Moderator: Stoic Guardian
Polly wrote:So there's really no difference between a Ukranian 14 year old being sold to mobsters in London in order for her body to be traded with punters for money, and a 35 year old shelling peas in a factory for 10+ hours a day? Gee, I guess I missed that memo.
This is the same sort of shitty victim argument you get from all those people who say "Thass raycisst" if anyone implies that success might just be something you have personal control over.
I'm also intrigued as to when exactly voluntary work becomes slavery. If someone could let me know where the line is drawn I'd appreciate it. Is a ten hour day in a factory slavery but a 14 hour day in a restaurant not? If so, why not? Is there a chart listing all the jobs that count as slavery somewhere?
Flannel Jesus wrote:My point in this thread was that saying "wahhh, I don't make as much as that guy, that means I'm a slave" is a big slap in the face to every real slave. Yes, some people may have to live paycheck to paycheck -- that's similar to how the majority of people lived prior to industrialization. Business owners didn't make life hard. Life IS hard. I know it's comforting to have somebody to blame, but religion is also comforting. There's another thing that this train of thought has in common with religion -- they're both bullshit.
Great post Moreno.Moreno: Prior to industrialization there were different kinds of impovrished lifestyles where class differences and a system that maintained these led to scarcity amongst the laborers and peasants. Many of these people were slaves. Not to mention indentured servants. Blacks in the US often had it worse after slavery in sharecropper south. They were technically free, but the system used them in ways that benefitted other groups while they were no longer seen as 'my property' to anyone. This last is good in one way of course, but in another way it meant that no one took responsibility for the minimal 'upkeep' and maintenance of that property. In some ways this allowed portions of the white south to have the benefits of slavery without some of the overhead.
Slavery in history has included all kinds of lifestyles. In Rome and Greece slaves could be well fed, live in relative luxury compared to other slaves and still be slaves. In the north in the US there was a large number of indentured servants. They had short life spans, because of their working and living conditions, and little power, but were not considered slaves.
I think the term wage-slave is a good one. We know that these people can make choices that formal slaves cannot, and that the restrictions on their choices are made via indirect economic control rather than via a whip or gun.
But saying these people are just low wage workers is utterly misleading- given the implicit sense many people in other classes conceive this: they are only competent enough to live like that, they deserve what they have, they should just do X (like I did), and so on.
I was once involved in a project where single mothers on welfare were able to go to college without losing their benefits. Much of the system rejected this and always in the objections - by social workers, state bureaucrats, local conservatives - we were told these women should not be treated as special and they have other choices. These choices were always presented as obvious and were specific.
We got all parties in a room together. Each time a, for example, social worker would say ' they should do this' we would turn to the other members of the group and do a reality check. Likewise with state official 'solutions'.
All these obvious choices that these women should make turned out to be hallucinations. all those obvious solutions put their children in jeopardy in various ways.
After this was clear to all parties, there was support for the program which indeed lead to a decent percentage getting degrees that allowed them to jump out of welfare without jeopardizing their children. Win Win. And very rapidly cheaper for the state - which did not pay for the education, loans did.
I mention this because I think choices are often projected onto situations where there are no good ones. Because one can make devastating choices it seems like it is not slavery - I realize in my example these were not menial workers. But isn't that what slavery was? One could run away, talk back, demand better treatment of one's children, but these were, generally, devastating choices.
We see no one with a whip or gun and so it can't be slavery.
This all doesn't mean the business owner is the moral equivalent of an overseer with a whip/slave owner. Now the system hides the whip in economic consequences.
And before industrialization we had communities and a commons in ways we do not now. Now we are all supposed to be disconnected monads.
Flannel Jesus wrote:Polly, I think they just like being melodramatic. If someone's not living in the same quality as some other people, they have to be a slave. It is, like you said, much like the whole "That's Racist!" meme -- it's just an over-dramatic leftist response to things so they can feel righteous and shit. It's an appeal to emotion, calling this "slavery" and that "racism". That's what the left is best at -- using overly strong language to appeal to peoples' emotions. So, I say let 'em have it, let 'em debase those words until they're meaningless, let them cry wolf time and time again. I'm not listening to their cries, and soon enough no one will.
Flannel Jesus wrote:One more try to explain why it's ridiculous to call minimum-wage jobs in the US "slavery":
Since when did people go out of their way to apply to be slaves? In my history lessons on slavery in early US history, I don't recall hearing stories of black people going to their local McSlaveCorp office and handing in their resume. Maybe I was sick that day in history class. Or maybe it's bullshit to compare working a job that you applied for deliberately to people being dragged away from their homes against their will and forced to work.
Since we eliminated roles. Certainly any peasant not under the thumb of some noble would have quite quickly have had to try to get under the thumb of a noble. This would give them a right to be somewhere, a right to use whatever commons there was and a right to farm and keep some of the products of that farming.Flannel Jesus wrote:One more try to explain why it's ridiculous to call minimum-wage jobs in the US "slavery":
Since when did people go out of their way to apply to be slaves?
James L Walker wrote: To Pink Dildo:
I thought the mark of a slave's occupation is depressing, humiliating, pointless, and overall underpaid.
Magsj wrote:I met a guy who abhorred all authority figures but he was lovely ergo.. the two can go together.
...make that money being wasted, as well as time.FilmSnob wrote:How do you figure?Magsj wrote:...yeah, that your average person is a tasteless bore who hinders progression.FilmSnob wrote:...the trends in the regularity of the answers always reveal something.
aes dhammo sanantano Pali: 'this is the eternal law'Moreno wrote:If you want to eat, you need to get money. Low wages is better than no wages or getting put in prison for acquiring food other ways.
It's not like they are choosing between a higher wage job where they have some respect and can act like humans instead of automatons.
I don't see the choice in this.
James L Walker wrote:I thought you said that you were some sort of anarcho capitalist or libertarian.
You sound to me like some sort of pompous naive privileged portion of the population.
You might as well become some sort of full fledged neo conservative republican government supporter the way you talk.
If you think there will be huge numbers of people offering themselves into menial wage slavery in a existence of anarchy you must be some sort of comedian.
uglypeoplefucking wrote:when one's life is devoted, out of necessity, to drudgery and menial work for low wages that are not sufficient to provide them with any opportunity for advancement or improvment of their condition, they are a slave.
Flannel Jesus wrote:Doing the things you need to do to eat is, in fact, NOT enough to qualify someone as a slave. I can think of some pretty simple examples. Here's one: NEARLY EVERY SINGLE PERSON PRIOR TO MODERN TIMES!
People used to actually have to work to eat all the time. They had to hunt, gather, forage, scavenge. If they didn't, they starved. Were they slaves? Slaves to whom?
uglypeoplefucking wrote:when one's life is devoted, out of necessity, to drudgery and menial work for low wages that are not sufficient to provide them with any opportunity for advancement or improvment of their condition, they are a slave.
not difficult to understand, not hyperbole, not leftist propaganda, just an accurate description of the life led by a substantial underclass of people AROUND the world.
yes some slaves have it worse than others, but that has ALWAYS been the case with slaves: working at McDonalds or Wal Mart is probably not as bad as being a teenager sold into sex slavery. So what?
doesn't mean it isn't slavery. i mean, skin cancer isn't as bad as pancreatic cancer, but it's still cancer.
Magsj wrote:I met a guy who abhorred all authority figures but he was lovely ergo.. the two can go together.
Pandora wrote:James L Walker wrote: I cannot wait for global economic collapse. The first people to be devoured will be people just like you. Only then will you understand the true meaning of victim and powerlessness.
If the true meaning of victimhood and powerlessness lies in one sitting at a local Starbucks and whining about how unfair one's life is as he sucks on his grande caramel frapuccino, then we are all doomed.
[ I'm sorry Joker, I don't think a single melancholy violin can capture the magnitude of your person's immense suffering. Here, this is more to your scale]:

SIATD v2 wrote:uglypeoplefucking wrote:when one's life is devoted, out of necessity, to drudgery and menial work for low wages that are not sufficient to provide them with any opportunity for advancement or improvment of their condition, they are a slave.
No, they are underpaid and overworked. They still own their own labour. A slave does not.
So working at Wal Mart and living in your parents basement is nowhere near as bad as seeing your village destroyed, your sister and mother raped, you and your father and brothers rounded up and imprisoned on a ship, taken across the Atlantic, during which time your father and several of your brothers are beaten to death or starve and are thrown overboard, only to arrive in the 'land of freedom' where you spend the rest of your days picking cotton for some rich white motherfucker. Nowhere near as bad.
Flannel Jesus wrote:uglypeoplefucking wrote:when one's life is devoted, out of necessity, to drudgery and menial work for low wages that are not sufficient to provide them with any opportunity for advancement or improvment of their condition, they are a slave.Flannel Jesus wrote:Doing the things you need to do to eat is, in fact, NOT enough to qualify someone as a slave. I can think of some pretty simple examples. Here's one: NEARLY EVERY SINGLE PERSON PRIOR TO MODERN TIMES!
People used to actually have to work to eat all the time. They had to hunt, gather, forage, scavenge. If they didn't, they starved. Were they slaves? Slaves to whom?
having to do things is not what constitutes slavery. being forced by natural drives and needs isn't what slavery is. being forced by people to do things is slavery, but being forced by hunger to do things is not.
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