saxitoxin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:It is analogous to how some people prefer to be entrepreneurs, even at great risk, but others prefer a salary with benefits, even if the job is not one they enjoy well.
No. That is absolutely not an analogy to black slavery.
Not in the Simon Legree, Uncle Tom's Cabin version, no. However, that was as much a distortion, probably more than the polyanna southern story that slaves were merely "servants" and/or even "bettered" (through contact with whites) -- a repulsive idea. I am not suggesting slavery was good, but nothing is 100% bad or 100% good, particularly not institutions that survive for such long periods. However, in the historical reality of all types of slavery -- yes.
In this particular isolated situation, it was analogous. Sally fared better by all accounts being a slave to Jefferson than she would have been "free". There was no such thing as real freedom for any women back then, never mind black women. Ignoring that and pretending that Jeffersion, on his own, had the ability to go against society and immediately make changes, instead of working toward a gradual outcome that DID wind up with legal slavery eliminated in the US, is distorting history. We need truth.. the good, the ugly, the bad AND the good if we are to truly move forward and not repeat past mistakes.