The Lessons of History
From The Ramparts
Junious
Ricardo Stanton
The Lessons of History
"Those who do not remember the past are
condemned to repeat it.”— George Santayana
It is
imperative we study and learn our history. History is the prologue to the
present. We live in volatile times. Stay alert, keep your eyes and ears open,
remain open minded yet skeptical (I know that sounds like a contradiction but
it can be done and we should do it). Today's unrest, angst and frustrations is very
much like what was going on in this country during in the early part of the
19th century when the massive infusion of immigrants thrown into an already volatile
mix of imported (and later domestically bred) and oppressed Africans created
social tensions and animosity that resulted in race riots and open bloodshed which
ultimately led to the War Between the States (there is no such thing as a
"civil war".)
This racial admixture altered the social
landscape. The ruling elites had long contemplated what to do with the Africans
(the "free" ones) hence the founding of the American Colonization
Society in 1816. The notion of sending free Blacks back to Africa (or someplace
in South or Central America ) was kept alive
until the War Between The States. In the infamous Dred Scott decision of 1857 the
US Supreme Court said, "Blacks were not citizens of this country and had
no rights a white person was bound to respect." The idea of gradually sending all Blacks
(free and enslaved) away was actually floated by Abraham Lincoln who persuaded
Congress to appropriate $ 500,000 for such a project. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jala/2629860.0014.204...
That plan died withLincoln but the issues
remained. The minions of the 1% asked "What are we going to do with the
Blacks"? That question is still being asked and addressed (today by incarceration
via the bogus Wars on Crime and Drugs, a tilted judicial system and genocide
via abortion, police killings, environmental poisoning, menticide etc), now
other non European immigrants are also being looked at askance.
That plan died with
The reality
is Trump is not going to deport millions of immigrants (although Obama deported
over two million!) any more than Abraham Lincoln or his successors were able to
"colonize" (deport) all Blacks. They will probably deport a few, a
million or so, for show purposes to keep up pretenses but they will not be able
to lock up nor deport all illegal immigrants.
What will the ruling class do to the immigrants? Their ancestors weren't able to deport all our ancestors, so what are they going to do with this crop of immigrants? A costly war was fought that inadvertently led to the freeing of our enslaved ancestors but the ruling class conspired to restore the former order and re-enslave our ancestors by taking away the protection of Northern troops. That deal returned political control back to the former slave owners and the aristocracy, which sealed our fate until the twentieth century's the "Civil Rights movement".
What will the ruling class do to the immigrants? Their ancestors weren't able to deport all our ancestors, so what are they going to do with this crop of immigrants? A costly war was fought that inadvertently led to the freeing of our enslaved ancestors but the ruling class conspired to restore the former order and re-enslave our ancestors by taking away the protection of Northern troops. That deal returned political control back to the former slave owners and the aristocracy, which sealed our fate until the twentieth century's the "Civil Rights movement".
Prior to
the War Between the States there was much contention, debate and wide scale
violence that served as a precursor to the War Between the States (see http://www.civilwaronthewesternborder.org/essay/bleeding-kansas-kansas-nebraska-act-harpers-ferry).
In many ways the class and racial divide is just as intense today as it was in
1854. Political actions based upon economic interests and ideas about race,
eventually led to the violent conflict we call the War Between the States. The
divide in this country today following the presidential election is just as
extreme as it was in 1854!
Today there
is a class war simmering in this nation: income inequality is at an all time
high while opportunity, upward mobility and the prospects of prosperity are
diminishing which is why there is so much angst and anger today. Time will tell
whether we muster the will to resolve the burning issues of today in a way that
reconciles the sins, divisions and wounds of the past and benefits all parties;
or we repeat and relive the mistakes that led to division, violent war in 1861
and the reestablishment of quasi slavery and peonage twelve years later. If the
election has anything to teach us it is we owe it to ourselves our ancestors
and our progeny to drop our dependency on our enemies, develop and find ways to
enhance our position throughout the
world.
-30-
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