美国税收,美国奴隶制

J. Lund, R. Einhorn
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引用次数: 121

摘要

在《美国税收,美国奴隶制》一书中,罗宾·艾因霍恩展示了奴隶制对美国人对税收的恐惧和厌恶的深刻、广泛和持续的影响。从最早的殖民时代一直到南北战争,蓄奴精英们都担心强大的民主政府会对奴隶制构成威胁。艾因霍恩揭示了关于税收、征税权和税收负担分配的激烈斗争是如何植根于对个人自由的争论,而不是奴隶主将人类视为财产的权利。在此过程中,她揭露了长期流行的杰斐逊式软弱政府言论的反民主起源,表明州政府实际上更民主、更强大——在大多数人都自由的地方。对于任何对美国政府和政治历史感兴趣的人来说,《美国税收,美国奴隶制》这本书对奴隶制在美国的形成过程中所扮演的角色有着惊人的独到见解。“对于那些试图理解复杂而不断变化的税收制度,它们与地方和国家政治的关系,以及州和地方系统是如何被‘特殊制度’塑造的人来说,这本开创性和创新性的研究将提供许多答案。”——洛伦·施文宁格,《美国历史评论》“[艾因霍恩]以一种引人入胜、平易近人的方式讲述了一个可能是复杂的故事。她的论点是,奴隶制和对奴隶制的反应在很大程度上塑造了我们今天的国家,因为它塑造了我们建立的税收政策,为我们得到的政府提供资金. . . .任何思考奴隶制对我们今天生活的影响的人都必须阅读。——詹姆斯·斯罗德,《华盛顿时报》
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
American Taxation, American Slavery
In American Taxation, American Slavery , Robin Einhorn shows the deep, broad, and continuous influence of slavery on America’s fear and loathing of taxes. From the earliest colonial times right up to the Civil War, slaveholding elites feared strong and democratic government as a threat to the institution of slavery. Einhorn reveals how the heated battles over taxation, the power to tax, and the distribution of tax burdens were rooted not in debates over personal liberty but rather in the rights of slaveholders to hold human beings as property. Along the way, she exposes the antidemocratic origins of the enduringly popular Jeffersonian rhetoric about weak government, showing that state governments were actually more democratic—and stronger—where most people were free. A strikingly original look at the role of slavery in the making of the United States, American Taxation, American Slavery will prove essential to anyone interested in the history of American government and politics. “For those seeking to understand complex and ever-changing systems of taxation, their relationship to local and national politics, and how the state and local systems were shaped by the ‘peculiar institution,’ this seminal and innovative investigation will provide many answers.”—Loren Schweninger, American Historical Review “[Einhorn] tells what might have been a complicated story in an engaging and accessible manner. It is her contention that slavery and the reaction to it to a great extent shaped the kind of nation we are today, because it shaped the kind of tax policies we constructed to fund the kind of government we got. . . . Required reading for anyone who ponders the impact of slavery on our lives today.”—James Srodes, Washington Times
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