againstthegrain
Senior Member
- Location
- Sun Valley, ID
Yup, but at the end of the day many are angry cause their McDonald's cost more and if McD's employee's have to depend on .gov to meet the basic requirements of life to get me my cheap food, well so be it.But it wasn’t the definition by which people were enslaved. It was the control of resources, of sticks and carrots, which enabled those who controlled the resources to keep human beings as chattel. So it may sound a little simplistic to call fast food workers slaves, but it still makes sense to ask why do people do that work for so little. It has been suggested that it is only transitional work for the young to do while their upkeep is still provided largely by their parents. But I’d it only young people employed in that profession? Seemingly not.
As a result we have a class of people whose work life is monopolized doing work which cannot be stretched to cover minimal requirements. It therefore falls to society as a whole to provide medical care out of the emergency room and to supplement the cost of food and shelter. It is certainly socialism, but who does it serve? Who is profiting? It is only the employers who benefit. The employees do not advance and the society made up of people who work for a living are being drained so that the employers may profit.
Slavery is just a word. It doesn’t look exactly like that but it is certainly exploitive.
Last edited: