Source: J. A. Hobson's Imperialism: A Study: A Centennial Retrospective (2002), p. 11.
“In the entire circuit of the globe those races which have developed under a tropical sun are found to be indolent and fickle. From the standpoint of survival of the fittest, such vices are virtues, for severe and continuous exertion under tropical conditions bring prostration and predisposition to disease. Therefore, if such races are to adopt that industrious life which is a second nature to races of the temperate zones, it is only through some form of compulsion. The negro could not possibly have found a place in American industry had he come as a free man.”
pg. 136.
Races and Immigrants in America, 1907
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John R. Commons 26
United States institutional economist and labor historian 1862–1945Related quotes
This is from a fictional speech by Lincoln which occurs in The Clansman : An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan (1905) by Thomas Dixon, Jr.. On some sites this has been declared to be something Lincoln said "soon after signing" the Emancipation Proclamation, but without any date or other indications of to whom it was stated, and there are no actual historical records of Lincoln ever saying this.
Misattributed
Wright Jr. 87 Years Behind the Black Curtain: An Autobiography. 1965
The motive is not a desire to elevate the negro, but to humiliate and degrade those of mixed blood; not a desire to bring the negro up, but to cast the mulatto and the quadroon down by forcing him below an arbitrary and hated color line.
1880s, The Future of the Colored Race (1886)
Second Thesis
Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View (1784)
The Devil's Dictionary (1911)
Source: The Unabridged Devil's Dictionary