I won't commit to the belief that the privileged are incapable of knowing what is fair or not due to their fear of losing their privilege, which means I must accept their complaints of oppression as I would any other. To ignore those complaints would assume the privileged are intellectually or morally inferior and that they cannot judge actual oppression versus true equality. — Hanover
Prior to the 1890s, southern blacks were accumulating wealth and learning how to navigate the political system. — frank
Jim Crow was a violent movement intended to bring that progress to an end and reverse it. — frank
White supremacists believed that the association of whites with black would destroy white culture, so their racism was (is) about what they see as self-preservation. — frank
The southern fascism you refer to only hurt black people. Does that give a hint as to why the rest of the country did not care?
— ZhouBoTong
It's a myth that racism only exists in the southeast. — frank
It seems very safe to stake out the claim that "Prior to the Civil War, most Americans were racist". it's also safe to stake out the claim that Americans were racist after the civil war. — Bitter Crank
The English did not introduce slavery because they were racists. They bought sold, and transported slaves because it was profitable. Slavery is old school -- going back a very long ways. — Bitter Crank
Racism isn't a requirement for developing a slave system. — Bitter Crank
The 3/5 compromise counted the slaves along with whites, just subtracting 40% of their numerical weight. The purpose was to reduce the represented population of the slave-holding states. — Bitter Crank
As to the 3/5s compromise, you need to do some research; — tim wood
Thomas Jefferson, slave owner, probably did not count Sally Hemings as sub-human when he had sex with her. — Bitter Crank
any modern racism, you have to go to some trouble to understand and define the terms. — tim wood
That was exactly my point. No one got up in arms over Jim Crow BECAUSE most of the country was racist anyway. — ZhouBoTong
Maybe because there are other factors. :roll: — frank
Notice I did not dismiss your factors. Just pointed to more significant over-arching factors. I have not been convinced (you haven't really tried to be fair) that slavery and racism were less of a factor in segregation than anything you have mentioned. — ZhouBoTong
Why should we think of racism as the primary problem? — frank
long as everyone admits that racism was a major problem, and that segregation was certainly racist, I don't care what we call primary causes. — ZhouBoTong
Racial slavery fostered racism. Slavery harms the owner as much as the slave (well not really, but certainly morally). — ZhouBoTong
The 3/5 compromise counted the slaves along with whites, just subtracting 40% of their numerical weight. The purpose was to reduce the represented population of the slave-holding states.
— Bitter Crank
As to the 3/5s compromise, you need to do some research;
— tim wood
There seems to be some confusion here. Yes, everything Bitter Crank said was correct. So why is it evidence that most of the country was racist? Because the ANTI-slavery side is the side saying that slaves should not count as a person (the COMPROMISE was to subtract 40%, the north did not want slaves to count at all). Obviously, counting them as a full person would have given more power to slave states, and that is no good. But saying they should not count as a person shows an inherent racism (otherwise they would notice the contradiction). — ZhouBoTong
I think there is much truth in this. But think about it: if it is truly DEFINITIONAL, then it's not really racism, is it. For us it is, to be sure, because we know better. We know that any such definition is wrong in fact. All I can suggest is that the issues of slavery and racism, then, run deeper than simple arguments can reflect, and are consequently an injustice in themselves. Try for a deeper and more nuanced understanding. Not as a defense of either, but towards a greater comprehension of both and their relationship to each other.DEFINITIONAL racism. One race is superior/inferior. — ZhouBoTong
The challenge, as always, is to recognize it, understand how privilege is made manifest, and fight for those who are deprived of it.
— Maw
Ok. I recognize it and realize when failures are the result of bad decisions versus a bad environment. — Hanover
if it is truly DEFINITIONAL, then it's not really racism, is it. — tim wood
Really? The FACT that they made no effort to hide it means we have a LOT of evidence. — ZhouBoTong
Are you comfortable admitting that Jefferson and Washington were racist? — ZhouBoTong
Surely, owning slaves (based on race) counts as evidence of their racism? — ZhouBoTong
Is it really debatable that "prior to the Civil War" at least 51% of Americans were racist? — ZhouBoTong
However, it is fairly (entirely?) consistent through history that the lower classes are more racist (and the racist representatives they voted for represent their racism). — ZhouBoTong
Bad luck anywhere in there? — creativesoul
I was going to say something close to this, but thought I should defend my view for a change. — frank
Do you think this was true in the Roman Empire or for other Mediterranean Basin slave-holding cultures going back 1 or 2 millennia BCE? — Bitter Crank
Was the fatal flaw in Anglo-American slavery that the slaves were pretty much exclusively African? — Bitter Crank
Was the fatal flaw in Anglo-American slavery that the slaves were pretty much exclusively African? — Bitter Crank
Slavery in the Roman empire varied from employment of Greek slaves as tutors for one's children to extremely harsh labor regimes in mining. — Bitter Crank
Anglo-American slaves performed a fairly narrow range of labor in fields, farmyard, and house, and the exploitation seems to have more intense and systematic than slavery under the Romans. — Bitter Crank
Yeah, but you're saying that most Americans were racist — Terrapin Station
If I had enough info about things they said where I considered some of those things racist, sure. I don't know enough about either for that, really, though. — Terrapin Station
This is also not saying that they weren't racist. I'd need far more info about them than I have — Terrapin Station
Racism hinges on their beliefs, — Terrapin Station
Also, voting for someone isn't at all indicative of agreeing with all or even most of the policies they support. — Terrapin Station
I think the hereditary nature is more the "fatal flaw", but it being almost exclusively African is what makes it racist by definition — ZhouBoTong
I would say you have the higher burden of proof. — ZhouBoTong
Based on your quote above (yes taken to extremes), there is not ONE SINGLE HUMAN that we can call racist. — ZhouBoTong
Thomas Jefferson wrote "all men are created equal". He owned slaves that did nothing wrong other than being born black. What possible justification is MORE likely than racism? — ZhouBoTong
If I can provide a letter from FDR referring to "white supremacy", is that evidence of racism? — ZhouBoTong
Right. Which we can never know for sure. But we can make some pretty solid assumptions based on their words and deeds. — ZhouBoTong
Note that I'm not making the claim that "most Americans were not racist." Rather I'm skeptical about the claim that most were. — Terrapin Station
That's not what I'm getting at. (And I'm not sure why you'd read it that way. The quote that's a response to is me simply saying that I don't know/don't remember enough about what Jefferson or Washington said.) — Terrapin Station
"a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race" — Terrapin Station
Thomas Jefferson wrote "all men are created equal". He owned slaves that did nothing wrong other than being born black. What possible justification is MORE likely than racism?
— ZhouBoTong
I had just explained the monetary motivations, for example. — Terrapin Station
If I can provide a letter from FDR referring to "white supremacy", is that evidence of racism?
— ZhouBoTong
If he's claiming something like white supremacy, sure. — Terrapin Station
I wouldn't at all doubt that some presidents were racist, by the way. — Terrapin Station
William Shockley, a Nobel laureate who was the co-inventor of semiconductors, supposedly said that whites have superior intelligence. That would be sufficient to count as racist (of course). — Terrapin Station
I recognize it and realize when failures are the result of bad decisions versus a bad environment. — Hanover
Some bad decisions are the result of bad environment. Do you recognize that too? — creativesoul
My objection to slavery is not that it was racist, but that it was extremely exploitative, extremely dehumanizing, and extremely cruel. — Bitter Crank
Racism, to my way of thinking, does not make slavery worse. — Bitter Crank
Racism, could not make slavery worse. — Bitter Crank
Being reduced to chattel property and treated as an object can't be topped. — Bitter Crank
You know, Karl Marx identified "wage slavery" as the curse of the working class. The employer doesn't exactly "own" the worker, but the worker is entirely dependent on the "wage-paying class" for their minimal sustenance. In one of his examples, he said a farmer could use a Negro slave to re-roof a barn. Or he could hire an Irishman to do it. Which worker was the better deal? The Irishman of course. — Bitter Crank
Capitalism can use slaves, but it is cheaper to use more disposable employees. From the capitalist's point of view, the purpose of hiring a worker is to exploit his labor as much as possible and pay him no more than it takes to keep him on the job. Since the worker is dependent on labor, the amount that it takes to keep him coming back is not that much. — Bitter Crank
My understanding of slavery in Rome, at least, was that it was hereditary, but the Romans allowed some (limited) avenues of escape from bondage. — Bitter Crank
I am not sure if Greece was not hereditary or I just made that shit up. — ZhouBoTong
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