• @pingveno
    link
    -3
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Your white supremacist friends see these facts and advocate going back to slavery

    Neo-confederates are primarily of the “Lost Cause” variety, where they diminish the horrors of slavery, make comparisons with the industrialized North, and romanticize the South. I’m not exaggerating when I say that you are snatching words right out of their mouth.

    Chattel slavery was never ended in US.

    While the prison system arguably allows a form of slavery via the felony exception to the 13th Amendment, it is not chattel slavery since no ownership is involved. There are of course plenty of pieces of history that I could in depth on like Black Codes, debt traps, and terrorism by the KKK and other white supremacist groups. Still not chattel slavery.

    I am amazed just how ignorant you are about your own country. A quintessentially American moment here.

    Oh teacher, I was unaware that you required a ten page single spaced Times New Roman paper on African American history following the period between Reconstruction and the present day. I’m quite well versed in US history around slavery, thank you.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
      link
      4
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Neo-confederates are primarily of the “Lost Cause” variety, where they diminish the horrors of slavery, make comparisons with the industrialized North, and romanticize the South. I’m not exaggerating when I say that you are snatching words right out of their mouth.

      You’re the only one diminishing the horrors of slavery here. I continue to be amazed by your inability to understand that there are multiple dimensions to any comparison. It is possible see parallels between chattel slavery and capitalism from both the right and left wing perspective. The notion that just because the right uses a particular argument it should be automatically discarded is infantile beyond belief. You’re using reductive logic here.

      While the prison system arguably allows a form of slavery via the felony exception to the 13th Amendment, it is not chattel slavery since no ownership is involved. There are of course plenty of pieces of history that I could in depth on like Black Codes, debt traps, and terrorism by the KKK and other white supremacist groups. Still not chattel slavery.

      People are being deprived of liberty and being forced to work in order to create profit for the people who own the prisons. This is literal slavery, and the fact that there is no ownership involved on paper is just a formality so people like you can claim this is somehow completely different.

      Oh teacher, I was unaware that you required a ten page single spaced Times New Roman paper on African American history following the period between Reconstruction and the present day. I’m quite well versed in US history around slavery, thank you.

      Oh so just knowingly whitewashing the things your regime does here.

      • @pingveno
        link
        -21 year ago

        I’m not whitewashing the current state of things as being perfect. If that wasn’t already obvious from our numerous interactions, I don’t know what to tell you. Chattel slavery was incredibly brutal on a systemic level, far beyond anything present in the US today. Yes, you could cherrypick parallels and try to cast them as the current system being worse, like this meme does. You would just be utterly wrong to the point where most Black people in the US would find this meme incredibly offensive.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
          link
          41 year ago

          My argument was that aspects of capitalist exploitation are in fact worse. Both systems are horrific in their own way. What the meme focuses on in particular is that the reason capitalism outcompeted chattel slavery is because it reduces the operating costs for the business. Meanwhile, you went on a weird tangent here.

          • @pingveno
            link
            -41 year ago

            Then all I can say is you badly need to go back to your history books on slavery (and the post-Reconstruction era for that matter) before you keep ragging on about how ignorant I am about my own country.

            • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
              link
              4
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Why don’t you address what specifically you disagree with in the statement you’re replying to there buddy.

              • @pingveno
                link
                -3
                edit-2
                1 year ago
                • Spends money on purchasing slaves vs. Can exchange one “slave” (worker) for another: This leaves out the horrors of the slave trade, both transatlantic and domestic. Families were routinely split apart. Slave auctions were dehumanizing. Enslaved people were entirely at the mercy of their enslavers. The states would help track down escaped slaves, and the federal government attempted to force Northern states to cooperate via the Fugitive Slave Act. I won’t whitewash the poor balance in employer-employee relationships, but it’s offensive to put it in the same league. Workers can leave. They can move companies, cities, states, or countries. Workers are not forced to leave their family, at least not at a level that is utterly non-negotiable.
                • Pays for the total upkeep of the slaves: Yeah, in the same way you keep up a piece of machinery. If it was no longer profitable to pay for the “upkeep” of an enslaved person because of age or disability, they were subject to being sold off for medical experiments, left in the woods to die, etc. Quality health care was not in the cards.
                • If a slave gets sick it’s [the enslaver’s] problem: Only if it interfered with work. And if you’re making a comparison with modern capitalism, workplace injuries are very much the employer’s problem because of worker’s compensation. Likewise health care insurance is commonly employer provided. There are also pieces of the social safety net, with are partially paid for by businesses in various ways.
                • Slaves come to work on their own: I see no downside to people having their own homes instead of whatever half-assed shack their enslaver provides.
                • Only has to pay for 8 hours of their lives: That other 16 hours was a hard won victory by unions. Going over 8 means paying overtime. Slaves didn’t get overtime, but they did get over 8 hours of work.
                • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
                  link
                  51 year ago

                  This leaves out the horrors of the slave trade, both transatlantic and domestic.

                  That is an entirely separate point. Go read up on what the capitalist regime in Korea, that US installed, did rounding up, torturing, and forcing homeless people into work. These horrors are quite akin to the chattel slavery horrors in US.

                  Workers can leave. They can move companies, cities, states, or countries.

                  Except that’s not how it works in practice. The baseline for the conditions that the companies offer is the conditions people experience when they don’t have a job. In US, that means starving on the street. Therefore, job conditions only have to be preferable to that. Meanwhile, moving cities, states, or countries implies having the means to do so which people being exploited do not have. The fairly tale liberals tell about the workers having freedoms to choose better employment has no basis in reality. Nobody chooses to work in an Amazon fulfillment center and piss in a bottle.

                  Pays for the total upkeep of the slaves: Yeah, in the same way you keep up a piece of machinery. If it was no longer profitable to pay for the “upkeep” of an enslaved person because of age or disability, they were subject to being sold off for medical experiments, left in the woods to die, etc. Quality health care was not in the cards.

                  And that’s precisely how things work under capitalism as well except the capitalist doesn’t even have to worry about their worker dying on them because they just replace them. That’s why Amazon lets people just drop dead on the floor as work carries on as usual.

                  If a slave gets sick it’s [the enslaver’s] problem: Only if it interfered with work.

                  The whole point of having slaves is so that they do work.

                  And if you’re making a comparison with modern capitalism, workplace injuries are very much the employer’s problem because of worker’s compensation. Likewise health care insurance is commonly employer provided. There are also pieces of the social safety net, with are partially paid for by businesses in various ways.

                  That’s total bullshit, see Amazon example above for a counter point. In fact, there are countless horror stories of people being literally worked to death in US without being able to take sick days or seek medical help that they needed. And not just US, here’s how capitalism is working in Japan.

                  Slaves come to work on their own: I see no downside to people having their own homes instead of whatever half-assed shack their enslaver provides.

                  The point you evidently missed is that capitalism reduces the costs for the business owner where worker is now responsible for ensuring they don’t live on the street. Huge numbers of people in US are both employed and homeless. These people don’t even get a shack. Here’s an explanation for you of how this works:

                  Only has to pay for 8 hours of their lives: That other 16 hours was a hard won victory by unions. Going over 8 means paying overtime. Slaves didn’t get overtime, but they did get over 8 hours of work.

                  Most workers in US don’t get any paid overtime. This isn’t even restricted to blue collar labor. Unpaid overtime is standard practice for white collar jobs like software developers as well.

                  Your arguments aren’t based on reality.

                  • @pingveno
                    link
                    -4
                    edit-2
                    1 year ago

                    Well, I made an attempt. I just ask that you consult with someone who you will actually pay attention to as to whether this comparison is an offensive one to make. As I said, when you’re starting to sound like a neo-confederate, step back and ask whether you’re saying something offensive.