Got to the bit I was interested in re: treatment of the indigent "Chronic unemployment was a major problem . . . Most towns looked after their own; elderly residents were treated with decency, respect, and compassion." Towns had a dole of bread, butter, and coal. BUT
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In New England, "'liberty' often described something which belonged not to an individual but to an entire community . . . 'publick liberty' as it was sometimes called was thought to be consistent with close restraints upon individuals."
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"Collective liberty was also expressed in many bizarre obligations . . . Eastham's town meeting ordered that no single man could marry until he had killed six blackbirds or three crows. Every town book contained many such rules."
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"The laws . . . granted some liberties to all men, others to all free men, and a few only to gentlemen . . . 'any man equal to a gentleman' was granted liberty of not to be punished by whipping 'unless his crime be very shameful and his course of life vicious and profligate.'"
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"The founding generation often wrote of 'soul liberty' . . . [what they meant was] freedom for the true faith. . . . this idea of religious liberty consistent with the persecution of [long list of denominations] except those within a very narrow spectrum of Calvinists orthodoxy."
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this concludes my read on the Puritans. what a journey! sorry to end on a B A S I C take but boy just fuck these cops join me next time as I delve into those knockoff Norman bastards, the cavalierspic.twitter.com/lvMXYnp2ev
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and here is the start of my Let's Read Albion's Seed thread on the Cavaliershttps://twitter.com/eigenrobot/status/1058233318158753793?s=19 …
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an outcome of this read is that I now hate society more holistically than I realized I ought to
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