Tom Paine 1949
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- Mar 15, 2020
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Actually both black Conservative Thomas Sowell and Democratic Liberal Patrick Moynihan had, in my opinion, some sound things to say about problems in race relations and the developing problems of poor black families in the 1960s, but they also both missed the boat in other respects. The quote of Thomas Sowell is a case in point:
As Sowell himself noted there was great progress after the 60s among middle class families that managed to stay together, get educations and enter new arenas, and that continues to this day. But ghetto life was not easily escapable nor good jobs available for millions of unskilled blacks or black veterans burned out after the war, and a profoundly demoralized subclass of African Americans also solidified, as drugs and crime ravished one generation after another, and many spent years in prison.
This may be true but dramatically misses dealing with the influence of the great early and middle twentieth century Northern migration of blacks who found jobs (mostly at the bottom) of thriving factories in Northern cities. There were the Depression of course, but that was also a period of at least some common struggles, and then there was the reopening of limited but new opportunities during and after WWII and the post war boom — with sometimes disorienting “freedom” in the North. For those blacks who went North there was an immediate access to “civil rights” unavailable in the South in those days. But with the formal winning of Civil Rights laws in the mid 60s there was also the start of the terrible Vietnam War, the closing of American factories, the loss of the Gold Standard as the U.S. lost its overwhelming economic dominance of the world, and spread of drugs and social disintegration — not only but especially among blacks. For many those were the years of useless riots, war, assassinations, and no progress — despite the Civil Rights Laws“Despite the grand myth that black economic progress began or accelerated with the passage of the civil rights laws and “war on poverty” programs of the 1960s, the cold fact is that the poverty rate among blacks fell from 87 percent in 1940 to 47 percent by 1960. This was before any of those programs began.”
As Sowell himself noted there was great progress after the 60s among middle class families that managed to stay together, get educations and enter new arenas, and that continues to this day. But ghetto life was not easily escapable nor good jobs available for millions of unskilled blacks or black veterans burned out after the war, and a profoundly demoralized subclass of African Americans also solidified, as drugs and crime ravished one generation after another, and many spent years in prison.
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