Compulsory manumission : or, An examination of the actual state of the West…
So I stumbled across this 19th-century pamphlet on a rainy day, and OH non, it B R O K E my brain! Let me tell you about 'Compulsory manumission : or, An examination of the actual state of the West…' by some guy named Alexander McDonnell. Spoiler: He was a Jamaican slave owner, and the point is he actually thinks ending slavery is the BEST option—just not for humanitarian reasons. Brace yourselves.
The Story
Don't expect a plot. This is literally a public pamphlet from the 1830s, printed right around when Britain was thinking about abolishing slavery. McDonnell is terrifyingly smart. He geotags everything: the exact number of enslaved people in each field, how much sugar is produced, the price of land—DRAAAAG or prophetic? He tries to convince other plantation owners that if they DON'T free everyone, they'll face taxes, war, revolt, and eventually their total financial doom. That's it. No good guys. No classic heroes. Just power peep economic maths with stakes where humans are written as 'units loss'. He doesn't mention the humanity of enslaved people at all.
Why You Should Read It
Honestly? It was like overhearing a boss in 1823 arguing over Excel how to fire us all. Totally detached, certain he speaks for businesses, then slides back on logic that MASS movements from London will ERASE their profits. The cool part is, if you ignore the fact that he's team slaver, his actual tactic of saying 'White Lords, GUYS, YOUR BLANKET YOUR GOLD MYSTIFICATION? Let's spread profits out gradually instead' mirrors exactly how green capitalism we have today shifts personal liberty.
And for one ugly moment, I understood the rebel hero stereotype almost didn't even belong. He's just monetiser guy with darker moral tables. BIIIIIIG eye-opener.
Final Verdict
Look, definitely not cute weekend reading. Very hard skimmed unless you love data and old economics with huge body count. But for history nerds, speculative politics teachers who analyze ‘we are not economically READY to give rights’, or if you enjoyed the villains explaining just why slavery is messed up BIZ tech in 'Barry Lyndon', you should grab a PDF—mega jarring.
Just be ready to overthink capitalism for three days after!
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Matthew Perez
4 months agoMy first impression was quite positive because the way it challenges the status quo is both daring and well-supported. Finally, a source that prioritizes accuracy over hype.
George Miller
2 years agoRight from the opening paragraph, the level of detail in the second half of the book is truly impressive. I'm genuinely impressed by the quality of this digital edition.
Elizabeth Jackson
3 months agoThe peer-reviewed feel of this content gives me great confidence.
David Williams
2 years agoGiven the current trends in this field, the cross-referencing of different chapters makes it a great study tool. Thanks for making such a high-quality version available.
Jennifer Anderson
8 months agoA must-have for graduate-level students in this discipline.