|
www.NewDemocracyWorld.org
The Truth about the Mayflower Colonists that Pro-Capitalist Propagandist Jeff Jacoby Must Hide
The Boston Globe's in-house conservative columnist, Jeff Jacoby, had a column a few days ago about how the Democratic Party was having a "Socialist" moment now but that it wouldn't last because socialism was just anti-American and a terrible idea. By "socialism" Jacoby meant, as he says explicitly, the egalitarian idea of people sharing according to the principle of "From each according to ability, to each according to need," as opposed to the "American" idea of everybody out for himself with private property instead of that horrible collectivism nonsense. Jacoby's Version of the Mayflower Colony Story In Jacoby's column he links to an earlier column of his about the Mayflower colonists, titled "The Economics of Plymouth Rock." Jacoby tells a story about how these Pilgrims started out trying to have an egalitarian society based on "From each according to ability, to each according to need" but quickly discovered that this resulted in people not working and the colonists nearly starving to death. But, Jacoby tells us, when the colonists rejected that egalitarian nonsense and based their economy of good old private property and self-interest, then everything improved. Here are Jacoby's words:
The Rest of the Story While reading Jacoby's Mayflower story I was reminded of an even more famous conservative from a few decades ago, Paul Harvey. Harvey had a radio show that featured his signature phrase: "the rest of the story." Harvey would take a story recently featured in the mass media and dig up "the rest of the story," which, when one heard it, would completely change one's understanding of the events recounted in the mainstream version. So, what is the "rest of the story" for Jacoby's Mayflower story? To start with, here's a Wikipedia paragraph just to refresh our memories about some key, but non-controversial, facts about the Mayflower colony:
The rest of the story is about "the common stock" that Jacoby talks about--you know that horrible collectivist thing that was the opposite of good old capitalist private property. In Jacoby's account, the reader is led to believe that "the common stock" was all the wealth of the Mayflower colonists shared equally ("From each according, etc.") by all of them. But it was no such thing! In "The Economy of the Plymouth Colony," by Rebecca Beatrice Brooks , we learn:
Now let's do a little arithmetic, taking into account how many colonists there were. With 102 passengers on the Mayflower and the crew estimated to be 30 in number, lets assume there were 132 colonists. But 31 of these colonists were children, leaving 101 adults. According to Brooks, the investments in the Mayflower colony included £1200 to £1600 by non-colonist investors and £10 each by the adult colonists, of whom there were 101. If we assume, conservatively for the argument I'm going to make, that the non-colonists owned £1200 worth of shares in the common stock, and the colonists owned 101 times 10 equals £1010 worth of shares in it, then this would mean that the total value of the common stock was at least £1200 plus £1010 equals £2210. And this in turn would mean that the percentage of the common stack that was owned by the colonists was 1010 divided by 2210 equals 46%. Even less (39% ) if the non-colonists had invested the larger amount Brooks gives of £1600. Equivalently, the investors back home in England owned 54% to 61% of the common stock. The rest of the story, then, is that the "common stock" was mostly owned not by the colonists but by investors back in England who were taking a hefty profit from the labor (under extremely harsh conditions!) of the colonists. No wonder the colonists hated working for the "common stock"! When the colonists abandoned working for the "common stock" they were not abandoning egalitarianism ("From each according to ability, to each according to need.") No! They were abandoning extreme capitalist exploitation ("You work your ass off for me, and I'll take most--54% to 61%--of the wealth you produce.") Jacoby's Final Spin Jacoby's version of the story continues this way:
This is how the disaster of extreme capitalist exploitation, when it leads to everybody nearly starving to death, becomes, in the spin of a pro-capitalist like Jacoby, "communism." And this is how the rejection of debt slavery to capitalist investors becomes, in Jacoby's spin, "switching from communal to private property." The fact is that when egalitarianism ("From each according to ability, to each according to need") swept about half of Spain in 1936-9, economic production greatly increased, as I write about here. And another important fact is that Karl Marx oppossed basing society on "From each according to ability, to each according to need" until very VERY far in the future of a "higher phase of communist society," as I show here.
This article may be copied and posted on other websites. Please include all hyperlinks.
|
|