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?

  • neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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    20 hours ago

    Mod notice: This post is kinda in the grey area of being in breach of Rule 6, but it’s a good question with decent answers, so it gets to stay.

    Stay classy.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Let it stand! I see it as more of a question of how people would react to such a disaster in modern America.

      • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksM
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        8 hours ago

        Plus rule 6 is mostly there to prevent this board from being flooded with questions about whatever annoying orange did in the past 24h

      • thelittleblackbird@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Not really, the great depression in capital letters was almost 100% in the US.

        The rest of the world had a recession, a bit tougher than normal but nothing near what happen in the US

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            5 hours 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.

          • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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            4 hours ago

            A story my parents shared with me as a kid, allegedly from somewhere in family history was of an individual taking a wheelbarrow of cash to the store to buy a loaf of bread, heading inside and learning the price had further increased and upon returning outside finding the cash dumped in the street and the wheelbarrow gone since that was the (relative) valueble left unattended.

          • CybranM@feddit.nu
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            7 hours ago

            That’s also partly because they printed a ton of money for reparations for losing the first world war

        • Nythos@sh.itjust.works
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          5 hours ago

          The US Great Depression directly lead to hyperinflation in Weimar Germany which lead to the rise of National Socialism.

          Edit: I was wrong, the hyperinflation was 9 years prior and it was a 30% unemployment rate from the crash which was a leading factor to National Socialism, not hyperinflation.

          • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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            3 hours ago

            Part of that was linked to a great drought on US farms caused by overfarming leading to the dust bowl. That was a major part of the US GDP then. And 100 years later people still don’t believe humans can alter the environment.

            • DNS@discuss.online
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              3 hours ago

              The US at the time deported Latino citizens due to the increases racism/bigotry. Most of them were farmhands who knew how to work the land, better than the white farmers. The US realized their mistake in the middle of the depression and attempted to woo the same people back under the Vaquero program. The promise of citizenship was never fulfilled by the US.

            • Nythos@sh.itjust.works
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              5 hours ago

              Seems I mixed up the unemployment from the depression with the hyperinflation of the Weimar Republic.

              I’ve edited my comment to say this