VR, Stellar Forge- guess we have it pretty good.
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Recalculating.....make a u turn!GPS can navigate a ship to any entered planetary coordinate by 3300CE
What I always find interesting about the 'Imperial Slavery is wrong!' crowd is that they rarely address the inequality and perilous financial insecurity of the average Federation citizen. There's very little difference between the two states of being only that the Empire is more upfront about it, whereas the Federation hides behind a façade of freedom and democracy despite essentially being run by a group of mega-corporations for a thousand years.
Take the average citizen supporting their family in the 34th Century, they need to provide health care, food, shelter, security, education, etc. but all this comes at a price. If you don't have the means in the Empire, you sign yourself up for a period of indentured service commensurate to the value of your skills and the amount you owe. In the Federation you either take out a loan or it's part of your contract with your employer and dependent on your continued employment with them; leave and you lose access to all these benefits. Only the independently wealthy are free of this rat race.
Is there really much of a difference between being an Imperial Slave/Indentured Worker or having a Fed McJob?
Imperial Slaves
We once heard David Braben liken them to Roman slaves - not the ones getting fed to the lions, but those working in the households of upper segment of Roman society - or to enlisted persons serving in the Legion.
These are not prisoners of war, nor captives taken during boarder raids. And odds are they do not do any heavy industrial work, manufacturing or skilled labor. I'd wager the majority of production is automated - we 3d print ships, why wouldn't pretty much every manufactured item be produced in the same manner?
But at the end of a hard day (sitting in Senate meetings, shaking hands with visiting dignitaries, pressing one's lips to the cheeks above you) when you want to unwind and relax, you probably don't want the cold metal fingers of a massage-o-matic when you could have the soft, perfumed fingers of an Imperial Slave to rub you down. Sure, the Geevesatron 2000 could pour you a glass of your favorite vintage of Lavian Brandy, but why not have it served by a nubile slave instead?
And unlike more "conventional" ("common"?) slaves, Imperial Slaves typically serve this role for a period of time - the time it takes for them to repay a debt, after all, why file bankruptcy and lose face when you can simply sell off your manual skills to repay that debt instead. This is in keeping with the concept of "Indentured Servants", where a person would enter into a contract to work for someone for a period of time to cover some expense they could not otherwise pay - such as transport from The Old Worlde to The States. We'll skip over the part where these contracts could be extended indefinitely by unscrupulous holders by added expenses such as "food, shelter, or clothing" to the debt, as this is merely an exercise in intent.
Like the house-slaves of the Roman Empire, and with Indentured Servants, these people did have rights - they might be able to vote, were often protected from physical abuse, and had a legal recourse - their day in court, if these rights were violated, which could and often included recourse including the cancellation of their Contract of Indenture. I suspect the same to hold true among Imperial Slaves.
"Standard" slaves would have no such rights or recourse.
And most importantly, this is not a discussion of the morality of slavery - slavery is as old as human history, and still in practice today, though often given more palatable names like "Community Service in lieu of Jail", or "Prison Work Program" or "Work Release", or perhaps the best known "H-1b Guest Worker". These are all forms of Indentured Servitude. And while the 13th Amendment does prohibit slavery, it is also important to note: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” - this does not apply to those duly convicted, which is how prison work programs and community service programs are able to operate legally, and honestly, I don't have a problem with this, when it is appropriate. Get convicted of littering, be sentenced to clean up an area where this is a problem, lesson learned, public good served, no harm done. Get convicted of spray painting graffiti, get sentenced to scrubbing building walls covered in graffiti - again, lesson learned, public good served, no harm done.
Native to the harsh desert climate, these unpleasant creatures will burrow into any soft surface, including flesh, to avoid the sun. Their resemblance of a walking human ear lead to their name. Some slavers use these grubs as a restrainer for their captives, attaching a dormant extra ear to the forehead of their slave that can be remotely triggered.
— In-Game Description
What I always find interesting about the 'Imperial Slavery is wrong!' crowd is that they rarely address the inequality and perilous financial insecurity of the average Federation citizen. There's very little difference between the two states of being only that the Empire is more upfront about it, whereas the Federation hides behind a façade of freedom and democracy despite essentially being run by a group of mega-corporations for a thousand years.
Take the average citizen supporting their family in the 34th Century, they need to provide health care, food, shelter, security, education, etc. but all this comes at a price. If you don't have the means in the Empire, you sign yourself up for a period of indentured service commensurate to the value of your skills and the amount you owe. In the Federation you either take out a loan or it's part of your contract with your employer and dependent on your continued employment with them; leave and you lose access to all these benefits. Only the independently wealthy are free of this rat race.
Is there really much of a difference between being an Imperial Slave/Indentured Worker or having a Fed McJob?
Well people who live in communist countries are basically imperial slaves already todayif you think about it.
Guaranteed food
Guaranteed shelter
Guaranteed work
Guaranteed health care
However can't own anything.
The system in the year 3300 is just takening to the extreme, actually what we got in Elite already exists today as humans are traded and sold into slavery today.
It's all fine defending indentured servitude until you realise that a choice is not a choice when the economy is predicated on removing choice.
Slavers...
I don't want no dirty Android trimming my verge. I'll stick to putting all my trust in my "indentured" groundskeepers.![]()