this post was submitted on 13 Jul 2023
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Gerald Horne's The Counter-Revolution of 1776 is all the good parts of Settlers and none of the bad. It has a very similar thesis, but Horne has the academic credentials a skeptical person can't immediately write off (we don't even know who J. Sakai is), it's not actively hostile to readers who aren't already a very specific type of leftist, and it's just better scholarship and writing.
On the last point, a bunch of stuff jumps out just in this short excerpt:
I think a decent amount of this can be explained by that Settlers was originally published in 1983. A lot of these 'luxuries' had really only come into prominence throughout the 20 years before that, and the white flight suburbia car hell project was just coming into its stride.
And I definitely took it as its not that these things are 'bad', bourgeoisie 'luxuries', etc. But to highlight the shear amount of extra wealth that was concentrated into the American labor aristocracy- in comparison to the rest of the world.