I understand all that. But you're totally missing the point. Just because we don't see the effect of slave labor in modern industry today, just because what the slaves "helped to build prior to 1864 is dead and buried" doesn't mean slavery has no impact on our lives today.A lot of men got rich off slavery in the early days of this nation. This wealth allowed them and their children to enjoy upper class status--pursue leisure, get educations, study and learn about the things that interested to them. Were there other ways to achieve wealth? Of course. But in the absence of slavery, Thomas Jefferson's family would not have been in a position to send him to college, and who knows what this country might be like today without him...without slavery? And that's just one very simple, very obvious thing. It sets the stage where slavery has a positive role, but there are negative impacts too, of course.RedGuard is right, and you are wrong.And I have no clue what interest you have in denying the fact that we enjoy the benefits of a very special country built on slave labor.It's just funny to me. I bet you would totally concede that we enjoy benefits today due to the lives of a few folks like Thomas Jefferson, but the lives of thousands of slaves? Nope, no impact whatsoever. And I'm gonna using economics to prove it!!![Edited on March 30, 2007 at 7:53 AM. Reason : ]
3/30/2007 7:45:08 AM
3/30/2007 7:57:55 AM
And upon reading the rest of this thread...Reparations is a terrible idea... I could literally write ten pages full of all the reasons it wouldn't work and shouldn't happen. And, let's not forget there was such a thing as black slave owners as someone mentioned earlier in the thread. This whole discussion is an example of the problem. We discuss things such as reparations instead of discussing other social issues that really matter. It's all water under the bridge... Slavery happened, period. Move on...
3/30/2007 8:06:26 AM
if you go back far enough it is almost guaranteed that someone you are a descendant of owned a slave at some point or anotherno slaves now, no slave owners now. lets move on.
3/30/2007 8:10:16 AM
I see both sides of itwhat is really left that slaves built?some houses, maybe a building or two, maybe some barnsbut most slave built infrastructure was destroyed or burned during the war anywayon the other side....it's a shame that we as a nation have slavery in our past, thankfully we've been able to rise above the misdeeds that were committed not that long ago in the grand scheme of thingsI have no idea if my ancestors owned slaves, I was adopted I know the family I was raised with never could have afforded slaves back in the day
3/30/2007 8:18:34 AM
^You're adopted? Seriously?
3/30/2007 10:15:39 AM
Hey, some black students might find out... their ancestors weren't slaves. Just sayin'
3/30/2007 12:07:32 PM
3/30/2007 12:21:25 PM
go back to africa
3/30/2007 12:27:06 PM
3/30/2007 1:08:38 PM
IF THE DINOSAURS WERENT SO DUMB NONE OF US WOULD BE HERE
3/30/2007 1:09:33 PM
3/30/2007 1:25:09 PM
3/30/2007 3:06:13 PM
Bridget, a country does not get kick-started. An economy exists whenever free individuals engage in productive behavior. Now, the ships that brought slaves over here could have instead been hauling over indentured servants from Europe (or even Africa if we insist). A lot of effort went into getting these people here; if we eliminate slavery from history that human effort still exists. Now, if we accept the 2 for 1 productivity ratio between slaves and freemen, then a land owner in America should be willing to pay more for an african sharecropper than a similar land owner is willing to pay for an african-slave. Regretfully, at the time, bringing over freemen from Africa was not a socially acceptable practice. White people were racist and treated immigrants poorly, even white people from Europe. An african sharecropper was quite likely to be murdered before the land owner could recollect his investment. As such, that the country was build with african-slaves does not mean it was the only way to do it. It is my assertion that it was the least efficient means possible. If, instead, slavery and nativism were banished from the land then free immigrants, predominantly from soul-crushing Europe, would have flooded the country much earlier and much faster and been much more productive at the same time; making both then and their investors better off. Of course, there was another problem preventing widespread immigration. Cross ocean transport at the turn of the 18th century was very expensive. Slave owners could afford this expense because they had the force of law to prevent their slaves from leaving before they had paid back the investment (even a slave getting to the north was likely to be returned). Such laws were less enforced against indentured servants (capped by law at seven years, which often did not produce a good profit). As such, there was a legal failure in the law: a slave is guaranteed to eventually be profitable: just keep them longer. But an indentured servant is capped at 7 years. If, instead, the law allowed investors to buy transport and demand payment in cash instead of labor then the individuals purchased could have been made the work as long as was necessary to pay his debts.
3/30/2007 3:52:05 PM
3/30/2007 3:53:19 PM
3/30/2007 3:55:18 PM
the cocaine trade paid for much of miami's current skylineshould we arrange some type of reparations there
3/30/2007 3:56:18 PM
^ no it didn't
3/30/2007 3:57:56 PM
yes it did
3/30/2007 4:05:51 PM
3/30/2007 4:14:15 PM
its more than just her face
3/30/2007 4:15:18 PM
3/30/2007 11:29:21 PM
3/30/2007 11:58:13 PM
3/31/2007 1:46:12 AM
3/31/2007 2:02:24 AM
The name, sharecropper, implies what those costs will be. A sharecropper gets a share of the final crop. Historically the share has been half. As for costs, think about it: you don't need to stop a sharecropper from running away, he wants to get his share at harvest time. So there is no need to hire a slave driver to watch them. No need to buy chains (iron was expensive). No need to chase down slaves that ran away.
3/31/2007 9:54:40 AM
3/31/2007 1:02:01 PM
Sure, like I said, indentured servants had to be given up after seven years. Even then, an indentured servant is just like a slave: he reaps none of what he sowed. And I at no point argued slavery was not profitable for the present slave owners: even at half productivity they are still producing for their masters and most of that is profit. But the profits for slave owners do not exceed the losses incurred by society at a whole.
3/31/2007 1:50:30 PM
3/31/2007 2:30:02 PM
Why? They get none of what they produce: their owner gets 100% of the crop. And their service is time limited: no matter how hard they work their service is for seven years. Sure, they get to look forward to future liberty and they have no reason to particularly dislike their masters, but the difference is sleight.
3/31/2007 2:54:53 PM
3/31/2007 4:47:08 PM