this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2025
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[–] SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml 28 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I mean, yes after reconstruction was defeated, that's true.

But I think Marxists and Socialists in the US should be out there claiming it's legacy (and reading W.E.B. DuBois' Black Reconstruction in America while they're at it), as the American Civil War was an actual Social Revolution.

A social revolution that was defeated by a mix of feckless liberalism and literal terrorism.

So much of the labor movement that followed, which US leftists love to champion, framed itself in the language and spirit of abolitionism and the civil war, (e.g. "we abolished chattel slavery, and now we need to abolish wage slavery")

[–] miz@hexbear.net 20 points 3 weeks ago

quote from Douglass in support of your comment

Frederick Douglass, arguing for unity among black and white laborers in 1883, said that “experience teaches us that there may be a slavery of wages only a little less galling and crushing in its effects than chattel slavery, and that this slavery of wages must go down with the other.”

The critique of wage slavery was then taken up by anarchists, socialists, and labor radicals of various stripes, who railed against the capitalist labor market and organized for a multiracial struggle against the owners of capital. Lucy Parsons, born a slave and later a widely known anarchist, declared in one of her most famous speeches:

How many of the wage class, as a class, are there who can avoid obeying the commands of the master (employing) class, as a class? Not many, are there? Then are you not slaves to the money power as much as were the black slaves to the Southern slaveholders? Then we ask you again: What are you going to do about it? You had the ballot then. Could you have voted away black slavery? You know you could not because the slaveholders would not hear of such a thing for the same reason you can’t vote yourselves out of wage-slavery.

from https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/01/wage-slavery-bernie-sanders-labor