2019年8月17日 星期六

Race/Related: How Much Do You Know About Slavery in America?

The 1619 Project
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Saturday, August 17, 2019

Lauretta Charlton

Lauretta Charlton

Harriet Tubman described it as "the next thing to hell." Thomas Jefferson, who like many founding fathers was a slaveowner, compared it to having a wolf by the ear. Frederick Douglass, in his 1852 Independence Day speech, called it the "shame of America." John Brown, the abolitionist, said there would "be no peace in this land" until it was done.
Slavery is called America's original sin, but how many of us truly understand the myriad ways it has shaped our lives and our country today?
The New York Times Magazine this week released a special issue dedicated to the subject of slavery in America. The initiative, which was led by Nikole Hannah-Jones, a staff writer at the magazine, is expansive. It tries to show that, in America today, everything from the absence of universal health care to our dependence on sugar — even traffic — is in some way connected to slavery and its legacy.
Matthew Desmond, a professor of sociology at Princeton University, writes a brilliant piece for the project in which he argues that the foundations of America's capitalist society "were developed by and for large plantations," where enslaved people were forced to provide free labor, often under unspeakable conditions.
"It is not surprising that we can still feel the looming presence of this institution, which helped turn a poor, fledgling nation into a financial colossus," Mr. Desmond writes.
Read an excerpt of Mr. Desmond's essay below, and browse the full issue, called The 1619 Project, here. If you descended from enslaved Africans and would like to participate in the project by sharing your family's story, please do so here, or send us your thoughts at racerelated@nytimes.com.
American Capitalism Is Brutal. You Can Trace That to the Plantation.
By MATTHEW DESMOND
Women and children in a cotton field in the 1860s.

Women and children in a cotton field in the 1860s. J. H. Aylsworth, via the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

A couple of years before he was convicted of securities fraud, Martin Shkreli was the chief executive of a pharmaceutical company that acquired the rights to Daraprim, a lifesaving antiparasitic drug. Previously the drug cost $13.50 a pill, but in Shkreli's hands, the price quickly increased by a factor of 56, to $750 a pill. At a health care conference, Shkreli told the audience that he should have raised the price even higher. "No one wants to say it, no one's proud of it," he explained. "But this is a capitalist society, a capitalist system and capitalist rules."
This is a capitalist society. It's a fatalistic mantra that seems to get repeated to anyone who questions why America can't be more fair or equal. But around the world, there are many types of capitalist societies, ranging from liberating to exploitative, protective to abusive, democratic to unregulated. When Americans declare that "we live in a capitalist society" — as a real estate mogul told The Miami Herald last year when explaining his feelings about small-business owners being evicted from their Little Haiti storefronts — what they're often defending is our nation's peculiarly brutal economy. "Low-road capitalism," the University of Wisconsin-Madison sociologist Joel Rogers has called it. In a capitalist society that goes low, wages are depressed as businesses compete over the price, not the quality, of goods; so-called unskilled workers are typically incentivized through punishments, not promotions; inequality reigns and poverty spreads. In the United States, the richest 1 percent of Americans own 40 percent of the country's wealth, while a larger share of working-age people (18-65) live in poverty than in any other nation belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (O.E.C.D.).
Or consider worker rights in different capitalist nations. In Iceland, 90 percent of wage and salaried workers belong to trade unions authorized to fight for living wages and fair working conditions. Thirty-four percent of Italian workers are unionized, as are 26 percent of Canadian workers. Only 10 percent of American wage and salaried workers carry union cards. The O.E.C.D. scores nations along a number of indicators, such as how countries regulate temporary work arrangements. Scores run from 5 ("very strict") to 1 ("very loose"). Brazil scores 4.1 and Thailand, 3.7, signaling toothy regulations on temp work. Further down the list are Norway (3.4), India (2.5) and Japan (1.3). The United States scored 0.3, tied for second to last place with Malaysia. How easy is it to fire workers? Countries like Indonesia (4.1) and Portugal (3) have strong rules about severance pay and reasons for dismissal. Those rules relax somewhat in places like Denmark (2.1) and Mexico (1.9). They virtually disappear in the United States, ranked dead last out of 71 nations with a score of 0.5.
[To continue reading this story, click here.]
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