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Jacobin Radio

The Dig: Settler-Colonial Revolutionaries with Joshua Simon

Jacobin Radio

Jacobin

Socialism, History, News, Left, Jacobin, Alternative, Socialist, Politics

4.7 • 1.5K Ratings

🗓️ 1 November 2019

⏱️ 128 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The divide between Latin American and the United States was not always so evident. Across the hemisphere, creoles—the descendants of European settlers, born in the Americas—launched revolutions to cast off European rule and preserve their own elite position over black and indigenous people. Joshua Simon explains how rival settler-colonial projects became today's status quo of US dominance.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode of The Dig is brought to you by our supporters at patreon.com and by n-plus-1 magazine

0:08.0

which features some of the most urgent and adventurous political writing, essays, fiction, and cultural criticism on the left today,

0:18.0

including many authored by guests who have appeared here on this podcast.

0:23.0

N-plus-1's new issue, Save Your Complex,

0:27.0

is now available in print and online

0:30.0

and is full of great pieces that are perfect for dig listeners like you.

0:35.0

One that you might like is Kiega Yamada Taylor's Predatory Inclusion,

0:40.0

an excerpt from her new National Book Award nominated Race for Prophet.

0:46.0

You may have heard Taylor here on the dig discussing Black Liberation, Criminal Justice, Howard Zin, or the Combahe River Collective.

0:56.6

In her new book, she traces the history of Homeownership Incentives in the late 60s when the 1968 Fair Housing Act offered new alternatives to the

1:06.0

racially exclusionary zoning and housing patterns that had previously

1:10.2

existed for African Americans. But Taylor writes, quote, placing home ownership at the heart of the nation's low income housing policies,

1:20.0

ceded outsize influence and control to the real estate industry over dwellings intended to serve a disproportionately African American market.

1:30.0

Taylor demonstrates that the real estate practices that are merged in tandem with the fraud and conspiracy at the heart of the Federal Housing Administration were coercive, regressive and continued a pattern of racist housing policy that persists today.

1:48.5

Taylor writes, quote, the assumption that a mere reversal of exclusion to inclusion would up end decades of institutional discrimination

1:57.5

underestimated the extent to which the housing economy was organized around race and property.

2:06.7

This month, dig listeners can take 25% off a year subscription to N-plus one.

2:14.0

Go to N-plus-1.com slash The Dig to subscribe and enter the Dig one word at

2:22.4

checkout. You'll get three issues plus full access to the magazine's

2:27.8

online archive and free entry to readings and events all for less than three dollars a month.

2:35.0

That's N-P-L-U-S-O-N-E-M-A-G.

2:42.0

dot com slash The Dig.

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