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Why New World Slavery Was Sadly, Inevitable: What The New York Times' 1619 Project gets wrong.
Frontpage Mag ^ | 01/17/2020 | Jason D. Hill

Posted on 01/17/2020 7:56:00 AM PST by SeekAndFind

The 1619 Project on slavery is a program organized by The New York Times in 2019 under the auspices of one of its chief staff writers, Nikole Hanna-Jones, with the goal of re-examining the legacy of slavery in the United States -- and timed for the 400th anniversary of the arrival in America of the first enslaved people from West Africa. The goal of the project is to reframe the country’s history, and to establish 1619 as true a founding of America as was the formal 1776 creation of the United States of America. The essays range in scope from attempting to prove how modern American capitalism is indelibly tied to slavery, to the alleged massive contributions the backward agrarian Southern institution of slavery actually made to the financial magnificence of the United States.

What I hope to establish in this article is not an attack against the 1619 Project -- which has many well-documented nefarious components. I’d like to offer something different: a philosophical-anthropological account of why I believe chattel slavery was the inevitable outcome of a clash between the presence of a manifest destiny of European man, and the absence of one in African and, generally speaking—Indigenous Man.   

When European Man and African Man first encountered each other it must have been a shock to the sensibilities of both. Having established a particular relationship to the earth that differed greatly from that of African man, European man saw himself as more than custodian of the earth—he was its earthly owner who exercised Divine dominion over it. He had done this by creating an abstract personality that had devised a method of exploiting and conquering nature to adapt it to suit his needs. He had, in effect, divorced himself from his animality, transcended it, and placed nature in a subordinate position which he dominated and controlled with weapons, tools and reason. Objects he encountered, including soil, trees, animals, minerals and figures resembling human-beings outside the historical process who presented themselves as part of nature—were treated as nature; that is, they were simply appropriated, controlled, taken out of the state of nature and commodified into socially useful artifacts for human consumption.

When European Man encountered African Man or Indigenous Man, he did not discover one that was his military or technological equal. What he found was one that presented himself as irrevocably tied to his animal nature. Indigenous Man presented himself as a natural creature having not yet transformed himself out of biological time into historical time, from a conception of himself as cyclical biological creature into an epoch-making world historical man. Indigenous Man did not have these attributes and he was, literally, there for the taking -- like the water buffalo and minerals and other resources around him. Had he transformed himself out of biological time into historical time, he would have devised the proper self-defense against conquest. European domination was made possible by the arrested epistemological development and faulty metaphysics of Indigenous Man that allowed for his rapacious conquest. He was seen as existing in a fallowed state of nature.

Man becomes historical by creating new worlds; new worlds that are symbolic and cultural in form which have no formal spiritual animal equivalent. Man as an evolved being severs his spiritual ties with his animal past and in the process engages in massive repression. Once man co-extends his animality into space and promotes and lives in biological time, his self-domestication and, therefore, self-maturation, is retarded and the reigning in of his animal self is a process that is fetishized. The animal within one needed no special encouragement. Rather, it is the birth of a self divorced from nature that will enter the historical process. A self that does not make this achievement will lose the battle to historical man.

The problem with Indigenous Man was that he could not extend his imagination into a world that stretched far beyond his immediate sight. Unable to construct powerful naval configurations that could dominate the high seas and reach into territories beyond, Indigenous Man’s physical, existential groping consisted in nearby raids and attacks close to the womb-like hearth where protective retreat into the zones of the primal tribe was always possible. He never learned to turn away from the ever-cyclical and adaptive behavior of animal species and create colossal conquests of his own. Formal detachment and projection into an infinite future were absent from the range of his possibilities. Mimicry and imitation -- whether of the ancestral world or the animal word -- is the ruling principle of Indigenous Man. Radical innovation would upset an unknowable order ruled by implacable and ineffable deities whose irreversible punishments would bring catastrophic designs on a people. Indigenous Man’s entire use of whatever semblance of reason he utilized was to divine the minds of the gods in order to placate them and to preempt them.

European Man, by contrast, used his reason to justify and align his will with God’s will. If he willed to conquer the majority of so-called uncivilized lands, then that was God’s will all along. European Man has never truly feared God in the way Indigenous Man has feared his gods. European man was not a renter, a mere custodian and grateful equal opportunity dweller on the face of the earth: this earth belonged to him and he was God’s earthly representative on it -- period. European Man saw himself as God made visible on earth.

European Man felt his loneliness because of a detachment from his animality and his unsentimental domestication of nature. He placed himself above nature, and did not worship, extol or venerate the creatures he willingly slaughtered as do many New World indigenous peoples. He did not pray to their spirits for guidance, or take on their likeness for deeper insight into an alternate reality. He therefore alienated himself from his primeval roots. To recover the roots he had betrayed and can never recover, he set out on a path of territorial conquests which were symbolic homes from the hearths that he had abandoned, the roots he had severed, the primal scene he had fled. The conquests were not just a substitute for a discarded home within -- they were a sign of physical and spiritual potency and omnipotence writ large: the world was his home and belonged to him. Was this not the audacious belief of tiny England when it dared and did conquer and occupy at one time one-third of the earth?   

European Man has always labored under the conception of himself as a post-human figure. Modern civilization was made by mandates handed down by God, or by the rational construct of man’s mind. European Man, even when mired in tribal configurations, was always in flight from his roots to a large extent and, therefore, has always sought to forget from whence he came through explorative conquests. Explorative European Man, unlike Indigenous Man,  declared himself eternally independent from and, in some degree, in contempt of primordial nature. For European Man it is not only that nature cannot be sentimentalized. It must be commanded, subdued and conquered.  

To begin a historical process, one must often leave origins behind and possess the absolute hubris to act as one’s own causa sui and begin a journey with one’s people out of which one creates a comprehensive mythology. One and one’s cultural milieu become the standpoint and the backdrop against which knowledge begins, and against which justification for moral action occurs.

Indigenous Man was not written out of history by European Man. His own cosmogonies canceled him out of the realm of high artifice. The subordination of nature and radical adaption of nature to man’s needs is the juncture where history begins. Indigenous Man’s cosmogonies never emancipated him from the reality of flux and chaos that he needed in order to be catapulted into the epochal realm of mastery, domination and conquest. It is not accidental that African Man’s dugout canoes and larger ships were never equipped to cross the high seas into Europe and conquer the British Isles. The cognitive feats of abstractions and mathematical computations required were absent. Perhaps they were missing because lacking in his thinking was a conception of a God who existed outside his creation that gave him cosmic significance and, more importantly, “cosmic specialness.”

Although Indigenous Man had local rites of passage that turned on heroic tropes within his small local tribes and that were validated via small-scale conquests of other tribal units within nearby compounds or at best, across the nearby waters, these conquests and local discoveries never gave him the cosmic grandeur of a universal aspirational identity and consciousness attained by European Man.

Indigenous Man’s cosmogonies canceled him out of the historical process because they never equipped him to aspire to become a universal man; the measure of all things. Primordial cosmogony was always in flux, dependent on the weather, the unruly demons, or the ineffable gods who ruled the cosmos, or the tribal chiefs who had access to them and whose whims and moods determined the moods and nature of the gods themselves.

European colonial expansion can be seen in several lights. One could say European man transformed each colonial outpost into an aspirational domain where, say, any Englishman, could realize himself and become who he thought he was meant to be in the world. These colonies were transformational units that, to the European cosmogony and moral imagination, were parts of a whole in a mechanistic rational universe. Disenfranchised individuals were not so much regarded as social ballasts as they were inanimate parts of nature to be appropriated and transformed out of nature into commodifiable material units.          

It was on such terms that the New World was founded. The United States was the legatee of such a tradition. Paradoxically, in the seeds of its founding also lay the principles for the liberal emancipation of those who had been enslaved and left outside the historical process. It is to America’s greatness that, beginning in 1776, she created a complex and often tendentious system that would eventually widen the pantheon of the human community to liberate and universalize those locked out of the domain of the ethical. The United States had built in constitutive, regulative features of self-criticism, self-reflexivity, and self-correction. The road was messy, but the forward-looking intention of the principles were clear: all human beings were created equal. None today, in the United States of America, is locked outside of the historical process. 


Jason D. Hill is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and a professor of philosophy at DePaul University in Chicago. His areas of specialization include ethics, social and political philosophy, American foreign policy and American politics. He is the author of several books, including “We Have Overcome: An Immigrant’s Letter to the American People” (Bombardier Books/Post Hill Press).


TOPICS: History; Society
KEYWORDS: 1619project; newyork; newyorkcity; newyorkslimes; newyorktimes; slavery
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1 posted on 01/17/2020 7:56:00 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

“ ...the 400th anniversary of the arrival in America of the first enslaved people from West Africa.”

There were slaves all over the world long before that.


2 posted on 01/17/2020 8:07:08 AM PST by jdsteel (Americans are Dreamers too!!!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Heavy.


3 posted on 01/17/2020 8:08:12 AM PST by AceMineral (One day men will beg for chains.)
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To: SeekAndFind
and timed for the 400th anniversary of the arrival in America of the first enslaved people from West Africa.

No. The arrivals were indentured servants and worked off their indentures, becoming free men. Until 1642 slavery was non-existent in the colonies. It was established by a Crown court decision that year when John Casor sued to be released from his indenture as he had completed his term of indenture. Anthony Johnson (a former indentured servant who had completed his indenture and had grown wealthy) refused to release him. The court decided in Johnson's favor declaring that Casor owed his labor to Johnson for the remainder of his life.

4 posted on 01/17/2020 8:11:45 AM PST by 17th Miss Regt
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To: jdsteel

There were even slaves all over before Islam rumbled into Africa, though with Islam it sure got a boost.

Mohammad was so white...

How white was he?

Mohammad was so white that he could use mayonnaise for eye shadow.


5 posted on 01/17/2020 8:12:30 AM PST by Rurudyne (Standup Philosopher)
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To: SeekAndFind

Slaves bought from muslim slave traders.

Islam STILL practices slavery.


6 posted on 01/17/2020 8:13:24 AM PST by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizens Are Born Here of Citizen Parents_Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: jdsteel

And of course the enslavement of indigenous people by both indigenous people and Europeans didn’t count because the enslavement of Black Africans was all that mattered. The fact that Muslims are still enslaving black Africans is also irrelevant to making America bad the the ignorant readers of the New York slimes. Never mind that the philosophical and religious underpinnings of the abolitionist movement started in America. Slavery lasted less than a Century nice America became independent.


7 posted on 01/17/2020 8:15:25 AM PST by carcraft (Pray for our Country)
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To: SeekAndFind

Ready, set, go, let the left’s rewriting of history begin. In this one the United States is bad and the communists are the heroes.


8 posted on 01/17/2020 8:15:49 AM PST by fireman15
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To: SeekAndFind

Bookmark


9 posted on 01/17/2020 8:17:22 AM PST by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Slavery existed in the Western Hemisphere long before the arrival of the white man. And make no mistake about it, when the subject people of the Aztecs were used for mass human sacrifice on an ongoing basis, which is easily provably the case, those peoples were no more than slaves to the elites.


10 posted on 01/17/2020 8:18:02 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: jdsteel

And still are today...sadly.


11 posted on 01/17/2020 8:18:14 AM PST by ealgeone
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To: SeekAndFind
In other words, the Bell curve. When I see articles like this, I have to wonder what is its intent and purpose. Just because the truth has been driven underground doesn't mean it's no longer valid. Speak to anyone who carefully guards their opinion, and the core elements of the author's thesis emerge.

So, the proggies have failed in (re) educating people to embrace their world view. It's a bit ironic, since the left professes to favor cultural aspects. They literally bet the farm on the theory that they could change the world, and failed miserably.

IQ was, is and always be the primary human determinant. But, that's not to say science cannot rectify the imbalances. Genetic therapies directed at growing/developing/shaping improved brain mass, neurological connections, chemical miasma, etc - all the critical components of higher intelligence - are just years/decades away.

Add in cosmetic gene applications (hair, eye, skin color, etc), and who will be whom when anyone can be anybody?

12 posted on 01/17/2020 8:23:04 AM PST by semantic
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To: SeekAndFind

I don’t believe the premise. European man was driven then as now by economics and wealth creation. With the opening up of the New World there weren’t enough human resources to develop it. The slaves and “indigenous people” provided that resource, until the natives died out There was no resistance because slavery had always been used to supplement human labor. The African slaves were cheap and resistant to the climate in the New World where most of them went (Caribbean and South America). North America was a minor player in New World slavery no matter what date you use,


13 posted on 01/17/2020 8:28:50 AM PST by JeanLM (Obama proves melanin is just enough to win elections)
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To: semantic

If slavery was the basis of successful capitalism; why did the South lose the war? It was the industrial power of the North. Capitalism is based on Industry not agriculture; ask Karl Marx

The Industrial revolution was not based on slavery; therefore Capitalism was not based on slavery.


14 posted on 01/17/2020 8:33:13 AM PST by CoastWatcher
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To: SeekAndFind

Boy, this won’t go down well on Martin Luther King’s birthday, lol.


15 posted on 01/17/2020 8:37:22 AM PST by miss marmelstein
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To: SeekAndFind

The United States has to be uniquely villainous and culpable in the leftist worldview because that’s where the money is. Actual world history is not especially useful to them and in most instances thoroughly undermines their narrative. Thus, it’s not about slavery, or even racial equality. Those are mere means to an end.


16 posted on 01/17/2020 8:39:06 AM PST by RegulatorCountry
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To: SeekAndFind

The larger or more aggressive African tribes raided and warred with the smaller tribes and took slaves, livestock, ect. to trade. The Muslims traveled the trade routes in Africa, purchased the slaves and took them to the coastal markets. Then the Brits, Dutch, Portuguese ships got them to the New world, mainly the West Indies. Most American slavers got their slaves from there. The cherished Leftist meme that the evil evil Americans simply plucked Africans off the beach is bullsheet.


17 posted on 01/17/2020 8:42:16 AM PST by Free in Texas (Celebrate diversity. Own firearms of every caliber.)
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To: SeekAndFind

..the 400th anniversary of the arrival in America of the first enslaved people from West Africa.

1. There was no America then, we were still a British colony.

2. Subtract the number of slaves that were brought to what is now the USA from the total number taken from Africa. Save you the math - something like only 9% came here. Where did the other 90+% go? Hint - Central and South America.

3. Another bothersome fact - how did a few hundred Dutch traders armed only with flint-lock rifles go to the interior of Africa and capture hundreds of thousands of slaves? Hint, they didn’t. They only traded for them on the coast, while other Africans went inland and captured them.

4. But of course white male Americans are responsible for all of this.


18 posted on 01/17/2020 8:48:50 AM PST by I cannot think of a name
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To: FreedomPoster
, when the subject people of the Aztecs were used for mass human sacrifice on an ongoing basis, which is easily provably the case,

Today they ongoingly sacrifice the pre born infants.

Public Serve Us goes on.

19 posted on 01/17/2020 8:53:05 AM PST by rawcatslyentist (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfuAJcWl6DE Kill a Commie for Mommie)
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To: I cannot think of a name

“....only with flint-lock rifles ....”

Flintlock??? Try matchlock ! Plus the challenge of keeping the match lit in a humid tropical environment!


20 posted on 01/17/2020 8:58:50 AM PST by Reily
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