Discussions of racial problems almost invariably bring out the cliche of
“a legacy of slavery.” But
anyone who is being serious, as
distinguished from being political, would surely want to know if
whatever he is talking about — whether fatherless children, crime or
whatever — is in fact a legacy of slavery or of some of the many other
things that have been done in the century and a half since slavery
ended.
Another cliche that has come into vogue is that slavery is “America’s
original sin.” The great Supreme Court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
said that a good catch phrase could stop thinking for fifty years. Catch
phrases about slavery have stopped people from thinking, even longer
than that.
Today the moral horror of slavery is so widely condemned that it is
hard to realize that there were thousands of years when slavery was
practiced around the world by people of virtually every race. Even the
leading moral and religious thinkers in different societies accepted
slavery as just a fact of life.
No one wanted to be a slave. But their rejection of slavery as a fate
for themselves in no way meant that they were unwilling to enslave
others. It was just not an issue — until the 18th century, and then it
became an issue only in Western civilization.
Neither Africans, Asians, Polynesians nor the indigenous peoples of
the Western Hemisphere saw anything wrong with slavery, even after small
segments of British and American societies began to condemn slavery as
morally wrong in the 18th century.
What was special about America was not that it had slavery, which
existed all over the world, but that Americans were among the very few
peoples who began to question the morality of holding human beings in
bondage. That was not yet a majority view among Americans in the 18th
century, but it was not even a serious minority view in non-Western
societies at that time.
Then how did slavery end? We know how it ended in the United States —
at a cost of one life lost in the Civil War for every six slaves freed.
But that is not how it ended elsewhere.
What happened in the rest of the world was that all of Western
civilization eventually turned against slavery in the 19th century. This
meant the end of slavery in European empires around the world, usually
over the bitter opposition of non-Western peoples. But the West happened
to be militarily dominant at the time.
Turning back to the “legacy of slavery” as an explanation of social
problems in black American communities today, anyone who was serious
about the truth — as distinguished from talking points — would want to
check out the facts.
Were children raised with only one parent as common at any time
during the first 100 years after slavery as in the first 30 years after
the great expansion of the welfare state in the 1960s?
As of 1960, 22 percent of black children were raised with only one
parent, usually the mother. Thirty years later, two-thirds of black
children were being raised without a father present.
What about ghetto riots, crimes in general and murder in particular?
What about low levels of labor force participation and high levels of
welfare dependency? None of those things was as bad in the first 100
years after slavery as they became in the wake of the policies and
notions of the 1960s.
To many on the left, the 1960s were the glory days of their
movements, and for some the days of their youth as well. They have a
heavy emotional investment and ego investment in the ideas, aspirations
and policies of the 1960s.
It might never occur to many of them to check their beliefs against
some hard facts about what actually happened after their ideas and
policies were put into effect. It certainly would not be pleasant to
admit, even to yourself, that after promising progress toward “social
justice,” what you actually delivered was a retrogression toward
barbarism.
The principal victims of these retrogressions are the decent,
law-abiding members of black communities across the country who are prey
to hoodlums and criminals.
Back in the 19th century Frederick Douglass saw the dangers from
well-meaning whites. He said: “Everybody has asked the question, ‘What
shall we do with the Negro?’ I have had but one answer from the
beginning. Do nothing with us! Your doing with us has already played the
mischief with us.” Amen.
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.
A Legacy of Cliches | John Hawkins' Right Wing News
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