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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(108,010 posts)
Tue Feb 19, 2013, 09:52 PM Feb 2013

Salon: The “original sin” of the Southern political class is cheap, powerless labor [View all]

Contemporary American politics cannot be understood apart from the North-South divide in the U.S., as I and others have argued. Neither can contemporary American economic debates. The real choice facing America in the 21st century is the same one that faced it in the 19th and 20th centuries — Northernomics or Southernomics?

Northernomics is the high-road strategy of building a flourishing national economy by means of government-business cooperation and government investment in R&D, infrastructure and education. Although this program of Hamiltonianism (named after Washington’s first Treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton) has been championed by maverick Southerners as prominent as George Washington, Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln (born in Kentucky to a Southern family), the building of a modern, high-tech, high-wage economy has been supported chiefly by political parties based in New England and the Midwest, from the Federalists and the Whigs through the Lincoln Republicans and today’s Northern Democrats.

Southernomics is radically different. The purpose of the age-old economic development strategy of the Southern states has never been to allow them to compete with other states or countries on the basis of superior innovation or living standards. Instead, for generations Southern economic policymakers have sought to secure a lucrative second-tier role for the South in the national and world economies, as a supplier of commodities like cotton and oil and gas and a source of cheap labor for footloose corporations. This strategy of specializing in commodities and cheap labor is intended to enrich the Southern oligarchy. It doesn’t enrich the majority of Southerners, white, black or brown, but it is not intended to.

Contrary to what is often said, the “original sin” of the South is not slavery, or even racism. It is cheap, powerless labor.

Before 1900, the cheap labor was used to harvest export crops like cotton and lumber. Beginning around 1900, Southern states sought to reap benefits from the new industrial economy by supplying national manufacturing companies with pools of cheap, powerless labor as well. For a century now, Southern state economic development policies have sought to lure companies from high-wage, high-service states, by promising low wages and docile workers. Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s recent appeals to California businesses to relocate to the Lone Star State are the most recent example.

http://www.salon.com/2013/02/19/southern_poverty_pimps/

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I still think slavery is the original sin. senseandsensibility Feb 2013 #1
Slavery is the ultimate cheap powerless labor DBoon Feb 2013 #2
If Slavery IS the Original Sin, bvar22 Feb 2013 #3
Yes, they've made an adjustment to have to pay some minimal wages CanonRay Feb 2013 #30
I believe it Canuckistanian Feb 2013 #4
Hmmm... moondust Feb 2013 #5
This is not so much a figment of the South anymore Major Nikon Feb 2013 #6
It is no coincidence that the South had the lowest percentage of union representation. alarimer Feb 2013 #7
what? HiPointDem Feb 2013 #8
Funny thing is the article you link to doesn't support what you wrote. Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2013 #9
child labor wasn't any better in the us than in england, and everything i wrote is true. HiPointDem Feb 2013 #11
Sorry buddy I don't buy your revisionist BS Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2013 #12
lol. you don't know your history. 'revisionist' is people who pretend slavery = only the south. HiPointDem Feb 2013 #13
Dude you haven't supported your argument. Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2013 #14
dude, you can start your education with the link in the post you just responded to. here it is HiPointDem Feb 2013 #15
here's another: HiPointDem Feb 2013 #16
Thank you HPD pecwae Feb 2013 #18
Much appreciated, HiPointDem cordelia Feb 2013 #19
I had the same reaction as you - lynne Feb 2013 #20
Thank you! You are absolutely correct. It's remarkable how many people just don't know..... OldDem2012 Feb 2013 #21
link looks interesting; thanks! real american history is way more interesting and educational HiPointDem Feb 2013 #25
Thank you for an informative series of posts on this important topic. n/t Laelth Feb 2013 #28
I tell that to my two kids every time they have a test in what they now call "Social Studies".... OldDem2012 Feb 2013 #29
Dude you still haven't proven your point. Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2013 #38
you seem to think my point is "the north had slaves too." but my point is that slave-trade HiPointDem Feb 2013 #40
and this Puzzledtraveller Feb 2013 #22
I read the Jungle in 9th grade. Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2013 #39
And Snyder & gang is trying to bring that model to MI. I can see the "Pure Michigan" catbyte Feb 2013 #10
Mammon Vs. America Berlum Feb 2013 #17
There was an interesting AlterNet article on a similar subject back in June 2012 LongTomH Feb 2013 #23
the reforms came largely because 1) elite northern abolitionists had already made their nut & HiPointDem Feb 2013 #27
It still is ... ananda Feb 2013 #24
Excellent eaasy. k&r n/t Laelth Feb 2013 #26
Interesting paragraph from the article. Laelth Feb 2013 #31
+1 HiPointDem Feb 2013 #32
Chiquola Mills, Honea Path, SC, 1934. . . DinahMoeHum Feb 2013 #33
Excellent essay. Thanks for this post. n/t Laelth Feb 2013 #34
Then maybe we over here on our side should consider the following: Volaris Feb 2013 #35
Not much has changed when you think about it, they're still using race as class divider SpartanDem Feb 2013 #36
It is like this guy is reading my university history papers Sen. Walter Sobchak Feb 2013 #37
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