Don't care as long as I make a stonking profit selling them. Personally I think we should be able to sell childrens organs as the profit in them would be huge.
I thought that was Advanced Medicines.
Don't care as long as I make a stonking profit selling them. Personally I think we should be able to sell childrens organs as the profit in them would be huge.
Had this same thought every time someone mentions how imperial slavery is better than the federal solution of guaranteed income. Which system is better? Idk, I guess it depends on whether you subscribe to the ethos that menial labor has more inherent value than free time.
How the imperial slavetrade is working has bean debated more then once. It is not logical that they can be a comodity because their value is their debt.
I had some thought on it for nearly a year ago:
https://forums.frontier.co.uk/showt...rs-not-cargo?p=4543749&viewfull=1#post4543749
What i think of now is maby only ppl with a high enough imperial rank could make money ferrying them. I still think they should be passengers not bulk trade commodity. Short range in big numbers or few mid range.
They achieve roughly the same thing
Capitalism, you get economic slavery. We see it in todays world easy enough. Whole social classes born into bondage since schooling in the areas they can afford to live is so bad that children do not aspire to be anything better than what they can directly see available. There is the promise of bettering ones self, but increasingly in a rampant capitalist system that has gone stangnent *Cough, USA and most '1st world nations'* The probability of bettering oneself in true terms to ascending class boundaries is about 0.1 to 1%, So, the idea that Capitalism brings choice and that somehow relating that to the lore of a videogame... you will see that it roughly boils down to the following
Slaves -> no choice, they are owned, classic slavery
Imperial slaves -> Like Roman system, slaves have rights, anyone can give themselves into a contract in order to serve some kind of debt, once its done, its done.
Capitalist Economics -> The wealthy run everything and those with no wealth are virtual slaves that sit roughly between Classic slaves and Imperial slaves in real terms.
Communist Economics -> Pretty much impossible to actually achieve due to human nature of greed... which is why Capitalism works so apparently well, rewarding psychopathic behaviour, so it ends up looking like everyone is a slave to the government
So basically, Imperial Slaves, Capitalism, Communism... roughly the same with different flavours
But...
How are we even transporting them? They're in cargo crates, are they in suspended animation, or are they just sitting there in a dark coffin... waiting? Hoping they don't get jettisoned and drift in space until their life support runs out?
Don't care as long as I make a stonking profit selling them. Personally I think we should be able to sell childrens organs as the profit in them would be huge.
We abolished slavery in the US quite some time ago, and indentured servitude went along with it.
Kind of.
I own a home. Part of owning a home means paying property tax.
To pay property tax, I require an income.
To obtain an income, I must work.
Thus, I am an indentured servant to the things I own.
Of course, the cost of a home is no small matter either, and to pay this cost, I require a loan.
A loan must be repaid.
To repay my loan, I must work.
And lenders charge interest - thus inflating the amount I must pay.
In a manner of speaking we are all slaves to the things we own, or have the illusion of owning, as they're not really ours until the debt is paid.
And then, to top that all off, we've created a system of debt that ensures we will nearly always have debt of some kind.
It's quite the vicious circle we've made.
And it's not really all that different in most other places as well, just there are different and funny names for it.
Well, this conversation really too off. I'm at work and on my phone, so I'll only reply to a couple of the more recent replies here. First of all. The value of slaves is labor. Secondly, I have repeatedly seen imperial slavery described as a social safety net. So, here's the deal, if you have a debt you can't pay, and declare bankruptcy by selling yourself into slavery, and live in a society where the solution to poverty is to put the poor into bondage. You've just spent however many of your remaining productive years not saving any money, not networking, not putting any money into the 3300 version of a retirement fund, and presumably you liquidated your assets to help pay your debt. How does this not end in perpetual slavery?
Thirdly, I can't actually find any reference to universal conscription in the federation, but even if there is, being a conscript is way better than being a slave. Conscripts have all of their physical needs met? And they get paid, and they get a military pension. Yeah, it's dangerous work if your in a combat role. But you're probably about as likely to be in an actual combat role as an imperial slave is to be working in the mines.
And this does not even address the real problem - every imperial slave takes away a job from a free citizen. Why pay someone if you can use a slave for free? And the free citizen left jobless will likely have no option than to sell himself into slavery, taking away another job, and so on. And this is the real reason slavery was abolished IRL - it is a death spiral for economy, incompatible with a free enterprise system.
This is certainly an accurate appraisal of the situation in the empire. However historically it was never a problem because historically you don't draw slaves from your general population. Usually you take them as prisoners of war, sometimes draw them from convict populations. The actual reason slavery was abolished in the west, is primarily because Britain decided they were going to end it and put a lot of resources into making slave trading unprofitable.