Laney HY

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Malcolm   Harris
“The “Chinese question” found its answer at the national level, in the debate over a California-led plan for Chinese exclusion. In reconstructing the United States, California was emerging as the regional swing vote, just as the state’s enfranchised settlers became single-issue voters. The transcontinental railroad solidified the state’s membership in the Union, which was far from a given considering how often the territory had changed hands in the previous few decades as well as its continual political instability and foreign interference in Mexico, not to mention the temporary sundering of the United States itself. California’s Unionist majority helped repair that split, cutting off the Confederacy’s western tendency. But Unionist didn’t necessarily mean faithfully devoted to principles of abolition democracy and the spirit of the slave revolution. The race-based exclusion of Chinese from the country flew in the face of Reconstruction and the black-led attempt to create a pluralist, racially equal nation. But that seeming contradiction was no contradiction at all for California’s white Jacksonians, because they maintained a consistent position in favor of free white labor and free white labor only. As for the regionally aligned party duopoly, California’s vote swung against the South during the war, but it could swing back. Federal civil rights legislation meant to force the ex-Confederate states to integrate also applied to settler California’s relations with the Chinese, which left the southern and western delegations looking for a solution to their linked nonwhite labor problems. If former slaves and their children were able to escape not just their commodity status but also their working role in the regional economy, southern planters threatened to bring in Chinese laborers to replace them, just as planters had in the West Indies. That would blow the exclusion plan out of the water, which gave California an incentive to compromise with the South. These two racist blocs came to an agreement that permanently set the direction of the modern American project: They agreed to cede the South to the Confederate redeemers and exclude the Chinese.”
Malcolm Harris, Palo Alto: A History of California, Capitalism, and the World

1139880 Annual Nonfiction Reading Challenge — 145 members — last activity Jan 20, 2026 09:29PM
Welcome to the 6th Annual Nonfiction Reading Challenge! There are 12 prompts for the challenge. For each prompt, read a nonfiction book and share you ...more
455740 繁體中文書疑難雜症 Traditional Chinese book — 927 members — last activity Jan 21, 2026 01:11AM
此社團建立宗旨為希望能讓更多閱讀中文書籍的讀者利用goodreads,分享閱讀經驗以及擴增書籍建檔。 也希望大家能分享自己在goodreads的使用經驗,或協助其他中文使用者改善他們的使用經驗。
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