
04-28-2014, 05:08 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,061
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmac2012
While it is likely true that having some gainful work to occupy one's time is generally better than chronic idleness enabled by enough of stipend to survive and not much more, not sure I'm going to give Bundy a nod for being on the right track. His take has it that govt. subsidy is some nefarious doing. More likely is that the multi-generational welfare dependency seen here and there was the end-result of decades of struggle by blacks in Jim Crow America to survive with large pockets barely doing so.
Post emancipation blacks were not often educated to any degree and plenty of whites were disinclined to hire them for anything, aside from some share cropping arrangement. There were plenty of segments of the nation in which poor whites had trouble finding work at various points and I can only imagine it was even harder for blacks.
Implying that perhaps they were better off as slaves is sort of ignoring the fact that it was their enslavement and its aftermath that laid the groundwork for difficulties in the Jim Crow era. I can easily imagine that in various urban centers, doling out a welfare stipend seemed at the time to be a better alternative than having legions of people on the bare edge of survival and turning to crime at times to survive.
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"We have the wolf by the ears; and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in the one scale, and self-preservation in the other."
- Thomas Jefferson
Many people are unsure of exactly what Jefferson meant by this. With minimal study, one finds that one of Jefferson's chief fears was the fear that slaves, not being educated, most likely would turn to a life of crime to support themselves if they were set free. As to the answer, one President Abraham Lincoln had the right answer to this problem.......I'm no Lincoln fan but on these issues the man was RIGHT and had he lived this country would be a far different place than it is today!
It's a long read but well worth it if one wishes to fully understand the problems facing early Americans.......
The 'Great Emancipator' and the Issue of Race
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