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In reply to the discussion: The South's Shocking Hidden History: Thousands of Blacks Forced Into Slavery Until WW2 [View all]Scuba
(53,475 posts)5. Some days I'm ashamed to be an American ...
In the 1880s, Alabama, North Carolina, and Florida passed laws making it a crime for a black man to change employers without permission. It was a crime for a black man to speak loudly in the company of a white woman, a crime to have a gun in his pocket, and a crime to sell the proceeds of his farm to anyone other than the man he rented land from. It was a crime to walk beside a railroad line, a crime to fail to yield a sidewalk to white people, a crime to sit among whites on a train, and it was most certainly a crime to engage in sexual relations withor, God forbid, to show true love and affection fora white girl.
And thats how it happened. Within a few years of the passage of these laws, tens of thousands of black men and boys, and a smaller number of black women, were being arrested and sold into forced labor camps by state officials, local judges, and sheriffs. During this time, some actual criminals were sold into slavery, and a small percentage of them were white. But the vast majority were black men accused of trivial or trumped-up crimes. Compelling evidence indicates that huge numbers had in fact committed no offense whatsoever. As the system grew, countless white farmers and businessmen jostled to lease as many black criminals as they could. Soon, huge numbers of other African Americans were simply being kidnapped and sold into slavery.
The forced labor camps they found themselves in were islands of squalor and brutality. Thousands died of disease, malnourishment, and abuse. Mortality rates in some years exceeded 40 percent. At the same time, this new slavery trade generated millions of dollars for state and local governmentsfor many years it was the single largest source of income for the state of Alabama. As these laws and practices expanded across the South, they became the primary means to terrorize African Americans, and to coerce them into going along with other exploitative labor arrangements, like sharecropping, that are more familiar to twenty-first-century Americans.
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The South's Shocking Hidden History: Thousands of Blacks Forced Into Slavery Until WW2 [View all]
xchrom
Jan 2013
OP
No, travel down to the Delta and observe the living conditions and "indentured" blacks
Tutonic
Jan 2013
#63
It doesn't matter. They were robbed of their place in the sun, that they should have had.
freshwest
Jan 2013
#39
Yeah, they want to live off what they stole from others - their freedom, their labor, their lives.
freshwest
Jan 2013
#40
Still happening... disproportionate sentencing for black folks and prison labor...
Luminous Animal
Jan 2013
#53
The south is different as any internal colony is different. Other internal colonies include:
HiPointDem
Jan 2013
#61
If only the 14 year old black kid had been smoking a joint...many here would *applaud* his
Romulox
Jan 2013
#25
if the kid was 17 and black and had Skittles, some here would defend his killing
CreekDog
Jan 2013
#27
I lived in the South in the 50's and 60's and nothing would surprise surprise me about what happened
demosincebirth
Jan 2013
#26