So what? How is that responsive to the observation that the ANC did not fucking originate racial conflict in South Africa?publius wrote:As for South Africa, the ANC has a problem of triabalism and crony corruption.
Apartheid. Heard of it?
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So what? How is that responsive to the observation that the ANC did not fucking originate racial conflict in South Africa?publius wrote:As for South Africa, the ANC has a problem of triabalism and crony corruption.
poke a statist and get tarred with all manner of thought-crime.Sounder wrote:The thing about insisting on maintaining slavery as a dominant frame for understanding the CW is that it belittles other causal influences. Perhaps slavery was a major aspect, but publius and anyone else ought to also examine other causal elements freely and without the imputed baggage of them being in support of slavery because they choose to leave slavery out of their analysis.
I tried to make a similar point over at AD’s TIDS thread. The point was made clearly and without rancor as a suggestion for a different flavor of causal chain.
AD’s putting me on ignore right after this is another indicator, to me anyway, that AD has more interest thinking he knows what is going on, than he has an actual interest about what is going on. That is, he is a slave to empty forms and cares nothing about the essence or the actual causal drivers of any given category.
http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/ ... &start=345
ditto. the thread was interesting when it started but successfully got pulled into gutter. instead of exploring the constitution and its connection to corporate interest it became "you support slavery, no I don't, yes you do, no I don't", etc...vanlose kid wrote:poke a statist and get tarred with all manner of thought-crime.Sounder wrote:The thing about insisting on maintaining slavery as a dominant frame for understanding the CW is that it belittles other causal influences. Perhaps slavery was a major aspect, but publius and anyone else ought to also examine other causal elements freely and without the imputed baggage of them being in support of slavery because they choose to leave slavery out of their analysis.
I tried to make a similar point over at AD’s TIDS thread. The point was made clearly and without rancor as a suggestion for a different flavor of causal chain.
AD’s putting me on ignore right after this is another indicator, to me anyway, that AD has more interest thinking he knows what is going on, than he has an actual interest about what is going on. That is, he is a slave to empty forms and cares nothing about the essence or the actual causal drivers of any given category.
http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/ ... &start=345
some people think some people (usually people like themselves) are fit to govern others. whether they're of the left or right doesn't really matter.
*
Yes. I know. That doesn't make England itself a country that can be compared with the United States in terms of how well it handled racism after abolition. Because, unlike the United States, England did not have a large population of freed slaves after abolition.publius wrote:England had a slave population abroad and they ended slavery.
If you mean serfdom in Imperial Russia, it was close enough. But I agree that comparing the freeing of the serfs in Russia to the emancipation of slaves in the United States wouldn't yield many useful insights.We could discuss serfdom, but that was not slavery.
I did read it. The reason it didn't change my views is that it's insanely revisionist.Had you read the post on Lincoln's Republicans I think your view would change.
No. They didn't. That's absurd. The seceding states were quite, quite clear in stating that the conflict was over slavery.Tariff's caused the war.
In order to avoid disunion and war, the northern and western states (later the Union) made every attempt to accommodate the continuation of slavery in the southern states (later the Confederacy). So you could certainly say that they would have preferred to live with slavery in the south than go to war over it.The Union could live with slavery.
The issue was disunion.The Federal government being starved of revenue though-this cannot stand.
I see. What distinguishes it as uniquely more admirable than the self-determination of the ANC to free their politics from those of the apartheid government? Or the self-determination of the American revolutionaries to free their politics from those of the British Empire? Or the self-determination of the Haitian slaves to free themselves from their owners? Or the self-determination of the Bosheviks to free their politics from both Imperial power and the interests of their fellow revolutionaries (and most of the rest of the population of pre-revolutionary Russia)?publius wrote:It is not so much admiration for slave owners as the self determination of the South to free their politics from the North.
There was no war state. The Confederacy started a war.publius wrote:That is why this was the wrong war to fight. Only the War State won that war.
There's not one word at the other end of that link that suggests that race was not and is not a huge problem in South Africa. It's about the ANC having failed to correct the massive problems created by the 150 years of apartheid that followed two horrendously bloody wars that followed several centuries of European colonialism in seventeen years.publius wrote:C2W, The race problem of Soth Africa is not as big problem as you seem to think: South Africa: The Grand Disillusion http://www.archipelagobooks.org/page.php?id=12
FWIW, I am fighting for historical truth, and not the governance of some by others. And I accuse nobody of any thought crime. There's no such thing, afaic.vanlose kid wrote:poke a statist and get tarred with all manner of thought-crime.Sounder wrote:The thing about insisting on maintaining slavery as a dominant frame for understanding the CW is that it belittles other causal influences. Perhaps slavery was a major aspect, but publius and anyone else ought to also examine other causal elements freely and without the imputed baggage of them being in support of slavery because they choose to leave slavery out of their analysis.
I tried to make a similar point over at AD’s TIDS thread. The point was made clearly and without rancor as a suggestion for a different flavor of causal chain.
AD’s putting me on ignore right after this is another indicator, to me anyway, that AD has more interest thinking he knows what is going on, than he has an actual interest about what is going on. That is, he is a slave to empty forms and cares nothing about the essence or the actual causal drivers of any given category.
http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/ ... &start=345
some people think some people (usually people like themselves) are fit to govern others. whether they're of the left or right doesn't really matter.
*
Well apart from the Irish of course AFAIK the first slaves in the West Indies were Irish rather than African.compared2what? wrote:England never had much of a slave population at home. None of the Western European/Christian countries did. It was a New World/colonial phenomenon.publius wrote:O how about England. South Africa is a bad example because the ANC is stuck on stupid.
So England is not just a bad example, it's simply not an example. Besides which, South Africa's racial issues weren't fucking originated by the ANC.
With England, slavery was about business and / or punishment. In some other areas, it was about booty and about military recruitment. For example the Mamluk Empire in Eqypt was based on slaves who were harvested from all over Central Asia, Crimea, The Caucasus, Middle East.Following the Irish uprising in 1641 and subsequent Cromwellian invasion, the English Parliament passed the Act for the Settlement of Ireland in 1652 which classified the Irish population into one of several categories according to their degree of involvement in the uprising and subsequent war. Those who had participated in the uprising or assisted the rebels in any way were sentenced to be hanged and to have their property confiscated. Other categories of the Irish population were sentenced to banishment with whole or partial confiscation of their estates. Whilst the majority of the resettlement took place within Ireland to the province of Connaught, Dr William Petty, Physician-General to Cromwell's Army, estimated that as many as 100,000 Irish men, women and children were transported to the colonies in the West Indies and in North America as indentured servants.[14]
Wow, publius- you told us very recently about how you have a long, long history of activism for left wing, internationalist causes.publius wrote:Well let me see. Apartheid ended. ANC took over an intact prosperous country and ran it in the ground. As the link explains, the ANC has issues. Prosperity does a lot to ameliorate hostility between racial groups. As does education. Political corruption does not.
This from a fellow that cannot tie two thoughts together?So that describes the extent of your grasp of principles of political economy?