in order to convert free human beings into
laborers. If, on the other hand, there's a lot of people and not much land,
or if those in power otherwise control access to land, those who do not own
the land have no choice but to work for those in power. Under these
conditions there's no reason for owners to go to the expense of buying or
enslaving people, then paying for their slaves' food, clothing, and
shelter: it's much cheaper to simply hire them. As one pro-slavery
philosopher put it: 'In all countries where the denseness of the population
has reduced it to a matter of perfect certainty, that labor can be
obtained, whenever wanted, and that the laborer can be forced, by sheer
necessity, to hire for the smallest pittance that will keep soul and body
together, and rags upon his back while in actual employment - dependent at
all other times on alms or poor rates - in all such countries it is found
cheaper to pay this pittance, than to clothe, feed, nurse, support through
childhood, and pension in old age, a race of slaves'"

"Today, of course, we have so internalized the ideology of centralized
control, of civilization, that most of us do not consider it absurd that
people have to pay someone simply so they may exist on the planet, except
perhaps to grumble that without rent or mortgage (or second mortgage)
payments we wouldn't have to work so hard at jobs we don't like, and could
spend more time with people we love, doing things we enjoy." (p.133-134 -
Endgame vol 1: the problem of civilization - Derrick Jensen)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endgame_%28Derrick_Jensen_books%29

Spikymike

11 years ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Spikymike on March 18, 2013

Frederick Douglass gets a decent mention in this useful article in the latest edition of the 'Socialist Standard' along with a couple of other related articles worth a read:

http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/