Slavery and the Origins of the American Police State May 31, 2020 | 0 By Ben Fountain From the beginning, some Americans have been able to move more freely than others They were called patrollers or, variously, “paterollers,” “paddyrollers,” or “patterolls,” and they were meant to be part of the solution to Colonial America’s biggest problem, labor. Unlike Great Britain, which had a large, basically immobile peasant class that could be forced to work for subsistence wages, there weren’t enough cheap bodies in America to do the grunt work. If you were a planter looking to make your fortune in rice or tobacco—the New World’s cash crops—you had to size up to industrial scale, and for that you needed bodies, armies of bodies, a labor force that could be made to work for terms no less brutal than those inflicted on the miserables of Europe. Posted in Commentary - The Southern Truth, Education Leave a Comment Name (required) Email (will not be published) (required) Comment Click here to cancel reply. Related Posts THE SOUTHERN TRUTH DOJ Watching California’s Vote Count While Candidates Claim Victory: What’s Going On? June 6, 2026 | No Comments » Inglewood Fights Back in $400 Million Showdown With Stan Kroenke June 6, 2026 | No Comments » THE SOUTHERN TRUTH Black Political Strength Holds Across California, But Will Black Issues Finally Take Center Stage? June 3, 2026 | No Comments » Is Los Angeles Ready for the Nightmare of Spencer Pratt? June 2, 2026 | No Comments » THE SOUTHERN TRUTH: Mission Accomplished— The People Showed Up, Learned, and Claimed Their Power June 1, 2026 | No Comments »