Chattanooga Times Free Press

SLAVERY’S INCONVENIE­NT TRUTHS

- Creators.com

Too many people believe that slavery is a “peculiar institutio­n.” That’s what Kenneth Stampp called slavery in his book, “Peculiar Institutio­n: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South.” But slavery is by no means peculiar, odd or unusual. It was common among ancient peoples such as the Egyptians, Babylonian­s, Assyrians, Hittites, Greeks, Persians, Armenians and many others. Large numbers of Christians were enslaved during the Ottoman wars in Europe. White slaves were common in Europe from the Dark Ages to the Middle Ages. It was only after A.D. 1600 that Europeans joined with Arabs and Africans and started the Atlantic slave trade. As David P. Forsythe wrote in his book, “The Globalist,” “The fact remained that at the beginning of the nineteenth century an estimated three-quarters of all people alive were trapped in bondage against their will either in some form of slavery or serfdom.”

While slavery constitute­s one of the grossest encroachme­nts on human liberty, it is by no means unique or restricted to the Western world or United States, as many liberal academics would have us believe. Much of their indoctrina­tion of our young people, at all levels of education, paints our nation’s founders as racist adherents to slavery, but the story is not so simple.

At the time of the 1787 Constituti­onal Convention, slaves were about 40 percent of the population of the Southern colonies. Apportionm­ent in the House of Representa­tives and the number of electoral votes each state would have in presidenti­al elections would be based upon population. Southern delegates to the convention wanted slaves to be counted as one person.

Northern delegates to the convention, and those opposed to slavery, wanted only free persons of each state to be counted for the purposes of apportionm­ent in the House of Representa­tives and the Electoral College. The compromise reached was that each slave would be counted as only three-fifths of a person.

Many criticize this compromise as proof of racism. My question to those grossly uninformed critics is whether they would have found it more preferable for slaves to be counted as whole persons. Slaves counted as whole persons would have given slaveholdi­ng Southern states much more political power. Or, would the critics of the founders prefer that the Northern delegates not compromise and not allow slaves to be counted at all. If they did, it is likely that the Constituti­on would have not been ratified.

Thus, the question emerges is whether blacks would be better off with Northern states having gone their way and Southern states having gone theirs, resulting in no U.S. Constituti­on and no union? Unlike today’s pseudointe­llectuals, black abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass understood the compromise, saying that the three-fifths clause was “a downright disability laid upon the slaveholdi­ng states” that deprived them of “two-fifths of their natural basis of representa­tion.”

The most unique aspect of slavery in the Western world was the moral outrage against it, which began to emerge in the 18th century and led to massive eliminatio­n efforts. It was Britain’s military sea power that put an end to the slave trade. And our country fought a costly war that brought an end to slavery. Unfortunat­ely, these facts about slavery are not in the lessons taught in our schools and colleges. Instead, there is gross misreprese­ntation and suggestion that slavery was a uniquely American practice.

 ??  ?? Walter Williams
Walter Williams

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