A little bit of history to add to this: the slave powers in the antebellum south also employed these tactics and more in order to perpetuate their stranglehold on southern and, for close to a century, national politics. The existence of slave labor artificially depressed wages in the south, because why pay a free person something to do work for you if you can just use your slaves instead, or pay another master to use his slaves if you don't own any yourself? This created a stark economic divide between a small cabal of ultra-wealthy plantation owners on the top and a massive number of unlanded poor whites at the bottom alongside the slaves. Fearing a disruption to this order by an organized political movement among the poor or, even worse, an alliance between poor whites and slaves in a bi-racial uprising, the slavers took steps to try to perpetuate this divide and ensure their rule over the region.Elfdart wrote: ↑2019-01-02 06:18pmI don't think the system is "broken" at all -it's doing exactly what the folks in charge of educational policy want it to do: It's making it difficult for members of the Great Unwashed to become doctors, engineers and lawyers. The GI Bill (and more importantly, federal aid to education for others normally left out) was arguably FDR's greatest domestic achievement, providing free or cheap education to veterans and others so they could have real jobs. Not only did this create the American Middle Class, it also nipped in the bud any movement to recruit vast numbers of disgruntled, unemployed war veterans for paramilitary activities, whether in black shirts or white hoods. So naturally, the right-wingers in this loony bin of a country went to great lengths to tear it up.
Public education was banned to try to keep the poor from being able to consume abolitionist literature, possession of which also being made illegal with a de facto death sentence (you'd get lynched if you got caught with any). Poll taxes and literacy tests were created to deprive this uneducated underclass of the ability to vote. Poverty was criminalized by banning behaviors exclusive to the poor, through things like vagrancy laws. When a poor person did get work, usually when there weren't enough slaves available, they often received payment-in-kind, since paying them that way instead of with cash allowed the employer to control what they got in exchange for their work, and thus help control their behavior, or through promissory notes, which put the worker at the mercy of their employer's ability and/or willingness to uphold their end of the arrangement later on.
Sometimes, poor workers could get their hands on some land by becoming a sharecropper or tenant farmer for a plantation owner, being allowed to live there in exchange for giving a percentage of their crops to the owner. However, they were often loaned the land with the poorest soil quality, since then poor harvests would trap them in a perpetual cycle of debt to their landlord. On top of this, they were often legally barred from actually selling the crops they did manage to grow, since many states implemented licensing laws for peddling where the yearly license fees often cost several times more than what a poor person could reasonably expect to make in that time.
To bring this all full circle, poor women would sometimes be forced to prostitute themselves in order to make ends meet, since their bodies were the only things they had to sell. When they did this, however, the state was able to label them as poor caretakers, giving them legal justification to take away their children and bind them to apprenticeships. The apprenticeships were slavery in all but name, since the kids were paid nothing and were not allowed to leave regardless of how poorly they were treated. The main difference is that these apprenticeships only lasted until the kid was age 21, so if they were lucky, the kid would be taken from their parents, forced to work for free for often over a decade, then unceremoniously dumped out onto the street with some trade skills that are not in demand because there are still plenty of slaves and bound apprentices to do the work.