• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    one of the most privileged people of the time

    I don’t think his level of privilege has much bearing on the approximate accuracy of the numbers he cites, which are what is relevant to my argument. I don’t think he was making that stuff up.

    would you have rather been an average person from say, 0 BC to 1800? If so, where/when?

    No, my own life has gone well enough, I got what I wanted. What I’m advocating for isn’t anything I need for myself. But when I talk or read the accounts of people who feel financially trapped, particularly young people, there isn’t any realistic advice to offer. What worked out for me isn’t reproducible and isn’t available to them. I don’t have a deep enough knowledge of history to talk about specific times and places. But for someone who resents the life that has been chosen for them and doesn’t want it, sure, why wouldn’t they be better off rolling the dice with historical circumstances? The specific malaise affecting them now was not there, and maybe whatever hardships would be faced instead would be more tolerable to them. But there’s no reason that should be the standard anyway. We are so rich in resources compared to any other time, there is no justification for anyone to be trapped like that. Everyone can be free to do what they want, and so they should.

    I think I have said all I have to say on this. It bothers me that you seem to think it’s acceptable to let people who find their work intolerable to fall into despair and kill themselves, but you’ve made some valid arguments and it’s refreshing to discuss this with someone who does not seem to be a property rights absolutist, so thanks for sharing your perspective.

    Edit: One last thing I want to mention, beyond making a point about whether the progress of civilization is a strict improvement, Debt: The First 5000 Years is also a comprehensive critique of the moral logic of debt. If it seems strange to reject that logic, I again recommend that book.

    • @Lauchs
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      I don’t think his level of privilege has much bearing on the approximate accuracy of the numbers he cites

      I do. If you look at the materials, much of it is re-used etc. As one of the most privileged people in the country, he could read and do math, thus go talk to merchants, find materials to re-use etc. Just the same as if you and I were temporarily homeless, our experience would be much different (I can go to any store and ask to use a washroom, a privilege most homeless do not have.) Also, really, if you went to old demolition sites, you could scavenge much of the materials like he did to build a floorless cabin only marginally bigger than a prison cell…

      You might take a look at how his contemporaries were living at the time: https://allthatsinteresting.com/jacob-riis-photographs-how-the-other-half-lives#20

      why wouldn’t they be better off rolling the dice with historical circumstances?

      I think this is what I’m finding so frustrating. Because for the vast majority of human existence, that’s a TERRIBLE gamble. Most of the time you’d be working the land from dawn until dusk with little to no leisure, barely getting enough calories to survive. Or maybe you are literally chained to an oar in a Roman galley, chained so as to stop you from killing yourself because your body belonged to whomever owned you. That’s if you were lucky enough to survive childhood. And God help you if you reincarnate as a woman…

      Hell, even getting born somewhere else nowadays would be a terrible gamble, to the point where it’s borderline offensively self centered. Like I said, people die every day trying to get out of their miserable circumstances and would howl at our complaints of being a “wage slave.” If you have friends from India, ask them about the people competing to work in sweat shops. My friend from Columbia described the mental jolt when he realized people walked around here with headphones because at home, you needed to keep your ears and eyes open so that you could duck into a shop before getting robbed (and shot if your money didn’t match your bearing/clothes, as a lesson to others to have money to pay gangsters.) Globally, we are the richest folks around and our complaints seem like the height of privilege and ignorance. (Watch any documentary about China, or take a look at how folks in their richest cities live: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4585230/Shocking-pictures-reveal-tiny-Hong-Kong-coffin-homes.html or about any of the countries where your stuff is made. Hell, watch Winter on Fire and watch what the Ukrainians went through just for a chance at a Western life, it’ll break your heart.) Even the saddest among us in the first world is living a life of luxury compared to most.

      It bothers me that you seem to think it’s acceptable to let people who find their work intolerable to fall into despair and kill themselves

      That’s not what I think. I support any and all social benefits that help people better their circumstances and there are a lot of such programs that we should expand, create etc. I think all forms of education, skill improvement, childcare, healthcare etc should be provided to all and ideally, for free. But what I absolutely will not support is supporting someone who decides that the concept of working is beneath them and that instead, society somehow owes them a life of leisure. That’s nonsense. The world is tough for most people and has been for almost its entirety, sorry about that. And if you are unable to support yourself, then we should be helping you to the utmost. But for someone who just doesn’t want to work? Nope, sorry. You are not owed a thing. I’m happy to help those who help themselves but just deciding that you shouldn’t have to work at all? In a world where people literally die for a chance at any of the jobs we complain about, that’s among the most privileged, selfish perspectives I can imagine and I hold it beneath contempt.

      I don’t know how to help the younger ones of this generation but I do know that the first step is approaching the situation with open and honest eyes, rather than a privileged “woe is me” attitude. Frankly, I think it’s counter productive and when we make nonsensical claims like it would be easier to be anywhere else in history, it undermines the actual and very real struggles that our generation faces.

      It’s been an interesting chat, take care!

    • @Lauchs
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      Sorry, I can’t seem to edit my response (blocking a community has interesting consequences.) But, the appropriate analogy came to mind a moment ago. Claiming we have it harder now than ever before (or others in the world) sort of strikes me like when republicans complain about a war on men. They have some legitimate points about male suicide, expectations etc. But cloaking it in absurd language diminishes any respect or validity that someone might casually give those complaints.