1 00:00:02,110 --> 00:00:06,284 Sharecropping is not slavery but it did become, 2 00:00:06,284 --> 00:00:09,812 for an enormous population of people, forced labor. 3 00:00:09,812 --> 00:00:12,113 And I think that splitting hairs 4 00:00:12,113 --> 00:00:14,823 about what's slavery, what's involuntary servitude, 5 00:00:14,823 --> 00:00:19,026 what's forced labor is a distracting exercise. 6 00:00:19,026 --> 00:00:24,370 The reality is, millions of black people in remote parts of the South 7 00:00:24,370 --> 00:00:27,852 could not leave the farms they were being held on. 8 00:00:27,852 --> 00:00:31,466 If they did, they were subject to arrest by the sheriff 9 00:00:31,466 --> 00:00:34,927 and, if they were arrested, they would then be returned 10 00:00:34,927 --> 00:00:39,143 to the very same farms, oftentimes, in chains, receiving nothing. 11 00:00:40,112 --> 00:00:43,073 That is slavery. That's a form of slavery. 12 00:00:44,303 --> 00:00:47,363 But, the criminal justice system and the use of the courts 13 00:00:47,363 --> 00:00:50,009 to force African-Americans back into labor 14 00:00:50,009 --> 00:00:54,776 was only one element of the new kind of slavery that soon pervaded the South. 15 00:00:54,776 --> 00:00:59,295 Sharecropping began, for instance, as a form of free labor 16 00:00:59,295 --> 00:01:02,910 in which a farmer would go to work-- would work a portion of the land 17 00:01:02,910 --> 00:01:06,371 owned by another man in return for a share of the crop. 18 00:01:06,371 --> 00:01:08,733 But the laws that were being passed by the South 19 00:01:08,733 --> 00:01:12,273 and the threat of being arrested and forced into a much more terrible 20 00:01:12,273 --> 00:01:18,424 kind of penalty in a coal mine or on a prison farm somewhere. 21 00:01:18,424 --> 00:01:21,666 The threat of having that happen to any African-American man 22 00:01:21,666 --> 00:01:25,578 meant that he could not defy the wishes of the white landowner 23 00:01:25,578 --> 00:01:29,897 where he was working. Again and again, for millions of African-Americans 24 00:01:29,897 --> 00:01:35,048 working as sharecroppers, they and their families were as effectively held 25 00:01:35,048 --> 00:01:40,019 and immobilized on those farms, in the 1890s and into the 1900s, 26 00:01:40,019 --> 00:01:43,848 as their grandparents had been held as slaves in the same places 27 00:01:43,848 --> 00:01:45,396 before the Civil War. 28 00:01:45,396 --> 00:01:48,710 Almost all sharecroppers were never able to pay back the debts 29 00:01:48,710 --> 00:01:51,296 to the landowners on whose land they worked. 30 00:01:51,296 --> 00:01:55,474 They effectively were peons, even though they were not called that at the time.