YouTubethis tbh
Is there a transcript or something? Not in a position to watch it now.
"Which societies were the first to abolish slavery?"Who cares? It's not a competition. Being the "first" to stop something that never should have happened to begin with warrants no pat on the shoulder from anybody with any reasonable standards.The 13th amendment was ratified in 1865. That is nearly a century too late in my eyes. Sorry.I don't view that as a reason to have pride--it's just another reason to be ashamed.America probably doesn't need a "transformation," but it's certainly not a good country. I don't know what a "good country" is. I've always thought people were inherently selfish and evil at their core, so this idea that there can even be a "good country" in this day and age is kind of laughable to me.Fun fact:The state of Mississippi didn't actually ratify the 13th amendment until 1995.
Do you know how widespread slavery is nowadays? I don't give a fuck what standards you want to hold the U.S. too by itself, but to deny that it is a couple of centuries ahead of most of the rest of the world in this regard is factually wrong.
Quote from: SoporificSlash on December 18, 2015, 01:28:00 PMYouTubethis tbhI fucking hate that video, it's such a perfect display of typical, weasel-y Hollywood progressivism.
Quote from: Luciana on December 18, 2015, 02:50:26 PMWhen compared to other first world westernized countries, it was one of the last.LOLAnd I think you mean "western", not "westernized". "Westernized" implies the country wasn't western to begin with.
When compared to other first world westernized countries, it was one of the last.
But I'm saying LOL at your statement, not your grammar. Fight me
No one is going to say "Just look at Zimbabwe! They have bad healthcare so you should be thankful America has it!" It's just not something you can compare at all.
My point was that I'm just far too cynical to consider it anything more than a source of shame, because we had to abolish it in the first place.
Just because my country does it in a more subtle and socially acceptable way now?
That's like saying Stahl shouldn't be proud of discovering oxidation because we were stupid enough to have phlogiston theory in the first place. Most of the systemic errors human beings have made and corrected can be boiled down to informational deficits. If you want it to be a source of shame, fine, but it's entirely on you for comparing it to a totally unrealistic counterfactual.
Uh, where?
And no, I don't consider the fact that these men lived in the 18th century to be an excuse.
Any capitalist nation.
OT: I don't particularly see anything factually incorrect with the video. It probably is the case that countries like the US and Britain (and probably France) are the most important countries historically by virtue of their influence
Quote from: Luciana on December 18, 2015, 02:50:26 PMNo one is going to say "Just look at Zimbabwe! They have bad healthcare so you should be thankful America has it!" It's just not something you can compare at all.Why the fuck not? There's just as much value, if not more, in looking at inter-group differences as intra-group differences.
Quote from: Metty Christmas on December 18, 2015, 03:07:22 PMOT: I don't particularly see anything factually incorrect with the video. It probably is the case that countries like the US and Britain (and probably France) are the most important countries historically by virtue of their influenceYeahLet's just forget Rome, the HRE, or the Mongols. Britain is fine, but the US? A nation that's gone from top dog to wavering in less than 80 years?The hell are you on about? The US is important and played a big factor in a lot of things, but to say it's one of the most important in the HISTORY? That's just silly.
Why not? As far as they were concerned, black people weren't people. I don't think it's unfair to say that they didn't know race was not a substantial factor in human variation, and it's not apart from the general barbarity of the time even towards people of our own race and nationalities. I don't know why you're asking me if adults don't know how to treat one another. . . You said yourself, humans are inherently "evil". A statement I agree with, to an extent.
It's ideological bullshit to compare slavery to the selling of one's labour for a wage, especially when there are literally fantastic reasons why we ought to prefer a system in which capital employs labour, as opposed to vice versa.
Because I can tell you right now--I didn't need to be taught that.
They have your whole livelihood on the line. That's what makes it slavery.