In point of fact, at numerous points in history, with cultures such as the Romans and certain Chinese dynasties, when a slave's period of service was over, they were set up by the person who had owned them. It was a way for a person to achieve a form of citizenship in some cultures actually. So before you ride off on your high horse you might want to actually familiarize yourself with what 'slavery' actually was throughout history to different cultures. Stop assuming that American experiences are somehow representative of the rest of the world and the rest of history. They aren't.
The theme of human bondage throughout human history has similar tones. These cultures existed in a different time, one where those in power were better able to manage the image of what they purported slavery to be, and how there version of it is somehow 'ennobling' to those enslaved. You obviously missed this bit posted by BigBadB:
"Slaves were considered property under Roman law and had no legal personhood. Unlike Roman citizens, they could be subjected to corporal punishment, sexual exploitation (prostitutes were often slaves), torture, and summary execution. The testimony of a slave could not be accepted in a court of law unless the slave was tortured—a practice based on the belief that slaves in a position to be privy to their masters' affairs would be too virtuously loyal to reveal damaging evidence unless coerced."
Hmmm, seems the American experience had some precedence. That's because it's slavery, which by it's very nature is demeaning and crippling to the human soul, for both slavemaster and slave alike. Give one man ultimate, unquestioned power over another man's existence, and just watch him fall into the depths of what a human being can sink to. Perhaps you should take some of your own advice - actually familiarize yourself with what 'slavery' actually was throughout history to different cultures.
Educate yourself before flying off half-cocked about things that you know quite literally almost nothing about.
if you feel so strongly about video game slavery, then I assume you must be out there campaigning vigorously against the form of wage slavery they have in the world today. We'll just focus on that one type of servitude since you are likely a North American, at least judging by your syntax and the background assumptions you seem to be drawing on to try and make your point. There have literally been thousands (if not more) of books written on the current form of slavery in 'Western' society and how pernicious a system it is. It has precisely many of the details you describe as indicative of slavery in your view. So I can only assume that you're quite active in supporting living wages, so people can live off of what they make and not be the working poor. I further assume that you support meritocracy and proper distribution of wealth, especially on the news that within two years, the richest one percent of the people in the world will own more than the other ninety-nine percent combined.
Oh, this old chestnut. The problem is not capitalism, you nit. Capitalism, deeply flawed though it may be, has lifted more people out of poverty than your form of socialism ever could. The proof is in reality. Look around the world - countries fail or succeed proportional to how much they embrace the concept of free-market capitalism. The effect of mineral and other inherent resources to a country's natural potential for wealth is obviously a big part of prosperity as well, but Japan and the former Soviet Union are a great example of how embracing free-market capitalism can make a country weak in these gifts strong, and a country rich in them poor. Capitalism has given people like you and I the wealth to be able to spout off about this crap in the first place.
I'm not saying I believe in completely unrestricted capitalism, by the way. Anti-trust laws are important, as monopolies are harmful to a true free market. But punishing people who earn more by arbitrarily taking their wealth, and arbitrarily giving people who earn less that same wealth, WILL NOT solve the problem. You encourage the job creators to hoard and protect their wealth even more than they already do, and thus invest less wealth back into society, and you discourage people at the bottom to try and better their situations themselves by simply giving them things they didn't earn, and wouldn't have been able to make, not without... intervention.
And that's the problem - the intervention. A system where a government is empowered to take from one class to give to another naturally gives those in positions of power within the government A LOT of power. They use that power to seek more power, more control of our lives. Power corrupts, and more power does more of the same. You're willing to trade the 'yoke' of the corporation and big business for the chains of big government. You're willing to trade one form of centralization of capital and power for another. Personally, I don't want either.
A proper capitalist system IS a meritocracy, the truest of meritocracies! All parties are enriched proportional to how much they're willing to go out there and earn it. This takes not just physical hard work, but mental effort and hard work, too. 'Living wages' are the worst kind of trap - They encourage people to live in mediocrity. Minimum wage jobs don't pay much for a reason - They're meant to be a stepping stone to something better. I'm living this reality right now. I almost let myself get trapped in a minimum wage job, earning just enough to scrape by, but never enough to make the kind of life I wanted. I don't want the 'benevolent' hand of government giving me a 'living wage' - I want a job where I can
earn a better wage
myself.
I want a government that'll stop colluding with big business, one small enough and limited enough that it won't be ABLE to, and I want my government to stop pretending it has my best interests at heart when it only wants more power over my life, and will get the hell out of my way while I go and make something of myself, by my
own effort!
TL;DR - Stop being lazy and read.