cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/54239937

During the Great Depression, when banks foreclosed on farms, neighbors often showed up at the auctions together.

They’d bid only a few cents, and return the land to the family that lost it. Sometimes a noose hung nearby as a warning to outsiders not to profit from someone else’s ruin.

It was rough, but it worked, communities protected each other when the system wouldn’t.

If a collapse like that happened today, do you think people would still stand together or has that kind of solidarity disappeared? Could it happen again?

  • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    That mostly has to do with the end of WWI and the reparations they had to pay. It happened near the same time, but not really related.

    • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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      5 hours ago

      That isn’t true. France, for example, had to pay a larger indemnity after the Franco-Prussian war. It certainly didn’t help but blaming it all on a fairly standard post-war treaty is literally a relic of Nazi propaganda.

      These events are interconnected and pretending the Great Depression didn’t affect economies world wide is revisionist nonsense.