• ZeroCool@slrpnk.netOP
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    9 months ago

    When the reporter persisted, Decker explained that her father—a preacher born around 1933, according to the Courier Journal, or 68 years after slavery was outlawed—was “born into poverty” and worked for free with his family on the property they lived on. (It’s unclear whether the adults were paid, though the Courier Journal notes that it sounds more like “Decker’s father was forced by his parents to do chores” and that the family were tenant farmers.)

    “My dad had to do chores when he was growing up 😭😭” - KY State Rep. Jennifer Decker

  • Jaysyn@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    Admitting that you think poor people are slaves isn’t the flex you think it is you feckless bag of hair.

  • watson387@sopuli.xyz
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    9 months ago

    Yeah, because growing up poor and being a slave are the same. WTF is wrong with these people?

  • liquidparasyte@pawb.social
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    9 months ago

    There’s wage slavery, there’s debtor’s prison, there’s sharecropping, and then there’s chattel slavery.

    When ‘slavery’ is brought up in American politics we almost exclusively mean the latter.

    Absolute clown 🤡

  • rebelsimile@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    I’ve never heard a black person say “My father was a slave”, because it’s fucking 2024, what the hell?

  • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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    9 months ago

    It’s true that there were a significant number of white (European) indentured servants/slaves in the Americas during the first centuries of colonization:

    From Barbados to Virginia, colonists long preferred English or Irish indentured servants as their main source of field labor; during most of the seventeenth century they showed few scruples about reducing their less fortunate countrymen to a status little different from chattel slaves – a degradation that was being carried out in a more extreme and far more extensive way with respect to the peasantry in contemporary Russia. The prevalence and suffering of white slaves, serfs and indentured servants in the early modern period suggests that there was nothing inevitable about limiting plantation slavery to people of African origin.

    reference

    Between 50 and 67 percent of white immigrants to the American colonies, from the 1630s and American Revolution, had traveled under indenture.

    Wikipedia article

    However, by the 1900s white slavery really only persisted in the form of sexual trafficking of women, which ultimately led to the passing of the Mann Act in 1910. It’s also likely that the idea of an organized slave trade at this time was hyperbolic:

    While prostitution was widespread, contemporary studies by local vice commissions indicate that it was “overwhelmingly locally organized without any large business structure, and willingly engaged in by the prostitutes.”

    To claim that her father was a “slave” in the 1930s is a serious misappropriation of the term.

    • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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      9 months ago

      I’ll argue to anyone that every Vietnam and Korean War draftee was a slave, or at least as much a slave as serfdom was.

      As bad as chattel slavery, no, but forced into dangerous labor for the profit of an uncaring oligarchy by threats of violence, yes.

      • Kalkaline
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        9 months ago

        We should have never gotten rid of the draft and we should have increased the odds of the rich and the leaders if this country being drafted to the front line positions. It would be a great way to make sure we don’t take part in useless wars.

        • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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          9 months ago

          I’d agree with this as long as it was a draft for general federal service, not necessarily military. We could draft into the park service, NOAA, NIST, the forestry service, BLM, heck I bet we could even figure out how to use draftees in DoE. I don’t see any problem with a few years of required federal service for all citizens, and there are lots of options.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        If it were me I’d rather be forced to do field labor than be forced to fight a war.

        Vietnam was pretty fucking bad.

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Equating forced labor, prison labor, indentured servitude, and poverty to chattel slavery is ignorance at best and serves white supremacy by minimizing the the Atlantic Slave Trade. If you get confused, just ask: Is someone legally allowed to sell my child?