The Benefits And Hypocrisy Of Playing The Slavery Card
By Thomas Sowell
Creators Syndicate, Inc.
November 1, 1995
EDITOR'S NOTE: With the defacing and toppling of slave owner statues like those of George Washington, and the constant call for reparations, I thought it a good idea to republish Thomas Sowell's 1995 article on playing the slave card.
ONE of the many sad signs of our times is that people are not only
playing the race card, they are playing the slavery card, which is
supposedly the biggest trump of all. At the so-called "million man
march" in Washington, poet Maya Angelou rang all the changes on slavery,
at a rally billed as forward-looking and as being about black
independence rather than white guilt. Meanwhile, best-selling author
Dinesh D'Souza was being denounced in the media for having said that
slavery was not a racist institution.
First of all, anyone familiar with the history of slavery around the
world knows that its origins go back thousands of years and that slaves
and slave owners were very often of the same race. Those who are
ignorant of all this, or who think of slavery in the United States as if
it were the only slavery, go ballistic when anyone tells them that this
institution was not based on race.
Blacks were not enslaved because they were black, but because they
were available at the time. Whites enslaved other whites in Europe for
centuries before the first black slave was brought to the Western
Hemisphere.
Only late in history were human beings even capable of crossing an
ocean to get millions of other human beings of a different race. In the
thousands of years before that, not only did Europeans enslave other
Europeans, Asians enslaved other Asians, Africans enslaved other
Africans, and the native peoples of the Western Hemisphere enslaved
other native peoples of the Western Hemisphere.
D'Souza was right. Slavery was not about race. The fact that his critics are ignorant of history is their problem.
What was peculiar about the American situation was not just that
slaves and slave owners were of different races, but that slavery
contradicted the whole philosophy of freedom on which the society was
founded. If all men were created equal, as the Declaration of
Independence said, then blacks had to be depicted as less than men.
While the antebellum South produced a huge volume of apologetic
literature trying to justify slavery on racist grounds, no such
justification was considered necessary in vast reaches of the world and
over vast expanses of time. In most parts of the world, people saw
nothing wrong with slavery.
Strange as that seems to us today, a hundred years ago only Western
civilization saw anything wrong with slavery. And two hundred years ago,
only a minority in the West thought it was wrong.
Africans, Arabs, Asians and others not only maintained slavery long
after it was abolished throughout the Western Hemisphere, they resisted
all attempts of the West to stamp out slavery in their lands during the
age of imperialism. Only the fact that the West had greater firepower
and more economic and political clout enabled them to impose the
abolition of slavery, as they imposed other Western ideas, on the
non-Western world.
Those who talk about slavery as if it were just the enslavement of
blacks by whites ignore not only how widespread this institution was and
how far back in history it went, they also ignore how recently slavery
continued to exist outside of Western civilization.
While slavery was destroyed in the West during the 19th century, the
struggle to end slavery elsewhere continued well into the 20th century.
In Mauritania it was officially abolished just 15 years ago, though even
its own officials admitted that it still continued, as it does to this
day.
There are 30,000 Africans enslaved in Mauritania under terrible
conditions at this moment, but there is scarcely a peep about it from
black "leaders" in America who thunder about slavery in the past.
If slavery were the real issue, then slavery among flesh-and-blood
human beings alive today would arouse far more outcry than past slavery
among people who are long dead. The difference is that past slavery can
be cashed in for political benefits today, while slavery in North Africa
only distracts from these political goals. Worse yet, talking about
slavery in Africa would undermine the picture of unique white guilt
requiring unending reparations.
While the Western world was just as guilty as other civilizations
when it came to enslaving people for thousands of years, it was unique
only in finally deciding that the whole institution was immoral and
should be ended. But this conclusion was by no means universal at the
time, however obvious it may seem to us today.
Thousands of free blacks owned slaves in the antebellum South. And,
years after the Emancipation Proclamation in the United States, whites
as well as blacks were still being bought and sold as slaves in North
Africa and the Middle East.
Anyone who wants reparations based on history will have to
gerrymander history very carefully. Otherwise, practically everybody
would owe reparations to practically everybody else.
1 comment:
Thomas Sowell is a bright, articulate guy. Too bad that truth and logic don't mean nearly as much as they used to in the public arena.
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