{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "just by the way I got into late 19th century american police corruption and politics because of you and whoa it's fascinating, I...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/162078326873/", "html": "<div class=\"question\"><strong>Anonymous</strong> asked: just by the way I got into late 19th century american police corruption and politics because of you and whoa it's fascinating, I would greatly enjoy if you would go on</div>\n<blockquote>\nmore like \u201cson buddy johnny \u201clarge ears\u201d mcmaster, my main man, my most promising recruit [agressive back pat] what\u2019s here gonna happen is that if me your favourite mentor get the newspaper boy to get me more happy news about our beloved senator, then I can pretty much guarantee that big boss \u201choney pot\u201d oreilly is gonna hear about your mom\u2019s flower shop\u201d</blockquote>\n\nOh nice. Def. read <a href=\"https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/plunkett-george/tammany-hall/\" target=\"_blank\">Plunkett of Tammany Hall</a> if you haven\u2019t, if that\u2019s not the link I got you into this with in the first place.\n<p>\nOne thing I\u2019m looking into lately is lynching and vigilante law. Got the standard background picture of lynching as a specifically racial Dixie thing but realizing that much of the country, between the Civil War and the 1920s, was developing <em>traditions</em> of extralegal killing.\n</p><p>\nI talked <a href=\"/post/138704339813/\" target=\"_blank\">here</a> about the Unwritten Law, that a man was entitled to (=routinely acquitted of) stalk and kill those who put hands on his women. Meanwhile the \u201ctrue man\u201d and \u201cAmerican mind\u201d doctrines set into law something like modern Stand Your Ground laws. In popular conception the list of things a true man was not expected to tolerate rather than deploy righteous violence was longer, in practical application it turned on the testimony of survivor-defendants.</p><p>\nNot just individuals committed individual acts but communities came together, enacted deadly purges, and then <em><a href=\"http://www.powells.com/book/vigilantes-and-lynch-mobs-9781439908457/68-132\" target=\"_blank\"><em>published triumphant histories</em></a></em> about it, as Regulators, Moderators, Committees <a href=\"/post/152223572328/\" target=\"_blank\">of Vigilance</a>.\n</p><p>(cf. the <a href=\"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehmic_court\" target=\"_blank\">Vehmic courts</a> of  medieval Germany, particularly the resemblance of the Gilded Age to feudalism insofar as the state secures magnates\u2019 holdings and leaves the people to themselves) </p>"}