From Slaveowner to Landlord

The Civil War and subsequent 13th Amendment put an end to American chattel slavery. Briefly it seemed possible that the occupying federal government might grant formerly enslaved people the means to control their own labor, reap their own profits, to some extent, e.g. by giving them actual productive land. But this hope died with the end of Reconstruction in 1877 and from that point on the formerly enslaved were once again subject to whatever methods of exploitation the local ruling classes could cook up, as long as they fell short of literal chattel slavery.1

And they cooked up with all kinds of ways to continue to exploit their former slaves. They passed vagrancy laws making it illegal not to have an employer, laws requiring convicts to work for the state, laws that ensured a steady supply of convicts who could be forced to work, laws regulating sharecropping in ways that made it pragmatically impossible for workers to get ahead financially, and so on. Literal American slavery ended in 1865 but the exploitation of workers rolled on. Northern states already had a great deal of experience exploiting free workers, and the ruling classes of the former slave states ended up both adopting and sharing a lot of proven techniques over time, to the point where today the entire United States uses essentially the same methods.
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The Nose, The Grindstone, And The Monkey Wrench — How We Can Build Autonomous Economic Zones in Los Angeles Without Changing A Single Law

Autonomous Zones in Los Angeles

In Los Angeles informal, that is to say illegal, productive uses of land are ubiquitous. Activities like street vending, backyard restaurants, ghost kitchens, perpetual garage sales, all kinds of specialized retail, unlicensed day care, auto and bicycle repair and painting, massage and yoga studios, market gardening, music lessons, rent parties, plant nurseries, gypsy cab operations, furniture and computer repair, tailoring, live music, personal grooming services of every description, apartment-sharing by large numbers of people, raising chickens, pigeons, rabbits, parakeets, cockatiels, and even small goats. Unhoused people use land productively, illegally, and cooperatively by living on it in addition to many of the above activities.

Everywhere in this City adaptable, energetic, determined people find infinitely many creative ways to enrich themselves, their families, and their communities using whatever access to land they’ve managed to organize. Not only do they benefit themselves and their immediate communities this way, but their work makes the life and the culture of this City infinitely richer for almost everyone here.2 And yet all of these activities are illegal and the potential consequences are severe. They include eviction for renters and its attendant potential financial ruin and risk of homelessness, homeowners risk nuisance suits and potential property confiscation, also amounting to financial ruin and risk of homelessness. Everyone involved risks fines, arrest, imprisonment, and police violence.
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