I see no parallel between punishment for breaking a law imposed by a court within a just legal system and taking someone's freedom on the basis of the color of their skin, their ancestry or their social class.
I think the reason is the word you added- "just". The assumption that any particular legal system can be expected to be always "just" is
questionable. It is a goal I don't see anyone has ever achieved, and as long as human are involved I don't see that any every will be. It is a noble goal, one to strive for, and one towards which great strides have been made, but one I can't see we will ever reach.
If it comes down to it I suppose you could say that if a person's appeals are exhausted and no evidence so substantial as to prompt court's to reassess a conviction is discovered then, yes.. in a manner of speaking, the convicted is in a similar position to a slave.
So do you approve of the prisoner's treatment and situation or not?
Just the same, I don't see the parallel between this and slavery of non-criminals.
Because you seem to be assuming all criminals are "immoral". Not all laws are just. Very recently, it was an imprisonable offense to screw a person of the same sex- in some states it still is. Until 1967, marrying someone of a different race was still in some places. Because of this moral ambiguity in the legal system, I struggle to see how you can make such a clear distinction between "criminals" that you say are not slaves and other, similarly imprisoned people that are slaves and not "criminals".
That's like arguing that "If you think the death penelty is okay in certain circumstances you are saying the same thing as people can be shot because you don't like the looks of them."
How about
hung?
Interesting. How did you manage to end that?
I was fortunate that at the time I was unencumbered by family or debt. Plenty of my co-workers were not. I left, they could not.
Did you and your fellow employees revolt and kill the employer?
It was discussed. As was framing the manager for sexual harassment.
Or did you have to fee by right and find those who would help you escape the country?
I assume you meant "flee by night"? Yes, in a sense I did. I didn't bother giving notice, I just left.
It must suck having an employer like that. I mean, I had some crappy jobs too, but they still let me go home at night and I was able to quit when I wanted to.
Yes, you were.
"The coal miners in the Southern Field were located up canyons where the coal seams were exposed by erosion. Most of the miners lived in these canyons in company towns, in company houses, bought food and equipment at company stores and alcohol at company saloons. The doctors, priests, schoolteachers, and law enforcement were all company employees. The entries to the camps were gated and guarded by deputized armed guards (Beshoar 1957:2; McGovern and Guttridge 1972:23)."
Doesn't exactly qualify as slavery. It's unfortionately that some people are in very bad economic situations. But that's natural not imposed, for one thing.
You'll have to explain that. "Natural"? Is it "natural" to be forced to work for a coal mining company because it the only game in town so they get to do whatever they want to you? Especially if they paid for you to come there in the first place? Is it "natural" to have to work a crappy minimum wage job for a tyrannical boss because the boy that knocked you up in high school split and left you with a kid and no education?
Some people are born without arms. That doesn't mean we should cut them off of those who are.
This makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.
Furthermore, it does not remove all choice from someone or make them property. If a person does not have a good situation and finds that their choices in employment and lifestyle are limited, this still does not make them the property of someone. And it does not mean that it is expressly because of someone else making decisions that they are robbed of choice.
Yes, Buzz, sometimes it does.
In fact, if no longer in name.
No it doesn't. You can have an economic hold on someone to a point and that is addressed above. If that economic hold, however, is something as restrictive as someone being brought to a country to work and being put in a situation where they cannot find alternate employment due to the circumstances, then that's pretty damn close to slavery. Maybe it doesn't qualify as "slavery" but it's still not something that should be tolerated.
But here's the other side of that coin- the conditions the miners lived in were directly due to the coal companies being economically forced by tight profit margins and fierce competition, and had they "chosen" not to "tolerate" these injustices the railroads would have ground to a halt and the American economy of the time would have faltered and even more people would have been forced into similar conditions. Very few things are black and white when it comes to human beings.
As for emotional restraints. You cannot legislate emotions.
Are we talking about legalities now? I thought we were discussing "Revolting, embarrassing, upsetting, angering, nearly unbelievable, endlessly depressing... atrocities".
Do you feel restraining, controlling, dominating someone by other than grossly physical means is any more acceptable that actually slapping chains on them, or not?
If someone feels they cannot leave someone for their own attachment or similar reasons, that is hardly comparable to slavery.
Why not?
Outreach to such people would be about the most that could be done. You can't really get someone for making another person feel they are too attached to leave. Or making someone think they don't want to.
So brainwashing is okay?
I'm not sure what your point is here. Because a law cannot be universally enforced it should not exist? Outlawing slavery does allow one to stop it in their own jurisdiction, at least publicly. And recognizing something wrong is still important, even if an immediate and easy action is not apparent.
Again you've slipped from discussing what you said was a question of absolute morality to concerns about laws and enforcement. My point here is that poverty is sometimes endemic in a society for causes outside its control, and that poverty leads to resource disparity, which in turn leads to domination of one social class by another. Whether this leads to actual chattel slavery- which I'm starting to think is the only sort of which you are aware- it does share many of its characteristics.
In my area it would be a state issue, I would think. It would be the business of the local police and/or county sheriff's office and the state policy as well as the public prosecutor assigned to that region. I suppose there could be federal charges too, especially if it involved crossing state lines.
I was not asking a question about jurisdiction, I was trying to highlight that the abuses of slavery you have illustrated as objectionable are not exclusive to it. If it is these abuses you are having the problem with you are in error in objecting to slavery as such, because these abuses are not unique to slavery, nor are they universal within it.
There are no laws on the books now that protect slaves' rights, because there are no nations that allow for slavery, as far as I know.
You may have missed it if you did not read the whole thread, but the question was put forth if possibly some form of slavery- other than chattel, certainly- might have a benefit to society, especially with clearly defined boundaries.
Let's face it, there are lots of people wandering around out there incompetent to handle their own affairs, and our prisons are not the answer.
Call it what you want then. As far as I am concerned, something like slavery should sound crude, harsh, irrational, emotionally upsetting. It's something that loses a lot when you sanitize it to an academic question of theory.
Loses something like, I dunno-
this? Religious people say exactly the same about atheism, you know. If you can't discuss a subject without demonising it you may want to find out why that is.
Perhaps. I don't see much need really to defend my position on slavery. I think that the moral and ethical theory questions are pretty much in the bag. I've never had any doubt.
And what is the source of this certainty?
I appreciate the skeptical mindset and the attempts to make fair and objective decisions that are based not on emotions but on logical observances.
Except in the case of "moral and ethical theory questions", of course.
But slavery? No, I don't see that as one which really requires a lot of reading of philosophy books and questioning whether or not my cultural perspective might be skewing things. Slavery is not something that I think need to speculate about.
Why not?
I'm not sure what you are getting at here. Are you saying you support slavery? Or what?
"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."
That I need to provide some universal and simple moral formula with which you can tell?
You seem to have one, I'd love to know what it is and where you got it.
And otherwise slavery cannot be considered wrong? Unless somehow it is proven so, universally and with no chance of cultural basis?
Of course not. Those are not the only two possibilities.
Look, I can't tell you where to draw the line. But I can tell you which side slavery is on. Other issues, not so much. But slavery? That's one where I'm confident enough of it's one-sidedness that I don't feel the need to consider whether someone else's opinion or wonder if I really should go around claiming my side is the only correct one.
Obviously. But strenuously and confidently asserting your certainty is not proof it is correct.
So what? Are you just condoning slavery? Or you think it's neutral and we should not pass judgment?
Again, not the only two- or including your unquestioned condemnation, three- possibilities.