I don't think that's remotely true. Jim Crow and lynching and brutal suppression don't negate the huge difference between slavery and freedom, no matter how circumscribed. There was very little impetus from freed slaves to return to their previous circumstances.
Indeed, but there was also appetite for abolishing slavery within, and as has also been pointed out, the plight of freed slaves was barely improved at all once they had their freedom. Not one I would chalk up as a victory, personally.
I'm quoting westprog because I agree with what he said. But I'll add two quick comments --
I suspect that the wealthy southern slave owners would disagree with you about an appetite for abolishing slavery within. Non-American, Yankee, and slaves opinions probably didn't count as far as they were concerned.
Anytime slavery is banned is an amazing accomplishment. It's true that historically one doesn't go from the slave class to equal opportunities overnight. But in the USA we moved from slavery based on race to an African-American President in about 6 generations. That is remarkable, and probably compares extremely well with just about any other country's history.
<snip> How old does something have to be to qualify as culture? The white SA's were in South Africa for as long as many of the black SA's whom they were oppressing. They had had their view of non-white people's for almost as long as they had contact with them.
Again, that was a fire that was already burning within. Nelson Mandela was already doing serious jail time for protesting apartheid before we in the West really caught on.
However, that is one area that I would have had no problems with the application of some serious (non-military) force, given that white South Africans are all descendants of western cultures, and generally hold to the same values and standards as the rest of us. I would not have considered the 'West' an external player in this, and would have considered it 'reining in our unruly children'. It's not like the White SAs could even claim apartheid as 'cultural heritage' any more - certainly not by the late 70's, early 80s.
Again, I'm quoting westprog because I agree with what he has to say -- and I'll add a few more comments.
I think the anti-apartheid movement in other countries goes further back than that. Here's a
wiki article saying that an anti-apartheid movement began in Great Britain back in 1959.
The world is very interconnected, and I suspect that most freedom movements are helped along by individuals and countries physically removed from the conflict, sometimes for altruistic reasons and sometimes for non-altruistic reasons. If you read the BBC link about Great Britain's efforts to ban the slave trade in the Atlantic it was also self-serving in that it got caught up in GB's expansionism goals. The USA revolution against GB was helped by countries, including France, that had their own reasons for wanting to see GB lose some colonies.
As far as Western values -- which ones? It's hardly been homogeneous. Europe's history is bloody and minorities of all sorts of ethnic groups and creeds were brutalized. At about the same time the USA was undergoing the Civil War (over slavery) -- many wealthy Eastern Europeans (OK, not Western Europe but not that far away either physically or in shared philosophies) were asserting that serfs should not be considered fully human. HG Wells book, The Time Machine, was not written in a historical vacuum. I hesitate to Godwin the thread, but the ideas behind anti-apartheid were probably not that separate from the ideas behind Hitler's dream of "living space" for the "master race" and that was probably rooted in the same ideas behind the wide spread popularity of eugenics in the Western World prior to WWII. So ... which Western Values? And if you don't distinguish moral values from other cultural values ... why do so with South Africa?
Lack of freedom, rights and dignity in one part of the world has the potential to encourage lack of freedom, rights and dignity in other parts of the world. None of us are an island. IMHO, I think that is why so many people feel comfortable with the idea of helping people, regardless of who they are or where they live secure freedom, rights and dignity. And that is also why so many people of a more tyrannical nature, also feel comfortable with trying to take freedom, rights and dignity away from others.