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When Black Labor Built Power and Was Shut Down
The National Negro Labor Council existed because Black workers recognized a contradiction that many labor institutions refused to confront. Labor rights that tolerated racial exclusion weren’t incomplete by accident. They were incomplete by design.
Formed in 1951, the Council organized Black workers across industries who faced discrimination not only from employers, but from within unions that claimed to represent the working class. Segregated locals, blocked promotions, u
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6 hours ago3 min read


Convict Leasing Built the South
Convict leasing wasn’t a footnote to American history. It was the economic engine that replaced slavery in the post–Civil War South.
After emancipation, Southern states faced a problem they were determined to solve without abandoning racial hierarchy or cheap labor. Slavery had ended, but the plantation economy had not been meaningfully restructured. Formerly enslaved people were now legally free, mobile, and no longer obligated to work for white landowners
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2 days ago2 min read


A. Philip Randolph and the Power of Organized Refusal
A. Philip Randolph didn’t believe freedom could survive without economic power. He believed political rights without material security were fragile, easily withdrawn, and too often symbolic. That belief shaped everything he built.
As the leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, Randolph organized Black workers who labored under some of the harshest conditions in American industry.
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3 days ago2 min read
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