The Ludlow Massacre and Other Lessons from Labor History

Georgia NeSmith
11 min readApr 25, 2020

Slavery is unpaid labor. But labor history includes unimaginable brutality toward white working families also…including slaughter.

In “Everyone’s Dying and No One Cares: Are Americans Indifferent to Death on a Mass Scale?” umair haque (one of the best writers on economics on Medium, by the way…FOLLOW HIM!] discusses apparent American indifference to suffering on a mass scale as seen in the response to the lockdown. There are a number of good points he makes, but there is one glaring error in this quote:

One great lesson of history is that if you buy into a system of exploitation, beware: you might just be next in line.

Now, you might think that the “real” Americans — the white working and middle class would have learned something from that. From the system that once exploited only blacks turning on them, at last, too. That they might have said: “Hey, you know what? Exploitation, we’ve learned, backfires. Let’s build a decent society.

….American history can therefore be divided up into three chapters: slavery, segregation, and predatory capitalism.

Unfortunately, slavery and predatory capitalism both existed side by side from the beginning of US history. What we see now is but the CONTINUATION of the unbroken line of predatory capitalism…

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Georgia NeSmith
Georgia NeSmith

Written by Georgia NeSmith

Retired professor, feminist, writer, photographer, activist, grandmother of 5, overall Wise Woman. Phd UIA School of Journalism & Mass Communication, 1994.

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