Of course, there's always the question of what actually constitutes slavery....
Check. Who needs chains when you've got wages?
Of course, there's always the question of what actually constitutes slavery....
look up History Of Slavery on Wikipedia and go from there.I was not aware of that. Links?
Murder is not universally understood to be an unquestionably "absolute evil".The only point there is that it is not a universally understood to be an unquestionably "absolute evil" as was proposed in another thread.
Why should it be?Why isn't it?
look up History Of Slavery on Wikipedia and go from there.
Murder is not universally understood to be an unquestionably "absolute evil".
People still murder.
So the big what?
NOTHING is or ever was understood to be an unquestionably "absolute evil".
This point has been made a large number of times. You should tackle it.
As for your claim about what was being claimed, do you have an actual link to the post and claim in question? Was such an actual claim made? By whom? Quote? Link? I'm just checking in case anything was misunderstood.
Why should it be?
I find that line to be quite obvious. If you can stand up and leave its not slavery. That doesnt mean anything else goes. Bad treatment of labor is still bad, and wrong. But as long as you are free to leave its not slavery. There is still too much real slavery in the world to make that term vacant for the various other forms of bad labor treatment one wishes to condemn.If slavery is wrong, where is the line drawn?
Gurdur, this was sparked by this thread where DrBuzz0
was (apparently) arguing that some people should be personally attacked and driven off for the views they hold - such as that slavery is OK. (I may have DrBuzz0's point of view wrong here. It was really hard to make out exactly what he was trying to say. That's just what it *seems* he was saying, if I got it wrong, I apologize.)
I doubt Piscivore actually believes slavery is OK. I think he is more trying to point out that the views people have towards slavery have not always been universally the same as the views we currently hold in our society.
Further, I understood Dr. B to mean that since slavery was so absolutely, inocntravertably wrong that people should be shunned and mocked for even discussing the possibility that it might not be.Gurdur, this was sparked by this thread where DrBuzz0 was (apparently) arguing that some people should be personally attacked and driven off for the views they hold - such as that slavery is OK. (I may have DrBuzz0's point of view wrong here. It was really hard to make out exactly what he was trying to say. That's just what it *seems* he was saying, if I got it wrong, I apologize.)
One of the things running through my mind right now is that "Slavery" is a pretty broad term, and we may be throwing something out with that bathwater we might not want to.I doubt Piscivore actually believes slavery is OK. I think he is more trying to point out that the views people have towards slavery have not always been universally the same as the views we currently hold in our society.
Where does that leave prisoners? They are not free to leave, if we make them work for their keep does this make them slaves?I find that line to be quite obvious. If you can stand up and leave its not slavery.
My reaction here is heightened because someone else tried a variant of that position on yet a totally different slavery thread (actually an American Civil War thread); the poster in question is arguing, in essence, that because slavery was not "universally" condemned in 1862, it is somehow magically unfair to criticise the CSA for bringing itself into existence to protect its slavery institution.
Well, I have heard that mandating that welfare recipients (those who are capable of working) actually work for their benefits amounts to slavery.
That's an argument that I don't buy.
Yes, to continue the can o' worms...
Well, if they are held as prisoners with no other reason than to make them work, that would make them slaves. But the prisoners you are talking about are of course convicts. They have chosen their destiny when they committed the crime, and most of them will eventually be free. We allready have a better fitting term than slaves: convicts.Where does that leave prisoners? They are not free to leave, if we make them work for their keep does this make them slaves?
A better question about the where the line goes might be about drafted military. They are not free to leave, and are held for no other reason than to make them do military service, in times of war it may be for a time that is not specified. I still wouldnt consider them slaves, though, but they might fit he term better than convicts.
We've most of us been taught that, but it seems to me that this whole idea that "slavery is wrong" is a pretty recent development when considered against the scope of human history. And it isn't even universal- slavery still exists today, in all its forms. People have to participate in it, condone it, for it to still exist.
It further seems that would be a tremendous advantage to any small group's genetic survivability. The group gets to add the slave's manhours to its production without costing the group a the same resource share as another full member or competition for females.
Further, "slavery"- i.e. compulsory employment- seems like a viable way to ameliorate the cost of non-productive members of society- recidivistic prisoners, drug addicts, and the chronically un- or underemployed.
I'd like to hear some other ideas.
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In general though, there's one unifying thing that, at least I, can see in slavery throughout the ages. It's a differentiation of "them" and "us" by such things as skin color, manner of speaking and so on. Generally there is some comparison to animals. IE: "We can own them. Sure it would be wrong if they were like us, but they're not. They're not as smart. They're not as capable. They are like animals."
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Interesting, but this is often what is done in war. My FIL was in many of the major battles in the Pacific and says how they were "trained" to hate the Japanese. Well, he was a machine gunner in the Marines, and his job was to shoot and kill people. They happened to be Japanese, but he had been taught that they did not 'count' somehow, that it was OK to kill them.
One difference between war and slaves, though - in war you just kill them (or put them in prison) but in slavery, there they are - walking among you. You have to be careful they don't become aware of how many "they" are compared to "you". Otherwise you could have a successful revolt on your hands.
It's odd to me, because I was not raised that way, but to many people in the world there are different "classes" of people. Some are just "naturally" more important or somehow better. I don't see things that way, but I know that in many societies that is the reality of how people see things.
Interesting, but this is often what is done in war. My FIL was in many of the major battles in the Pacific and says how they were "trained" to hate the Japanese. Well, he was a machine gunner in the Marines, and his job was to shoot and kill people. They happened to be Japanese, but he had been taught that they did not 'count' somehow, that it was OK to kill them.
So I guess you wouldn't mind being a slave?Moral wrongs have a largely arbitrary element.
So I guess you wouldn't mind being a slave?