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B**S
An eye opener for those who cling to the Lost Cause myth of the Confederacy
The book goes well beyond the shallow few paragraphs about slavery that I got in school in Illinois, from grade school through college. It lays out the economic reasons that slavery is protected in the US constitution, how it is that among the first 6 presidents of the new nation, 4 were from Virginia. The interweaving of the independence movement and the colonial business of slavery. Well written and meticulously documented, it is the best historical discussion of the economics of slavery that I have come across. It goes into the events not only in the mainland of the Americas, but also the island territories governed by various European powers. The speculation in slaves as just another commodity, the reasons for.market fluctuations in the prices of slaves. How loans collateralized with slaves were bundled by banks and sold as investment vehicles to people who never knew their bonds were backed by the value of slaves. It is a real eye opener. How some big name Wall Street investment firms got started as cotton brokers who traded the occasional coffle of slaves for a plantation owner who needed quick cash before the cotton harvest. It is a real page turner, crisply written with copious footnotes and references, but these never bog down the narrative. I recommend this book to anyone who really wants to understand the history of the USA and its tie to slavery.
J**.
A much deeper chapter
A monumental work of scholarship and a superb nutshell version of American and European history. The depth of the roots of slavery probed here in detail. If the actual work of slaves in cotton, tobacco and sugar cane is the leaves of the tree, the trunk and all roots are the mercantile and banking system that turned humans into financial capital and credit. Slavery was tenacious because these financial roots were tenacious, very deep. In American schools we are briefly shown a few leaves of this tree of horror but never the roots until now. so dark, so ugly - American Founding Fathers tainted anew.Very dark text - ought to be required reading in college. Sublettes write throughout as if blacks are total 100% victims to this day for 100% of their historic and ongoing travail. My gut and reading leads me to believe blacks have always played a role in their plight but it is anathema to discuss any of this on any level - historical, anthropological, neurological or any other way - all off limits now - the racist trigger is the hairiest of hairs-PC academic career third rail. Like the nose hair of a gnat. It doesn't help black lives to keep it all bottled up but black talking heads don't seem to mind.Are there long-term lasting genetic-epigenetic effects resulting from the age of American slavery (“The fecundity of the capitalized womb”) that are locked into both white and black genomes as methylated chromatin? Are black and white Americans now born deformed by 18th, 19th Century slavery horrors?Experiment: Test African blacks and American Blacks for DNA,RNA methylation differential. Are there residual heritable genetic effects of slavery horror. See: TTT (Transgenerational Transmission of Trauma – Dr. Natan Kellerman)
V**S
American History at its best!
The history that most often appears in the high school text does serious damage to the truth of the founding of the country. How often we think we know events and people but soon learn that the real story is much more complicated or even that the original story is a lie. This is the experience I had over and over again as I read this outstanding book. It was well written, thoroughly researched and riveting in providing a new portrait of events that I thought I knew. It's a page-turner. The documentation was exceptional. If only "the people" could know the truth. Well, now you can. By simply reading this book, you learn year-by-year, president-by-president the choices they faced and the decisions they made. The country's constitution is re-aligned. All is contextualized. Often known and repeated quotes appear different, richer, truer. Thought patterns that began then, now have just been updated. The "why" of the pattern is clear. Many new people are presented and interwoven in the saga. The birth, education and experiences of many known people are told in a way that you grasp who they really were, not the ones text books told us about. This book is exceptional and I hope many more people will open their eyes to the true American legacy. We are not the country we have been told. This book adds many new, essential missing pieces. Through the Lens of the Transatlantic Slave Trade
L**A
A HISTORY OF THE SLAVE-BREEDING INDUSTRY is an outstanding book that I recommend to anyone who wants to know the truth about ...
I wish I had time to write more about this book. THE AMERICAN SLAVE COAST: A HISTORY OF THE SLAVE-BREEDING INDUSTRY is an outstanding book that I recommend to anyone who wants to know the truth about slavery and the nature of oppression under greedy men. Most of us accept that American slavery was a horrible institution that left a permanent stain on this nation, but this book makes clear the levels of extreme brutality that became acceptable and kept black people in chains. It illuminates how equating black lives with chattel under the laws of the antebellum era resulted in imbalances of power even in this nation's federal government. Supporting its thesis with quotes from documents written by founders such as Thomas Jefferson, articles from the periodicals of that time, as well as slave and notary records, this well-written work argues effectively that the South had no intention of ending slavery. There was too much money to be made by breeding black people. In fact, breeding slaves was so lucrative that it's quite possible other ethnic groups, including poor whites may have found themselves in chains as well but for the Union's victory during the Civil War. The reality was black bodies were capital for the endeavors of wealthy men. For many men in power, selling their fellow humans for profit was too good a deal to pass up, and crafting rhetoric to convince non-slaveholders that black people were subhuman was one of many moves these men made to maintain the status quo in the antebellum South.
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