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?
- 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. - Let it stand! I see it as more of a question of how people would react to such a disaster in modern America. - Plus rule 6 is mostly there to prevent this board from being flooded with questions about whatever annoying orange did in the past 24h 
 
- Wasn’t the Great Depression a worldwide thing? - 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 - You are forgetting the collapse of the Weimar Republic and the rise of the Nazis. - https://www.britannica.com/event/Great-Depression - Their currency collapsed to the point, where a wheelbarrow of cash could not buy a bread. - I would say that is pretty significant. - 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. 
- ??? - The weymar hiper inflation happened almost 9 years before… - The great US depression was only a drop in a miriad of causes, it is not even in the top 3 of reasons of nazi getting the power. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperinflation_in_the_Weimar_Republic 
- That’s also partly because they printed a ton of money for reparations for losing the first world war 
 
- 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. 
 
- 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. - Nope, it didn’t, the hiper inflation happened almost 9 years before. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperinflation_in_the_Weimar_Republic - Edit: I appreciate your edit, but now mine looks out of touch :) - Seems I mixed up the unemployment from the depression with the hyperinflation of the Weimar Republic. - I’ve edited my comment to say this 
 
- 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. - The drought began 5 years after the market shit itself to death. The farms began struggling after the war. 
- 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. 
 
 
 
- It was but these penny auctions were mainly a US thing I think 
 
 
- I’m guessing the noose wasn’t only for the benefit of outsiders. Most communities probably had one or two selfish people. 
- Unequivocally no. - We live in an era of being able to buy things, sight-unseen. In that era, there was no way for an investor to bid without physically showing up, so if they did, and aggressively outbid everyone else, then they already have a noose set up for them. - Now? People don’t need to be at the auction in person, there probably wouldn’t be an auction to begin with. The Bank would hire a real estate agent, who would pass it off to whomever makes the highest bid. Simple as that. - I’d like to think we would, as communities, as a society, but in this society is also money hungry, faceless corporations that will do whatever they can to make a dollar. There are so many layers of obfuscation between the person who is buying the property, and the person who ultimately owns it. - I just can’t see it happening with the Internet. - It’s also the difference between individual ownership and company ownership. Companies simply have too much power. 
- Society doesn’t exist anymore. Capitalism has atomized us all into individual crabs, clawing to get out of the pot, paying no heed to who we drag down in our struggles. - I’m going to start using the “single crab alone, clawing in a bucket” analogy to describe our current world. 
 
- I agree that this could happen as you described because of online bidding & buying. But any new owners and/or renovation crews show up, I think people could make that new purchase WAY most costly. Word would eventually get around and no one would want to accept those jobs. - I think the only way to realistically fight back is if all the tradespeople refuse to work on a foreclosed property. - It’s possible, or the land owners could simply bring in someone from out of state (or province, or whatever it is where you are)… 
 
- Yeah, the bloated police state and anonymity of most real estate moguls makes this is logistically impossible. That being said, the reaction to the United Healthcare CEO’s killing and the number of ICE, “assaults,” that can’t get grand jury indictments makes me think this spirit is still alive. 
- I just can’t see it happening with the Internet. - This, even without the technological forces of capital swooping in to take advantage of every leveraged opportunity, even if people did rally together it would just turn into a political/performative circus and the entire thing will get lost and buried under some streamer drama that erupts from it. 
 
- We’ve had worse depressions already. In 08 entire neighborhoods in Reno were totally abandoned, the whole economy seemed to be house construction and repair. At night whole neighborhoods would vanish, not a single light turning on. I knew guys in construction that suddenly couldn’t get work and went around in crews and stripped foreclosed houses of materials to resell or use on lowball job bids, I knew a pretty well off contractor with an adult disabled son who turned to pushing pyramid schemes to try and stay alive basically. I ended up living in an abandoned house for months looking for work. Between the dot Com crash and the housing market bubble my family went from poor to middle class to hoping to survive winter. I remember my dad telling me in an interview they asked him why he changed careers twice and him just laughing like ‘‘you haven’t been in town long then’’ boom and bust. That’s been the nature of things. I still have health problems from getting pneumonia that year when I was basically homeless, I had a friend drag me to a clinic to get penicillin, the doctor had me wait around a few hours so he could have multiple med students come examine me, he had never seen anyone with that advanced of a case in his whole career. And I’m lucky, I know multiple people in their 20s like me at the time that died that winter because they refused to go to the hospital. They knew they couldn’t pay and didn’t want collections. I ended up getting a medical debt bankruptcy a few years later. You live through this and on the news they say things like ‘‘economic recession’’ and ‘‘down turn’’ maybe ‘‘soft raise in unemployment’’ like they guys who used to sign my paychecks were calling me asking if I heard about any work, standing next to me in the clinic line with sunken eyes. - I will say, at that time people were very open handed, you never needed to call someone to help you get your car out of the road, people would jump out and push you to the side, even put some gas in your tank to get home, I used to drive around with gas cans and a tow line especially in the snow, I used to have sand bags too, people would bend over backwards in a second when they saw your situation, it was a time of a lot of social closeness. And no one ever asked in you had a damm job. My god. No one ever said that shit. ‘‘Get a job?’’ Someone might shoot you for that. 
- Private equity will buy everything with no public sale. - Indeed, backed by the force of the state no less. 
- Assuming they don’t completely collapse on their own due to their bad investments. This might actually happen from how things are going. Unfortunately, it’ll also kick off a larger recession/depression - No no they’ll get bailouts. Billions in corporate welfare for donating a few million to whatever grift Trump is running at that moment. 
 
 
- Banks have auctions remotely now to prevent this sort of class solidarity. 
- Absolutely not, there’d be some TikTok influencer that would be like “Broooo you can get land so cheap!” and buy it all and sell it for massive profit. - Or Mr Beast would buy it and give it back while looking like an animatronic wearing a dead face. - He likes views, he’d make the farmer do some stupid challenge to win back some portion of the land, selling off whatever the farmer couldn’t “win” - I don’t really know what he does, except that he gives stuff to people. That’s the full content of my Mr Beast file. That and a mugshot. - He doesn’t give stuff to people. - It’s an investment to make more money. 
- Less “he gives people stuff” and more “he exploits peoples desperation for views.” 
- I watched part of one video a few years ago because the title said something about crashing a train and I just wanted to see what kind of equipment they were destroying and how they managed safety. Instead my main takeaways were - The videos have such insanely fast pacing I needed a proper break from the screen after skipping through a few minutes of it
- They had some guy spending shitloads of money to try to protect a pile of cash from a pile of explosives (and whatever cash he protected he got to keep), also dubious on safety but with the way they edited and of course basic knowledge of explosive safety (such as, everybody stay away from the explosives and don’t leave random explosives lying around in disorganized piles), I’m guessing the pile of explosives was entirely digital
- The train was in fact nothing special. Just some old equipment from the 80s that already have some examples in preservation. Also I’m guessing they weren’t aware that most American trains do not have much in the way of crumple zones due to FRA regulations because they really set it up for what would be an impressive crash for a car which is built with tons of crumple zones and instead the train got dented up as it bounced
 
 
 
 
 
- Honestly, this is why I fled suburbia for someplace more integrated and communal. - I looked around and realized that I barely knew who lived there, and nobody had my back. Likewise, if someone was in trouble, I would never hear about it. I’m not unfriendly by any means, it’s just the whole tract-housing setup with no communal space is practically engineered to divide people up. Heap work hours and commute time on top of that, and all you know is someone keeps a car in so many driveways overnight; you never see any people. Everyone there really kept to themselves, as the environment made that easy to do. - I’m happy to say that I’m in a place now that would likely band together if it came down to it. 
- No. The auctions wouldn’t happen in person but online. Some reit or foreign money or both will bid more than the locals could afford. - Average folk probably wouldn’t even be allowed to participate. Only corporations with proof of excessive funds would be allowed to bid. - Only corporations whose name starts with the word “Black” and ends with “Rock” will be allowed to bid. 
 
- Well if there was one I don’t think everyone would submit to the banks or foreign money. - It has already happen. Look what happen in 08. The banks did the foreclosures and then just sat on the properties or sold them in mass to someone else. There wasn’t any auctions on the courthouse steps for the local populace to bid only a dollar. - Most of the tax delinquent auctions I’ve glanced at have a minimum bid of the entire assessed value of the property, which usually that assessment predates the tax delinquency so they end up being more expensive at auction than in normal property sales - I’ve not learned where to find foreclosure auctions listed yet but I would expect those to be similar 
- That wasn’t a great depression. - Because a depression is going to make banks sympathetic to the poors? Don’t bet on it. - A real depression wouldn’t spare anyone, everyone gets hit not just the poor. - That’s what’s going to make this one interesting. The cascade event for the great depression was a stock market crash which resulted in many of those wealthy people autodefenestrating, an event that the stock market was modified to prevent from happening in the same way in the future. It’s going to work the same as the last time for the poors, but it’s still to be determined if it’s going to hit the non-poors the same way. - autodefenestrating Thats a good word. 
 
- Why would that make banks less likely to take foreign money instead of more likely to take foreign money? 
 
 
- Says who? The Bush crash of 2008 destroyed a lot of lives, and the media never really covered it properly. My son still talks about how 2008 blew a whole in the lives of his entire generation, the way Covid did to the generation in 2020. The media acknowledged the decline of families during Covid, but not the Bush 2008 Crash. 
 
 
 
- It won’t be on the public web, FFS. - Why tax actions are in some places already 
 
 
- Absolutely not. Americans are now scumbags to each other. Especially after how they monetized homes and turned them into reality tv shows. About how the take an affordable home and make it unaffordable. Scumbag Americans will fuck each other over. - Scumbag murican checking in: The difference between a 65 year old and a 5 year old is nearly non-existent nowadays. Xenophobia is a hell of a drug. - In my experience young children are the most empathetic and caring people. Its surprising (also why lord of the flies is a stupid story). - Until they get parented by magats and sent to school. 
- 5 year olds haven’t been fully taught racism yet. 
- And a 15, 25, 35, 45, 55 year old… 
 
- I feel like this too 
 
- Most likely no. People nowadays have no empathy. Don’t care about others. No unity. 
- Not in the same way. There is still some anti-eviction resistance that goes on today. It’s rare and never successful in undoing evictions though. For the most part, I think the US is too individualistic, and the methods of preventing and breaking solidarity too refined for broad action to be successful. I imagine that during a depression, most desperate people would rather join the feds to feed their family by committing violence against others. Even now, ICE received 150k applications in a single week, and people aren’t anywhere near as desperate as they’d be in a depression. The government would have to basically collapse, and even then we’d probably end up more like the poor countries ruled by gangs and warlords that dangle the possibility of escaping poverty in exchange for extreme violence. - Labor solidarity decreased under Hoover, and only started increasing under FDR with a lot of government support. I’m skeptical we’ll ever have free and fair elections again, so I don’t envision a pro-union government anytime soon. 
- …dude half of my neighbors want to see me killed because of things like me refusing to worship that dead neonazi that recently got himself shot in the neck. - They’d buy off my possessions just so they could see my reaction as they set them ablaze. - No, not in my country (US). People will not band together like that again, possibly ever. 
- No. 
 50% of voting Americans deify a pathological lying pedophile rapist treasonous traitorous insurrectionist diaper-wearing convicted felon.
 So, “No”.- Only 40%. - Still terrifyingly high. - Trump won the national popular vote with a plurality of 49.8%, making him the first Republican to win the popular vote since George W. Bush in 2004. - No he didn’t. They cheated, and we ALL know it. Perhaps the greatest crime of appeasement the Dems have done so far has been to let MAGA get away with the biggest election fraud in American history. - Election fraud? - Let’s be real here, majority of Americans are stupid, particularly the Latino and black male voters that swung right this election. You reap what you sow - Yeah, election fraud. You claim it was disgruntled male black and Hispanic voters. Others claim it was young people refusing to vote over Israel. Others think it was a massive vote boycott because they were pissed that Harris didn’t go through a primary process. Everybody is grasping at any explanation that is NOT Election Fraud. - The OFFICIAL excuse that BOTH sides like to point to, are millions of ballots that were straight Democratic tickets, with Trump at the top, and ALL in the Swing States. Supposedly, there are MILLIONS of them, so many that they turned the election. - Apparently the Swing States have lots of these Trump-loving Democrats, and they don’t live anywhere else but those 7 states. I’d love to see one of these people get interviewed, and explain their thinking, but I’ve never seen such an interview. I’ve never heard of such a person. I, personally, have never spoken to anyone who voted like that, although MAGAs, and weak Democrats, claim that it’s 100% true. - I don’t believe those people exist at all. I think the Trump/ Musk/ Putin Election Scheme was simple - just change the Presidential pick on enough ballots, in only the seven Swing States, to win AND, since they can adjust the switch parameters to any percentage they want, they made it big enough that he could finally be the first Republican to claim the popular vote in almost 40 years. - Rigging one election in only 7 states was pretty easy, once they had control of the voting machines, but it is far more difficult to rig hundreds of Congressional and Senate races. Doing that same sort of vote-switching would be much more difficult for Congressional and Senate races, where the elections are spread out everywhere, there are alternative methods of voting, and the vote counts are much smaller and harder to camouflage. - The best way to avoid getting clobbered in the 2026 Midterms, is to make sure there isn’t a 2026 Midterms. That will happen at the end of next summer. Expect all three rings to be chaotic at next summer’s circus, before the impose Martial Law, and suspend elections for the first time in American history. - Then our Democracy has officially ended, and it’s on. 
 
 
- Damn, so what you’re saying is that it still isn’t 50%. Crazy. - If you think the .2% matters I’m going to start listing propaganda talking points from the 2024 presidential election cycle. - lol. 
 
- Well, if digging a moat was the goal the US certainly is there. Canada will have a field day with European tourists during football world cup. 
- 77,302,580 people is not half of America. It is 49.8% of the folks that bothered to vote. - More usefully, - In the 2024 presidential election, 73.6% (or 174 million people) of the citizen voting-age population was registered to vote and 65.3% (or 154 million people) voted according to new voting and registration tables released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. - 50% of VOTING Americans - It’s right there, 2nd line of the post you’re replying to. 
 
 
 
 
- California was populated by desperate people losing their farms and homes. See: grapes of Wrath. - Penny auctions happened, but they weren’t the norm nationwide. The banks did forclose and people did lose their homes and sometimes abandoned them because the land was worthless during the dust bowl. - If America gets that desperate again, you will see pockets of solidarity and community and other examples of heartlessness and tragedy. We can’t know how much unless it happens. - Same book described farmers letting good food rot because they needed to raise prices. If they gave the food away it would drop prices lower than they already were. - Like you said, banks would take people’s homes and abandon them because they didn’t want to set the standard that you could take loans out and not pay them. - Over 100 years ago the Great Depression proved without a doubt that capitalism is a garbage system and the only safety net it has is tax payer money. - If a bank that’s “too big to fail” and they’re on a downhill path, why waste resources trying to dig themselves out when they know they’ll get a fat paycheck from the people. - It’s insane to me that there’s middle/lower class people that defend this shit. 
- It’s in our future again at some point, what’s going to happen when there are a million or more climate refugees forming wandering groups in the nation’s interior, like Moses wandering the desert for a place to stay and food to eat. I shall call this “retirement” 
 











