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whose timber was used by shipyard workers rapidly turning<br />

out slave ships; the clerk in the New York City export<br />

house checking bales of tobacco awaiting shipment to London;<br />

the master cooper in the Boston rum distillery; the<br />

young Virginia overseer building up his "stake" to try and<br />

start his own plantation; the immigrant German farmer<br />

renting a team of five slaves to get his farm started; and on<br />

and on. While the cream of the profits went to the planter<br />

and merchant capitalists, the entire settler economy was<br />

raised up on a foundation of slave labor, slave products,<br />

and the slave trade.<br />

Nor was it just slavery within the thirteen Colonies<br />

alone that was essential. The commerce and industry of<br />

these Euro-Amerikan settlers was interdependent with<br />

their fellow slave-owning capitalists of the West Indies,<br />

Central and Southern America. Massachusetts alone, in<br />

1774, distilled 2.7 million gallons of rum-distilled from<br />

the molasses of the West Indies slave plantations.(22) Two<br />

of the largest industries in Amerika were shipbuilding and<br />

shipping, both creatures of the slave trade. Commerce with<br />

the slave colonies of not only England, but also Holland,<br />

Spain and France, was vital to the young Amerikan<br />

economy. Eric Williams, Walter Rodney and others have<br />

shown how European capitalism as a whole literally<br />

capitalized itself for industrialization and world empire out<br />

of Afrikan slaverv. It is important to see that all classes of<br />

Euro-Amerikan settlers were equally involved in building a<br />

new bourgeois nation on the back of the Afrikan colonial<br />

proletariat.<br />

By the time of the settler War of Independence,<br />

the Afrikan nation made up over 20% of the non-Indian<br />

population - one Afrikan colonial subject for every four<br />

settlers. Afrikan slaves, although heavily concentrated in<br />

the plantation Colonies, were still represented throughout<br />

the settler territories. Their proportion in the non-Indian<br />

population ranged from 2-3% i? upper New England to<br />

8% in Rhode Island, to 14% in New York, and to 41% and<br />

60% respectively in Virginia and South Carolina. (23)<br />

While they mainly labored as the agricultural proletariat,<br />

Afrikan labor played a crucial role in all the major trades<br />

and industries of the times. The colonized Afrikan nation,<br />

much more than the new Euro-Amerikan settler nation,<br />

was a complete nation - that is, possessing among its people<br />

a complete range of applied sciences, practical crafts<br />

and productive labor. Both that colonized nation and the<br />

Indian nations were self-sufficient and economically<br />

whole, while the Euro-Amerikan invasion society was<br />

parasitic. While the class structure of the new Afrikan nation<br />

was still in a formative stage, distinct classes were visible<br />

within it well before the U.S. War of Independence.<br />

In Virginia, it appears that an overwhelming majority<br />

of the skilled workers-carpenters, ship pilots,<br />

coopers, blacksmiths, etc.-were Afrikans. Nor was it just<br />

nonmarket production for direct use on the plantation;<br />

Afrikan artisans produced for the commercial market, and<br />

were often hired out by their masters. For example, we<br />

know that George Washington was not only a planter but<br />

also what would today be called a contractor-building<br />

structures for other planters with his gang of Afrikan slave<br />

carpenters (the profits were split between "The Father of<br />

Our Country" and his slave overseer).(24) The Afrikan<br />

presence in commerce and industry was widespread and<br />

all-pervasive, as one labor historian has summarized:<br />

"Some of the Africans who were brought to<br />

America in chains were skilled in woodcarving, weaving,<br />

construction, and other crafts. In the South, Black slaves<br />

were not only field hands; many developed a variety of<br />

skills that were needed on a nearly self-sufficient plantation.<br />

Because skilled labor of whatever color was in great<br />

demand, slaves were often hired out to masters who owned<br />

shops by the day, month, or year for a stipulated amount.<br />

Some were hired out to shipmasters, serving as pilots and<br />

managers of ferries. Others were used in the maritime<br />

trades as shipcaulkers, longshoremen, and sailmakers. A<br />

large number of slaves were employed in Northern cities as<br />

house servants, sailors, sailmakers, and carpenters. New<br />

York had a higher proportion of skilled slaves than any<br />

other Colony-coopers, tailors, bakers, tanners,<br />

goldsmiths, cabinetmakers, shoemakers, and glaziers.<br />

Both in Charleston and in the Northern cities, many artisans<br />

utilized slave labor extensively."(25)<br />

Afrikans were the landless, propertyless, permanent<br />

workers of the U.S. Empire. They were not just slaves<br />

- the Afrikan nation as a whole served as a proletariat for<br />

the Euro-Amerikan oppressor nation. This Afrikan colony<br />

supported on its shoulders the building of a Euro-<br />

Amerikan society more "prosperous," more<br />

"egalitarian," and yes, more "democratic" than any in<br />

semi-feudal Old Europe. The Jeffersonian vision of<br />

Amerika as a pastoral European democracy was rooted in<br />

the national life of small, independent white landowners.<br />

Such a society had no place of a proletariat within its ranks<br />

- yet, in the age of capitalism, could not do without the<br />

labor of such a class. Amerika imported a proletariat from<br />

Afrika, a proletariat permanently chained in an internal<br />

colony, laboring for the benefit of all settlers. Afrikan<br />

workers might be individually owned, like tools and draft<br />

animals, by some settlers and not others, but in their colonial<br />

subjugation they were as a whole owned by the entire<br />

Euro-Amerikan nation.<br />

3. Euro-Amerikan Social Structure<br />

When we point out that Amerika was the most<br />

completely bourgeois nation in world history, we mean a<br />

four-fold reality: 1. Amerika had no feudal or communal<br />

past, but was constructed from the ground up according to<br />

the nightmare vision of the bourgeoisie. 2. Amerika began<br />

its national life as an oppressor nation, as a colonizer of<br />

oppressed peoples. 3. Amerika not only has a capitalist ruling<br />

class, but all classes and strata of Euro-Arnerikans are<br />

bourgeoisified, with a preoccupation for petty privileges<br />

and property ownership the normal guiding star of the<br />

white masses. 4. Amerika is so decadent that it has no proletariat<br />

of its own, but must exist parasitically on the colonial<br />

proletariat of oppressed. nations and nationalminorities.<br />

Truly, a Babylon "whose life was death".<br />

The settler masses of Colonial Amerika had a<br />

situation totally unlike their cousins back in Old Europe.<br />

9 For the privileges of conquest produced a nonproletarian

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