
By Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly, aka “Dr. CBS,” re-posted from her Substack newsletter. This month, in the lead-up to the celebration of 250 years of “independence,” Dr. CBS has been posting excerpts from a revolutionary thinker from the Black radical tradition every single day. She calls it the “This is America” project.
We must be clear about the difference between radicalism and reaction, revolution and counterrevolution. Let’s talk about it.
I’m Dr. CBS and we have just three days left of of my “This is America” project!
Today we’re thinking with the people’s historian Dr. Gerald Horne’s and his magisterial work, The Counter-Revolution of 1776: Slave Resistance and the Origins of United States of America, published in 2014.
Let’s start with our bar”:
Defenders of the so-called Confederate States of America were far from bonkers when they argued passionately that their revolt was consistent with the animating and driving spirit of 1776. Slavery fueled a rising capitalism. However, ironically, breaking the bonds of slavery was necessary if capitalism was to realize its full potential, not least since enslaved Africans were fiercely determined to destroy the wealth they were creating, along with the lords of the lash. Contradictorily, slavery was both a boost for nascent capitalism and ultimately a fetter on its productive force. More than this, chattel slavery grounded in racist chauvinism—of a uniquely republican and toxic type—was one of the more profound human rights violations of the previous millennium. To the extent that 1776 gave such slavery a renewed lease on life, it was truly a lineal ancestor of 1861 and, thus, a counter-revolution of slavery.”
Continue reading “The Counter-Revolution of 1776”