| Mark Traugott - 1995 - 260 páginas
...classes. In the words of Thomas Skidmore, the program was to end social oppression and political force "till there shall be no lenders, no borrowers; no...tenants; no masters, no journeymen; no Wealth, no Want" (quoted in ibid.: 187). This was a vision that would appeal less, no doubt, to elites than to those... | |
| Jonathan A. Glickstein - 2002 - 382 páginas
...emergence of the same egalitarian conditions favored in communist schemes. These were conditions in which "there shall be no lenders, no borrowers; no landlords,...tenants; no masters, no journeymen; no Wealth, no Want" (Skidmore, The Rights of Man to Property! [New York, 1829], 5-46, 79-80, 137-38, 241, 386; 293 Huston,... | |
| Sean Wilentz - 2006 - 1114 páginas
...differences would not be turned into permanent inequality. Gradually, class oppression would disappear, "till there shall be no lenders, no borrowers; no...tenants; no masters, no journeymen; no Wealth, no Want."6' As political eschatology, Skidmore 's tract was just as uncompromising as David Walker's vision... | |
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