Ideology Thread: Race is not biology — it is policy. Whiteness was invented as a legal category in Virginia in the 1680s to prevent a multiracial rebellion from happening again.

Ideology Thread · 1676–Present

The Invention
of Race

Race is not a biological fact. It is a political technology — invented at a specific time, by specific people, for a specific purpose. In 1676, Black and white servants in Virginia fought together against the colonial elite and nearly won. Within a decade, the Virginia legislature had invented "whiteness" as a legal category with privileges — and made Blackness synonymous with permanent, heritable enslavement. This thread documents who built racism, why, and how it has been maintained through law, science, religion, and culture ever since.

Period
1676 – Present
Race as Biology
Not supported — Human Genome Project, 2003
Race as Policy
Invented in Virginia, 1680s–1705
The thread's argument

Racism was not a natural human reaction to difference. It was an engineered system, built to solve a specific political problem: how do you prevent poor white and poor Black workers from uniting against the wealthy class that exploits both of them? The answer, invented in Virginia in the 1680s, was to give poor white people a racial identity with attached privileges — making racial solidarity with Black people economically costly and socially unthinkable. This is documented in the actual laws passed. The ideology of white supremacy came after the policy, to justify what the policy required. Understanding racism as a constructed system — with inventors, architects, and a maintenance structure — is the beginning of understanding how it could, in theory, be dismantled.

Era I · Before Race: Class Was the Divide, 1619–1676
1619–1676 — Virginia Colony

Before Whiteness: When Race Barely Existed as a Category

Early Virginia Colony · Indentured Servants · Enslaved Africans
1619
first Africans arrive in Virginia — as indentured servants, not as racial slaves
1640
first recorded instance of a Virginia court sentencing an African to lifetime servitude
1650s–70s
period when African and white indentured servants lived, worked, resisted, and cohabited together

The first Africans to arrive in the English colonies of North America in 1619 did not arrive as racial slaves in the legal sense that would develop over the following decades. They arrived as indentured servants — the same legal category as many poor white English migrants — who would work for a fixed term in exchange for passage, and then be free. Some of the first Africans in Virginia completed their indentures, received land grants, and became small landowners. Anthony Johnson, an African who arrived in the 1620s, eventually owned 250 acres in Virginia and himself held indentured servants, including white ones.

In the early colonial period, the relevant social divide was not race — it was class. Poor white indentured servants and enslaved or indentured Africans occupied roughly the same social position: they worked the same fields, lived in the same quarters, were subjected to the same corporal punishment, and shared the same condition of exploitation by the planter elite. They socialized together. They had children together. They escaped together. They organized together.

The word "white" as a racial category was rarely used in colonial Virginia before the 1680s. Legal documents referred to "Christian" and "Negro," "servant" and "slave," "English" and "African" — but not yet "white" and "Black" as comprehensive, permanent, heritable racial categories. That invention came later, for a specific reason.

The Anthony Johnson Fact

Anthony Johnson arrived in Virginia around 1621 as an indentured servant. He completed his term, received a land grant, and by 1651 owned 250 acres and five servants — including at least one white servant and one African servant he successfully sued to hold as a slave for life. This is not a story of early racial harmony. It is evidence that before racial categories were legally hardened, class position, not race, primarily determined social fate — and that the hardening of racial categories was a deliberate subsequent choice, not a natural evolution.

1676 — Virginia Colony

Bacon's Rebellion: The Multiracial Uprising That Invented Whiteness

Jamestown, Virginia · Nathaniel Bacon · Governor William Berkeley
1676
year of Bacon's Rebellion — the turning point in the invention of American race
~500
rebels who burned Jamestown — Black and white together
4 yrs
before Virginia begins systematically encoding racial hierarchy into law

In 1676, a planter named Nathaniel Bacon led an armed rebellion against the Virginia colonial government. The rebellion is usually taught as a conflict over frontier policy and Native American relations. That framing obscures what made it genuinely terrifying to the colonial elite: Bacon's army included both white indentured servants and Black enslaved people fighting side by side. Approximately 500 rebels — of mixed race — burned Jamestown to the ground. The colonial governor fled.

Bacon died of dysentery before the rebellion was crushed. His army dispersed. But the Virginia planter class had seen something that changed everything: when poor white and poor Black people recognized their common interests against the wealthy, the entire social order became vulnerable. The question the planters now faced was not military but political: how do you prevent this coalition from forming again?

The answer they arrived at was elegant and brutal: give white servants a racial identity that made them structurally superior to Black workers, regardless of their class position. A poor white man who identified as white had something a poor Black man did not — and defending that something would prevent him from making common cause with the person below him. The invention of whiteness as a political category was the planter class's solution to the problem of multiracial class solidarity.

"They dare not make the servants too hard, their slaves being at least as numerous as themselves — the only remedy is to make the distinction between them and their white laborers much greater than before."

— Virginia planter, c. 1680, on the problem posed by Bacon's Rebellion

Era II · The Legal Construction of Race, 1680–1705
1680–1705 — Virginia Colony

The Virginia Slave Codes: Whiteness Invented as Law

Virginia General Assembly · Act XII (1705) · The Legal Architecture of Race
1662
Virginia law: enslaved status becomes heritable through the mother — bloodline slavery begins
1670
Virginia law: free Black people prohibited from owning white servants
1705
Virginia Slave Code: comprehensive legal architecture of racial hierarchy enacted

Between 1680 and 1705, the Virginia General Assembly passed a series of laws that systematically built racial hierarchy into the legal code. Each law served two functions: restricting Black freedom and extending white privilege. Read together, they constitute the invention of the American racial system.

1662: Enslaved status becomes hereditary through the mother. Previously, the status of children born of mixed-race unions was ambiguous. This law resolved the ambiguity by making enslavement a bloodline condition — ensuring that the children of enslaved women were also property, regardless of paternity. This was the moment slavery became racial and permanent rather than contractual and temporary.

1670: Free Black people prohibited from owning white servants. This removed one avenue through which free Black people could accumulate economic power.

1680: Black people prohibited from carrying weapons and from lifting a hand against a Christian. The word "Christian" here means "white" — the law creates a racial hierarchy through religious language.

1691: Interracial marriage prohibited and interracial couples banished. This was specifically designed to prevent the kind of social mixing that had characterized the pre-Bacon's Rebellion period.

1705: The comprehensive Virginia Slave Code. It abolished the last vestiges of African indentured servitude. It made all non-Christian servants arriving from abroad slaves for life. It gave white servants finishing their indentures 50 acres of land and guns — a material investment in white identity. And it made white people who aided or harbored escaped enslaved people liable for the full value of that person. The 1705 Code is the founding document of American whiteness.

The Laws That Built Race
1662
Hereditary Slavery Through the Mother
Enslaved status becomes a bloodline condition. Children of enslaved women are property regardless of their father's status. Slavery becomes racial and permanent.
1691
Anti-Miscegenation Law
Interracial marriage prohibited. Specifically designed to prevent the social mixing that enabled multiracial solidarity.
1705
Virginia Slave Code — The Founding Document of Whiteness
White servants given land and guns on completion. Non-Christian servants enslaved for life. Racial hierarchy comprehensively encoded. The word "white" appears repeatedly as a legal category for the first time.
The Deliberate Gift to Poor White People

The 1705 code gave freed white indentured servants 50 acres of land and a musket. This was not generosity — it was politics. Poor white people who might otherwise identify with poor Black people were given a material stake in the racial system: land, weapons, and legal superiority. Their cooperation with racial hierarchy was purchased with concrete benefits. This is the original "wages of whiteness" — a term W.E.B. Du Bois would later use to describe the psychological and social benefits that kept poor white workers loyal to a system that economically exploited them.

Era III · The Ideology Built to Justify the Policy, 1700s–1900s
1600s–1800s

The Church Provides Cover: "The Curse of Ham"

Genesis 9:20–27 · Colonial and Antebellum Theological Justification
Genesis 9
the biblical passage used to justify African enslavement — though it says nothing about Africa or race
1700s
when "the Curse of Ham" became the primary American religious justification for slavery
1861
Confederate Vice President Stephens: slavery is the "cornerstone" of their government — no religious hedging

Once racial slavery was established as law and economic policy, it required ideological justification. The first apparatus deployed was theological. The "Curse of Ham" — a reading of Genesis 9 in which Noah curses Canaan (Ham's son) to be "a servant of servants" — was reinterpreted in the American colonial context as a divine sanction for African slavery. The text makes no mention of Africa, skin color, or race. None of this prevented it from becoming the dominant religious justification for slavery in the American South for 200 years.

The theological argument served a specific function: it transformed what was a political and economic choice into a divine mandate. If God had ordained that Africans be enslaved, then slaveholders were not criminals — they were agents of providential order. Enslaved people who resisted were not asserting a natural right to freedom — they were defying God's will. The argument was circular, self-sealing, and enormously useful.

As the abolitionist movement grew in the 19th century, pro-slavery theology became increasingly elaborate. Thornton Stringfellow's Scriptural and Statistical Views in Favor of Slavery (1856) compiled every biblical reference to servitude as evidence of divine approval. Ministers who questioned slavery were expelled from Southern denominations. By 1860, the major Protestant denominations had split along sectional lines specifically over slavery — the Southern Baptist Convention, founded in 1845, was formed explicitly to defend the practice.

1700s–1930s

Pseudo-Science: Building Race into Biology to Justify What Was Actually Economics

Samuel Morton · Josiah Nott · Louis Agassiz · Eugenics Movement
1839
Samuel Morton publishes skull measurements "proving" racial hierarchy — data later shown to be fabricated
1907
Indiana becomes first state to pass forced sterilization law targeting "unfit" (disproportionately Black) people
2003
Human Genome Project confirms: race has no biological basis in human genetics

As the Enlightenment produced a scientific culture that demanded empirical justification for social arrangements, the ideological justification for slavery shifted from theology to biology. A generation of American and European scientists constructed what they called "scientific racism" — a body of research purporting to demonstrate that racial hierarchy was a natural, biological fact rather than a political construction.

Samuel Morton, a Philadelphia physician, spent decades collecting and measuring human skulls from around the world. His 1839 book Crania Americana claimed to demonstrate that cranial capacity — and therefore intelligence — varied by race, with white Europeans at the top and Black Africans at the bottom. His work was enormously influential. In 1978, Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould reanalyzed Morton's original data and found that Morton had systematically and unconsciously manipulated his measurements to match his racial assumptions. The "science" was the conclusion dressed up as evidence.

Louis Agassiz, the most prominent American naturalist of the 19th century, was a "polygenist" — he believed different races were separately created and constituted distinct species. He initially found the idea of racial hierarchy repugnant, then visited the United States, encountered Black Americans for the first time, and recorded in a letter his visceral disgust — which he subsequently theorized into "scientific" conclusions about racial difference.

The eugenics movement of the early 20th century was the industrial-scale version of this tradition. It produced forced sterilization programs (Indiana, 1907; 32 states by 1935), immigration restriction laws targeting Southern and Eastern Europeans and Asians (1924 Immigration Act), and the intellectual framework that Nazi Germany's racial hygiene program explicitly cited as its model. American eugenics preceded and informed Nazi eugenics. The German scientists came to American conferences to learn American techniques.

💀
Morton's Skulls
Data fabricated to fit racial assumptions. 1839 "science" refuted 1978. Taught as fact for 140 years.
🧬
Human Genome Project
2003: genetic variation within racial groups exceeds variation between them. Race is not biology.
🏛️
Eugenics → Nazis
American eugenics programs were the explicit model for Nazi racial hygiene. German scientists came to America to study the system.
1865–Present

The Wages of Whiteness: Why Ordinary White People Enforced the System

W.E.B. Du Bois · Black Reconstruction · The Psychology of Race
1935
Du Bois names the "psychological wage of whiteness" in Black Reconstruction in America
75%
of Southern white families owned no enslaved people in 1860 — but enforced the system anyway
~$0
economic benefit to poor white workers from slavery — they were economically harmed by competition from unpaid labor

A frequently asked question about American slavery: why did poor white people — who owned no enslaved people and received no economic benefit from slavery — enforce, defend, and die for the system? Why did white Southern farmers who would never own plantations fight a war to preserve a class system that exploited them too?

In 1935, W.E.B. Du Bois named the answer in Black Reconstruction in America: the "psychological wage of whiteness." Poor white workers received no material wage from the racial system. In fact, they were economically harmed by it — enslaved labor depressed wages for free workers and made it harder for poor white people to compete economically. But they received something else: social status. The certainty of being better than someone, regardless of their own economic condition. A poor white sharecropper and a wealthy planter had nothing materially in common — but they were both white, and that shared identity was enough to prevent the class coalition that could have threatened both of their economic relationships.

This is why the system was self-maintaining. The planter class didn't need to personally enforce racial hierarchy — they had convinced poor white people that their own dignity depended on Black subordination. Slave patrols — the precursors of American policing — were staffed primarily by non-slaveholding white men, who enforced the property rights of wealthy slaveholders for free, in exchange for the racial status the system provided.

This dynamic persists. Economic analyses consistently show that racial resentment — not economic anxiety — is the primary predictor of white support for policies that harm white economic interests. The psychological wage of whiteness is still being paid, and it is still distorting political behavior in ways that serve the wealthy at the expense of everyone else.

"The white group of laborers, while they received a low wage, were compensated in part by a sort of public and psychological wage. They were given public deference… because they were white."

— W.E.B. Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America, 1935

Era IV · The Maintenance Structure: How Racism Is Reproduced, 1900s–Present
1915–Present

How Racism Is Actively Reproduced: Media, Schools, and Institutions

Birth of a Nation · School Curricula · Media Representation · The Carceral State
1915
Birth of a Nation screened at the White House — launched KKK revival, established anti-Black film tropes
1944
Gunnar Myrdal's An American Dilemma documents how white Americans hold racial beliefs they've never examined
44
states with laws restricting teaching of race history as of 2024

Racism does not reproduce itself automatically. It has to be actively transmitted through institutions. The mechanisms are documented.

Cinema and media. D.W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation (1915) — screened at the White House by Woodrow Wilson, who called it "history written in lightning" — established the visual vocabulary of anti-Black racism in American popular culture for the 20th century: the predatory Black man, the noble Klansman, the happy enslaved person, the dangerous freed one. These tropes recirculated through Hollywood for generations, shaping how white Americans understood Black people without ever having to consciously examine that understanding.

School curricula. As documented in the "How Slavery Really Ended" thread, the Lost Cause curriculum taught by the United Daughters of the Confederacy presented slavery as benevolent, Reconstruction as corrupt, and the Confederacy as noble. Generations of American schoolchildren — not just in the South — were taught a version of history designed to make racial hierarchy seem natural and its origins seem distant. As of 2024, 44 states have passed legislation restricting how race, slavery, and their ongoing consequences are taught in public schools. The ideological project continues.

The carceral system. Mass incarceration — documented in its own thread — functions partly as an ideology-reproducing machine: it associates Black people with criminality in the public imagination, justifying the racial hierarchy of the present through the apparent evidence of the present, without reference to the policies that produced the incarceration rates.

1676–Present and Beyond

What the Record Shows: Racism Was a Choice — and Choices Can Be Unmade

The Historical Argument · The Policy Implication
1676
the year that most directly explains the racial system the US lives with today
~40 yrs
it took to build the legal architecture of racial hierarchy in Virginia — 1662 to 1705
0
biological basis for race — confirmed by every major genetics study since 2003

The through-line of this thread is a specific historical argument: racism was not inevitable. It was not a natural human response to difference. It was an engineered system, built by identifiable people in response to an identifiable political problem, using identifiable mechanisms — law, theology, science, media, and curriculum — to make a political construction look like a natural fact.

The evidence for this argument is in the historical record. Before Bacon's Rebellion, white and Black workers cohabited, organized, and rebelled together. After 1680, a deliberate series of legal interventions created the categories, assigned the privileges, and manufactured the ideology that made racial solidarity across color lines politically unthinkable. The laws are in the archive. The dates are known. The people who wrote them are named.

This matters because if racism was built, it can be dismantled. Not easily, not quickly — the system has had 350 years to entrench itself in law, culture, economics, and psychology. But it was not handed down from nature. It was not written in biology. It was written in legislation by the Virginia General Assembly between 1662 and 1705, extended by pseudo-scientists who fabricated data, maintained by media that recycled stereotypes, and preserved by school curricula that hid the origins.

Understanding the construction of race does not require assigning individual guilt to white people living today. Most white Americans did not choose the system they were born into, any more than Black Americans chose the one they were born into. But the system is real, its effects are real, and the record of its construction is available to anyone who looks for it. The question "why did white people do this?" has a documentable answer: specific white people, in a specific time and place, built a system to solve a political problem. The system outlasted the problem it was built to solve. It is still running. And it was built by human beings, which means it can be changed by them.

"White people are not white. Part of the price of the white ticket is not seeing the world clearly — they have invested too much in maintaining a lie."

— James Baldwin, 1984

The Science Is Settled

The Human Genome Project, completed in 2003, confirmed what population geneticists had argued for decades: there is more genetic variation within racial groups than between them. Race is not a biological category. It is a social and political one. The entire edifice of "scientific racism" — Morton's skulls, polygenism, eugenics — was fabricated to justify what was already policy. The policy came first. The science was invented to explain it.

The Full Picture

Race was invented. The extraction system that used it is still running.

Whiteness was built in Virginia in 40 years. The economic system it enabled has run for 400. Follow the economic thread.