User talk:Steven Walling and Wage slavery: Difference between pages

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[[Image:wageslavery.jpg|thumb|400px|right|The abolition of wage slavery is a stated goal of unions like the [[IWW]]]]
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'''Wage slavery''' is a term first coined by the [[Lowell Mill Girls]] in 1836,<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=YXT-kSv1btIC&pg=PA87&lpg=PA87&dq=lowell+%22wage+slavery%22&source=web&ots=WsT3bkI_0G&sig=w7N0JGBskFiUHReS-00amVMNaPY&hl=en Artisans Into Workers: Labor in Nineteenth-century America By Bruce Laurie]</ref> though articulated as a concept at least as early as
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[[Cicero]]<ref>"...vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labor, not for artistic skill; for in their case the very wage they receive is a pledge of their slavery.''" - [[De Officiis]] [http://www.constitution.org/rom/de_officiis.htm]</ref> and elaborated by subsequent thinkers, particularly with the advent of the [[industrial revolution]].<ref>[http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1863/theories-surplus-value/ch07.htm Marx, Ch. 7 of Theories of Surplus Value, a critique of Linguet, Théorie des lois civiles, etc., Londres, 1767.]</ref> It refers to the similarities between [[slavery|owning]] and [[employment|renting a person]], and denotes a [[social hierarchy|''hierarchical'' social condition]] in which a person chooses a job within a coerced set of choices (primarily working for a [[boss]] under threat of [[starvation]], [[poverty]] or [[social stigma|status diminution]]),<ref>[http://reactor-core.org/cannibals-all.html Full text of CANNIBALS ALL! OR, SLAVES WITHOUT MASTERS., by George Fitzhugh (1857)]</ref><ref name="schalkenbach1">[http://schalkenbach.org/library/george.henry/sp15.html Robert Schalkenbach Foundation]</ref><ref>[http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/people2/Chomsky/chomsky-con2.html Conversation with Noam Chomsky, p. 2 of 5]</ref><ref>[http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/download/Marx_Capital_Vol_1.pdf Capital: Volume One]</ref> which make that "person dependent on wages or a salary for a livelihood,"<ref>[http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/wage%20slave wage slave - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary]</ref> "esp[ecially] with total and immediate dependency on the income derived from...[wage] labor".<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/wage%20slave wage slave - Definitions from Dictionary.com]</ref> Wage slavery, in the [[libertarian socialist]] or [[anarchist]] usage of the term, is often understood as the absence of:
<br>
# A [[democratic]] or [[anti-authoritarian]] society, especially with non[[hierarchical]] [[workers' self-management|worker's control]] of the workplace and the [[economy]] as a whole,<ref name="marx1">[http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/marx/classics/manifesto.html The Communist Manifesto]</ref><ref>[http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/bakunin/stateless.html Stateless Socialism: Anarchism]</ref><ref>[http://www.iww.org/culture/official/preamble.shtml Preamble to the IWW Constitution | Industrial Workers of the World]</ref>
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# Unconditional access to non-exploitative property and a fair share of the basic necessities of life,<ref>[http://www.dis.org/daver/anarchism/kropotkin/atty.html An Appeal to the Young by Peter Kropotkin]</ref><ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=TB2ul8NVVPcC&pg=PA71&lpg=PA71&dq=kropotkin+%22wage+slavery%22&source=web&ots=Y8qkrsqmhv&sig=45ue0lUzLHHQP32-N03hiMYY0zM&hl=en The Conquest of Bread - Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin]</ref> and
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# The ability of persons to have say over economic decisions in proportion to the degree they are affected by those decisions.<ref>{{citebook
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|last=Albert
|first=Michael
|authorlink=Michael Albert
|title=[http://books.google.com/books?id=Zc4p7vUXZyEC&pg=PA32&lpg=PA32&dq=parecon+in+proportion+affected&source=web&ots=SXCno7bevU&sig=oec6UDsqQIpzEqVjKk_oMjTangU&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result Parecon: Life After Capitalism]
|page=p.32
|publisher=[[Verso Books]]
|year=2003
|isbn=184467505X}}</ref>
In terminology used by some [[Criticisms of capitalism|critics of capitalism]], [[statism]] and various [[authoritarian]] systems, wage slavery is the condition under which a person must sell his or her [[labor power]], submitting to the [[authority]] of an employer in order to prosper or merely to [[subsist]].<ref>[http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu:16080/Anarchist_Archives/bakunin/capstate.html The Capitalist System]</ref><ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=SX2bnjTLlmUC&pg=PA270&lpg=PA270&dq=kropotkin+%22wage+slavery%22&source=web&ots=7o78B2s6jm&sig=yHDNwuJ7supyUSV2SIS17ruYpU8&hl=en#PPA271,M1 kropotkin's revolutionary pamphlets - Petr Alekseevich Kropotkine, Peter Kropotkin]</ref><ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/books/state01.htm Notes on Anarchism, by Noam Chomsky (Excerpted from For Reasons of State)]</ref>


==Comparison with chattel slavery==
== Qrazy sale at COTW! Act now! Total liquidation! ==
[[Image:CottonNegrosSouth.jpg|300px|left|thumb|[[Negro]]es picking cotton on a plantation in the South]]
The first articulate description of wage slavery was made by Simon Linguet in 1763, describing how it undermined [[being]]ness and individual [[autonomy]], by basing them on a materialistic concept of the body and its liberty i.e. as something that is sold, rented or alienated in a [[class society]]:


{{quote |“The slave was precious to his master because of the money he had cost him… Men's blood had some price in the days of slavery. They were worth at least as much as they could be sold for in the market…It is the impossibility of living by any other means that compels our farm labourers to till the soil whose fruits they will not eat, and our masons to construct buildings in which they will not live. It is want that drags them to those markets where they await masters who will do them the kindness of buying them. It is want that compels them to go down on their knees to the rich man in order to get from him permission to enrich him… what effective gain [has] the suppression of slavery brought [him ?] He is free, you say. Ah! That is his misfortune… These men, it is said, have no master—they have one, and the most terrible, the most imperious of masters, that is, need. It is this that reduces them to the most cruel dependence. They live only by hiring out their arms. They must therefore find someone to hire them, or die of hunger. Is that to be free?”<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1863/theories-surplus-value/ch07.htm |title=Chapter 7 |work=Theories of Surplus Value |author=MARX, Karl |date=1863 |publisher=Marxists.org}}</ref>}}
Greetings [[WP:ORE|WikiProject Oregon folks]], time for another edition of the Collaboration of the Week! Last week we saw some good improvements made to [[Westside Express Service]], while we also worked on a Coordinates Drive. I don’t know how many articles had the coordinates added to, but thanks to those who helped out. This week we have two more requests: '''[[William Clark (explorer)|William Clark]]''' of Lewis & Clark fame and the famed '''[[Oregon Bottle Bill]]'''. Hopefully we can work both up to B class. [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Opting out|Click here to opt out of these messages]], or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Future collaborations|click here]] to make a suggestion for a future COTW. Adios. [[User:Aboutmovies|Aboutmovies]] ([[User talk:Aboutmovies|talk]]) 07:07, 8 July 2008 (UTC)
‎[[Image:Portrait_Emma_Goldman.jpg|thumb|left|[[Emma Goldman]] famously denounced wage slavery by saying: "The only difference is that you are hired slaves instead of block slaves" <ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=0IF7CusxuMcC&pg=PA283&lpg=PA283&dq=emma+goldman+wage+slavery&source=web&ots=JpS0sk3Uxl&sig=POCKMMN7TyBvrY98xurg3QHRBbM&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=6&ct=result#PPA283,M1] Emma Goldman: A documentary History of the American Years</ref>]]
According to this view, then, the fundamental differences between a chattel slave and a wage slave are:


1. The chattel slave is property ("capital"). As such, the chattel slave's value to an economically rational owner is in some ways higher than that of a wage slave who can be fired, replaced or harmed at no (or less) cost, since the chattel slave's owner has made a greater investment in terms of the money he paid for the slave. For this reason, in times of recession, chattel slaves couldn't be fired like wage laborers. American chattel slaves in the 19th century had improved their standard of living from the 18th century<ref>{{cite web |url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0145-5532(198223)6%3A4%3C516%3ATHOASN%3E2.0.CO%3B2-F |title=JStor}} The Height of American Slaves: New Evidence of Slave Nutrition and Health</ref> and, as historians Fogel and Engerman's reported, slaves' material conditions in the 19th century were "better than what was typically available to free [i.e. wage slave] urban laborers at the time"<ref name = "Fogel">Fogel & Engerman, Without Consent or Contract, New York: Norton, 1989, p. 391.</ref>. This was partially due to slave psychological strategies under an economic system different from capitalist wage slavery:
==A question==
You know a lot about chucks. Is there a breed that is more likely to produce double yolk eggs? I went through a phase of getting double yolkers in my [[Co-op (supermarket)|Co-op]] free range eggs a while ago, but then they stopped. Shame, as they made ace poached eggs with extra yolky bits on toast. Yum. As I'm now thinking about keeping my own chickens, can you recommend a breed that might produce them? Thanks [[Special:Contributions/86.138.46.163|86.138.46.163]] ([[User talk:86.138.46.163|talk]]) 08:32, 8 July 2008 (UTC)
:There's no specific breed I can think of that is most likely to produce double yolks, for one primary reason: double yolks are an evolutionary disadvantage, since fertilized eggs (meant for hatching) with double yolks die in the shell. Thus, any chicken is only rarely going to lay double yolks. But my advice is that you go with one of the more prolific egg laying, non-sitting breeds (i.e. non-broody) breeds. If you also need a docile bird, go with [[Rhode Island Red]]s, [[Barred Plymouth Rock]]s, or [[Sex Link]] hybrids (also called Black or Red Stars). If you don't mind more flighty chickens, go with a Mediterranean layer like [[Leghorn (chicken)|Leghorns]], [[Ancona (chicken)|Anconas]] or [[Minorca (chicken)|Minorcas]]. Hope that helps, [[User:VanTucky|'''Van''']][[User talk:VanTucky|<span style="color:#FF4F00">'''Tucky'''</span>]] 18:28, 8 July 2008 (UTC)


{{quote |“…the preindustrial nature of these labor systems allowed slaves to establish a distinctive African American culture which eschewed the values embraced by the master class. Although intrusive and oppressive, paternalism, the way masters employed it, and the methods slaves used to manipulate it, rendered slaveholders' attempts to institute capitalistic work regimens on their plantation ineffective and so allowed slaves to carve out a degree of autonomy, manifest in their cultural assumptions and behavior, under slavery. On the one hand, planters wanted to see themselves as beneficent masters, a position which their exploitation of slave labor required them to qualify. On the other, slaves exposed the hypocrisy of the paternalist double standard and by merely obeying but not necessarily complying with their masters' orders 'acted consciously and unconsciously to transform paternalism into a doctrine of protection of their own rights,' an 'assertion of their humanity,' and, ultimately, the transformation of privileges into customary rights and the attendant affirmation of their African American identity (Genovese, 1976, p.49) The effect of this accommodation-resistance dialectic, so fully described by Eugene Genovese, was to render slave-holders non-capitalist masters and, more importantly for this section, made slaves pre-industrial workers whose insistence on customary rights frustrated planters who were trying to exploit slave labor. (Genovese, 1976) […] Slaves' partial retention of an African, essentially preindustrial work ethic which, according to Genovese, stressed hard work but within a cultural framework which eschewed freneticism, time discipline, materialism, and acquisitive individualism, was a product of slaves' labor on southern plantations which were run by essentially precapitalist masters. This experience enabled slaves to create autonomous spheres{{ndash}} personal relationships, familial bonds, [and] a distinctive slave religion. [Slaves] developed a variety of subtle techniques such as feigning illness, sabotage, and deliberate go-slows in order to protect themselves and their culture… slave women, by using contraceptives, engaging in sexual abstinence, and occasionally practicing infanticide, not only limited their own exploitation but circumscribed the planters' profits (Hine, 1979)… Once this [slave] system came under increasing political attack in the 1850's by northern proponents of free wage labor, southern masters found themselves fighting for their political independence by defending a slave society and plantation system that while not economically profitable was nonetheless ideologically and socially crucial to their way of life.”<ref>{{cite web |title=Debating Slavery: Economy and Society in the Antebellum American South p. 44 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=RpJm7wW2pmIC&pg=PA44&lpg=PA44&dq=preindustrial+nature+of+these+labor+systems+allowed+slaves+to+establish+a+distinctive+african+american+culture&source=web&ots=HLnqh4eD0g&sig=MGh6hCnGjMw86HQDpbJozRTqSug#PPA44,M1}}</ref>}}
==[[Wikipedia:Highly Active Users|WP:HAU]], Status, and you!==
Similarly, various strategies and struggles adopted by wage slaves are deemed to have created extra-capitalist structures ([[unions]], [[Welfare (financial aid)|welfare]] institutions etc) that can constrain the destructive mechanisms of wage slavery. These institutions could test the limits of wage systems and eventually lead to their overthrow, though they can temporarily also appease the masses; preventing the overthrow of the [[elites]] that often take credit for the creation of these institutions.
As you may know, the StatusBot responsible for maintaining the status of the [[WP:Highly Active Users|Highly Active Users]] was taken offline. We now have [[Wikipedia talk:HAU#Status is now up and running|a replacement]] in the '''[[WP:QUI|Qui status system]]'''. This semi-automatic system will allow you to easily update your status page found at [[Special:Mypage/Status]] which the HAU page code is now designed to read from. If you are already using Qui (or a [[User:Hersfold/StatusTemplate|compatible]]) system - great! - no action is needed (other than remembering to update your status as necessary). If not, consider installing Qui. You can also manually update this status by changing the page text to '''online''', '''offline''', or '''busy'''. While it is not mandatory, the nature of HAU is that people are often seeking a quick answer from someone who is online and keeping our statuses up-to-date will assist with this. Note if you were previously using your /Status page as something other than a one-word status indicator, your HAU entry may have been set to "status=n" to correct display issues. Please clear this parameter if you change things to be "HAU compatible". Further questions can be raised at [[Wikipedia talk:Highly Active Users|WT:HAU]]. This message was delivered by <font face="Verdana">[[User:Xenobot|<font color="black">'''xeno'''bot</font>]]</font> 22:43, 8 July 2008 (UTC)


2. A wage slave's starkest choice is "work for a boss or face poverty/starvation". Indirectly, prison, beatings, insults and other punishments, including death lay in store for those who try to survive without working for (or becoming) a boss (e.g. workers trying to democratically run a capitalist's factory, live freely in buildings or grow and collect food, medicine and other goods freely from the land and factories capitalists own etc). If a chattel slave refuses to work, a number of punishments are also available; from beatings to food deprivation--although economically rational slave owners practiced positive [[reinforcement]] to achieve best results and before losing their investment (or even friendship) by killing an expensive slave.<ref>[http://www.coloradocollege.edu/dept/HY/HY243Ruiz/Research/Antebellum.html SLAVERY IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH]</ref><ref>[http://niahd.wm.edu/index.php?browse=entry&id=3089 The Gray Area: Dislodging Misconceptions about Slavery]</ref><ref>[http://home.triad.rr.com/warfford/Roman_Empire/slavery.html Roman Household Slavery]</ref>
== Black Rock Hen ==


3. Unlike a chattel slave, a wage slave can sometimes choose his boss, but he can't choose to have no boss unless he wants to face starvation, poverty or status diminution.
Hi, although not a breed I think the Black Rock is notable - certainly in the UK where it is a significant laying bird. My intention is to restore it: happy to seek wider views if you have a strong feeling that it should not have its own article. Regards [[User:Springnuts|Springnuts]] ([[User talk:Springnuts|talk]]) 14:52, 12 July 2008 (UTC)


4. “The slave is sold once and for all; the proletarian must sell himself daily and hourly. The individual slave, property of one master, is assured an existence, however miserable it may be, because of the master's interest. The individual proletarian, property as it were of the entire bourgeois class which buys his labor only when someone has need of it, has no secure existence. This existence is assured only to the class as a whole. The slave is outside competition; the proletarian is in it and experiences all its vagaries.” (Karl Marx)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1847/11/prin-com.htm |author=MARX, Karl |date=1847-11 |publisher=Marxists.org |title=The Principles of Communism }}</ref><!-- Is this Marx as stated in this article, or Engels as in the referred site? -->
==[[Allegations of apartheid]] deletion notification==


[[Image:2 Young Women.jpg|thumb|220px|right|[[Tintype]] of two young women in Lowell, Massachusetts]]
Some time ago, you participated in a deletion discussion concerning [[Allegations of Chinese apartheid]]. I thought you might like to know that the parent article, [[Allegations of apartheid]], was recently [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Allegations of apartheid (fifth nomination)|nominated for deletion]]. Given that many of the issues that have been raised are essentially the same as those on the article on which you commented earlier, you may have a view on whether [[Allegations of apartheid]] should be kept or deleted. If you wish to contribute to the discussion, please see [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Allegations of apartheid (fifth nomination)]]. -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 17:48, 12 July 2008 (UTC)


The similarities between chattel and wage slavery were certainly noticed by the workers themselves; for example, the 19th century [[Lowell Mill Girls]], who, without any knowledge of European radicalism, condemned the "degradation and subordination" of the newly emerging industrial system, and the "new spirit of the age: gain wealth, forgetting all but self", maintaining that "those who work in the mills should own them."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=dCBwFyNp6jQC&pg=PA202&lpg=PA202&dq=new+spirit+of+the+age+gain+wealth+forgetting+all+but+self&source=web&ots=fYEEWfaRCU&sig=zSx0_iiZxv2CrgRc_q2zptKzMv4 |title=Books |publisher=Google}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NrLv4surz7UC&pg=PA1056&lpg=PA1056&dq=%22those+who+work+in+the+mills+should+own+them%22&source=web&ots=Js0EIV8FiN&sig=LXPG_U3aeBYCVgoFMmsBEpvPK1k |title=Books |publisher=Google}}</ref>
== Could you look at something in more detail for me? ==
In their 1836 strike, this was one of their protest songs:


<poem>:Oh! isn't it a pity, such a pretty girl as I
Hi there. You are one of two admins who left a warning for [[User:RMDRDR]]. Could you both (I've posted to the other one) take a look at what happened [[Talk:Harry_Potter_and_the_Deathly_Hallows#Vandalism_not_properly_reverted|here]] and what I said [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:RMDRDR&oldid=225276912 here] (old page version in case of blanking)? I initially thought the partial reversion (which led to some vandalism being missed) was someone logging out to vandalise, back in to partially revert, and then back in to vandalise. But then I realised I should assume more good faith (see [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Harry_Potter_and_the_Deathly_Hallows&diff=prev&oldid=225277237 here]). I don't have much experience dealing with vandalism, so if one of you two could follow this up, that would be great. Possibly enough has been done, but I'm not sure. [[User:Carcharoth|Carcharoth]] ([[User talk:Carcharoth|talk]]) 21:13, 12 July 2008 (UTC)
:Should be sent to the factory to pine away and die?
:Oh! I cannot be a slave, I will not be a slave,
:For I'm so fond of liberty,
:That I cannot be a slave.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/americanstudies/lavender/liberty.html |title=Liberty |work=American Studies |publisher=CSI}}</ref></poem>


[[Noam Chomsky]], who believes that such sentiments are "just below the surface"<ref name = "Chomsky">{{cite web |url=http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20070921.htm |title=Interview |author=CHOMSKY, Noam |date=2007-09-21}}</ref>, has used the militant history of labor movements, [[Bakunin]]'s theories about an "instinct for freedom", [[Kropotkin]]'s mutual aid evolutionary principle of survival and [[Marc Hauser]]'s evidence supporting an innate and universal moral faculty<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.americanscientist.org/template/InterviewTypeDetail/assetid/52880 |title=American Scientist}}</ref>, to explain the incompatibility of such oppression and greed with certain aspects of human nature.<ref name = "Chomsky 2004">{{cite web |url=http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20040714.htm |title=Interview |author=CHOMSKY, Noam |date=2004-07-14}}</ref>
== Vorwerk (chicken) ==


Supporters of wage and chattel slavery have linked some of the unavoidable features of reality (the subjection of man to nature) with the seemingly avoidable conditions of social structures (the subjection of man to man); arguing that hierarchy and their preferred system's particular relations of production represent human nature and are no more coercive than the reality of life itself, which therefore cannot be improved upon by social structures--only made worse. Consequentially, any well-intentioned attempt to fundamentally change the status quo is naively utopian and will result in more oppressive conditions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-4642(194011)6%3A4%3C504%3ATSIONW%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T |title=JStor}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://reactor-core.org/cannibals-all.html |title=Cannibals All |publisher=Reactor Core}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Norberg |first=Johan |title=In Defense of Global Capitalism |publisher=Cato Institute |location=Washington |year=2003 |isbn=9781930865471 }}</ref>Bosses in both of these long-lasting systems argued that their system created a lot of wealth and prosperity. Both did, in some sense create jobs and their investment entailed risk. For example, slave owners might have risked losing money by buying expensive slaves who later became ill or died; or might have used those slaves to make products that didn't sell well on the market. Marginally, both chattel and wage slaves may become bosses; sometimes by working hard. It may be the "rags to riches" story which occasionally occurs in capitalism, or the "slave to master" story that occurred in places like colonial Brazil, where slaves could buy their own freedom and become slave owners themselves<ref>Family and Frontier in Colonial Brazil, Alida C. Metcalf, p. 201.</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Metcalf |first=Alida |title=Family and Frontier in Colonial Brazil |publisher=University of Texas Press |location=Austin |year=2005 |isbn=9780292706521 }}</ref> Social mobility, or the hard work and risk that it may entail, are thus not considered to be a redeeming factor by critics of capitalist wage slavery:
{| class="messagebox {{#ifeq:|yes|small|standard}}-talk"
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|[[Image:Updated DYK query.svg|15px|Updated DYK query]]
|On [[12 July]], [[2008]], '''[[:Template:Did you know|Did you know?]]''' was updated with {{#if:|facts|a fact}} from the article{{#if:|s|}} '''''[[Vorwerk (chicken)]]'''''{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{4}}}]]'''''
}}{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{5}}}]]'''''
}}{{#if:|, and '''''[[{{{6}}}]]'''''}}, which you created or substantially expanded. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the [[:Template talk:Did you know|Did you know? talk page]].
|} <!-- [[{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}]], [[{{CURRENTYEAR}}]] --> --[[User:BorgQueen|BorgQueen]] ([[User talk:BorgQueen|talk]]) 22:11, 12 July 2008 (UTC)


{{quote |Even if the amount of social mobility in capitalism were as great as supporters of capitalism claim, it would not matter. If it is possible for someone to move from the lowest position of an authoritarian system to the highest position, it is still unethical because it is an authoritarian system. If it were possible to go from homeless person to dictator within a fascist system, fascism would still be wrong. In many Leninist states there were individuals who went from being a worker to being part of the ruling class, in some cases even joining the Politburo, yet that does not make Marxist totalitarianism an acceptable system. In Colonial Brazil, there were slaves who managed to become free and even become slave owners themselves. It was as rare as workers becoming capitalists in contemporary capitalism, but it did happen and was theoretically possible for many slaves. Just as the theoretical possibility of a slave becoming a slave owner does not justify slavery, the theoretical ability of a wage-slave to become a capitalist does not justify capitalism. The existence of social mobility does not justify a social system… Capitalists like to claim that their wealth is the result of them working hard by running their business, managing portfolios, etc. A mafia boss also does lots of work to plan his robberies and keep his illicit enterprise going but his actions are still theft. Many capitalists don’t even run a company, they derive their income solely from stocks, bonds, interest, dividends, rent, etc. This attempt to justify capitalist exploitation completely fails in these cases because they aren’t even running a company or doing any work at all. Manipulating portfolios doesn’t produce anything useful; sticking money in the bank and letting it accumulate interest isn’t hard work. It is true that investing usually entails taking risks (one could lose the investment), but just because someone is taking a risk does not mean that s/he is producing anything. Most human activity involves risks of some sort. If a criminal robs someone at gunpoint s/he is taking a risk as well. S/he could go to jail, the robbery could go wrong, s/he could get hurt, etc. That does not change the fact that it is robbery. The same is true of the risks taken by capitalists. The workers take as much of a risk, if not more, as the capitalist. If the business fails the worker is unemployed. The worker is then usually in a worse situation then the capitalist because the capitalist is wealthy and can weather such a situation much easier than those on lower levels of the hierarchy. In addition, many jobs entail risks to workers' life or limb, whereas investment does not.”<ref name = "Question">{{cite web |url=http://question-everything.mahost.org/Socio-Politics/capitalism.html |title=Capitalism |work=Question Everything}}</ref>}}
== Question ==
[[Image:E l bernays-1928-propaganda.png|left|thumb|200px|[[Edward Bernays]]' 1928 book, ''[[Propaganda (book)|Propaganda]]''.]]
The methods of control in wage systems, differ substantially from those in chattel systems. For example, in his book, [[Disciplined Minds]], American physicist and writer Jeff Schmidt points out that professionals are trusted to run organisations in the interests of their employers. The key word is ’trust’. Because employers cannot be on hand to manage every decision, professionals are trained to “ensure that each and every detail of their work favours the right interests – or skewers the disfavoured ones” in the absence of overt control. Schmidt continues:


''"The resulting professional is an obedient thinker, an intellectual property whom employers can trust to experiment, theorize, innovate and create safely within the confines of an assigned ideology."''<ref>Schmidt, ''[http://disciplinedminds.tripod.com/ Disciplined Minds – A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals And The Soul-Battering System That Shapes Their Lives]'', Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2000, p. 16.</ref> Schmit goes on to show with statistical evidence that subordination to elite ideology, including aggression, is greater among those with more schooling,<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=4aScfMumCMoC&dq=disciplined+minds&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=8L4c2RYr8T&sig=7LJpTOslSQLFGgmZ6GIxw-So1CE&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result#PPA11,M1 Disciplined Minds p.11 ]</ref> a conclusion corroborated in other studies as well.<ref>Lies My Teacher Told Me p.297-304</ref>
I realize you just changed your name, and as someone who still uses a pseudonym and will likely continue to do so, what was your motivation for changing to your "real" name? (I only ask because your edit summaries/username says it's [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User%3ASteven_Walling&diff=225713309&oldid=225711522 okay to ask]...[[User:Keeper76|<font color="#21421E" face="comic sans ms">Keeper</font>]] | [[User talk:Keeper76|<font color="#CC7722" face="Papyrus">76</font>]] | [[User:Keeper76/origin|<font color="#ff0000"><small>what's in a name?</small></font>]] 01:25, 15 July 2008 (UTC)
In Propaganda (1928), the father of [[public relations]] [[Edward Bernays]] argued that "[t]he conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/bernprop.html |title=History is a weapon}}</ref>
:Also curious... –<font face="Verdana">[[User:Xenocidic|<font color="black">'''xeno'''</font><font color="#DCDCDC">cidic</font>]] ([[User talk:Xenocidic|<font color="black">talk</font>]])</font> 02:32, 15 July 2008 (UTC)
Similarly [[Walter Lippmann]] argued that "the manufacture of consent" amounted to "a revolution" in "the practice of democracy" and allowed the "bewildered herd" to be controlled by their betters.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.zmag.org/chomsky/mc/mc-supp-040.html |title=ZMag}}</ref>


Some supporters of chattel slavery claimed that those who hadn't studied in depth the economic and social aspects of slavery, could not form a reasoned opinion on the matter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://docsouth.unc.edu/southlit/fitzhughcan/menu.html |title=Doc South |publisher=UNC}}</ref>
Several things going on:
Similarly, some modern economists believe that the uneducated are not in a position to reject economic systems involving wage slavery. For example [[Nobel Prize]] winning economist [[Paul Samuelson]] asks: "…without the disciplined study of economic science, how can anyone form a reasoned opinion about the merits or lack of merits in the classical, traditional economics?"<ref>{{cite web |url=http://infoshop.org/library/Fredy_Perlman:_Intro_Commodity_Fetishism#_ref-5 |title=Introduction to Commodity Fetishism |authorlink=Fredy Perlman |author=Perlman, Fredy |publisher=Infoshop}}</ref>
#I published my real name on my user page, forgetting that this would show up in Google. So any anonymity is effectively blown anyway.
#Everyone in RL already knows I wiki.
#I do a lot of real world wiki activism and attend tech/wiki events under my real name. It's weird to introduce yourself and then have tell people your dorky pseudonym that you edit under on Wikipedia.
#Including my work. I work for [[AboutUs.org]], and have always used my real name on that wiki.
#I think that trying to hide from trolls like Daniel Brandt through user name makes them hungrier to hunt you down. People like that enjoy the chase, so I get left alone by beating them to the punch.
#I'm proud of my work here, and want others to know.
Make sense? [[User:Steven Walling|Steven Walling]] ([[User talk:Steven Walling|talk]]) <sup>formerly [[User:VanTucky|'''Van''']][[User talk:VanTucky|<span style="color:#FF4F00">'''Tucky'''</span>]]</sup> 02:35, 15 July 2008 (UTC)
:Yep. =) –<font face="Verdana">[[User:Xenocidic|<font color="black">'''xeno'''</font><font color="#DCDCDC">cidic</font>]] ([[User talk:Xenocidic|<font color="black">talk</font>]])</font> 02:37, 15 July 2008 (UTC)
:Yep, and your real name is indeed much nicer than the pseudonym. <span style="font-family:lucida sans, console;">'''''[[user]]:[[User talk:Everyme|Everyme]]'''''</span> 10:23, 18 July 2008 (UTC)


==Role in the development of the modern nation-state==
== Boreray (sheep) ==
[[Image:1912 Lawrence Textile Strike 1.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Soldiers surround peaceful demonstrators during the [[Lawrence textile strike]] in 1912.]]
[[Image:Kronstadt attack.JPG|thumb|lright|400px|[[Red Army]] troops attack [[Kronstadt]] [[libertarian socialist]] workers who had demanded among other things that "handicraft production be authorised provided it does not utilise wage labour."<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kronstadt_Rebellion]</ref>]]
Wage slavery played a very important role in the modern consolidation of the [[nation-state]] structure that originated in the pre-capitalist ''"...[[feudal]] period with battles for power between feudal lords, [[kings]], the [[Pope]] and other centers of power which gradually evolved into systems of nation states in which a combination of political power and economic interests converged enough to try to impose uniform systems on very varied societies...In the course of the development of the nation state system, there also developed on the side various economic arrangements which about a century ago turned into what became contemporary [[corporate]] capitalism, mostly imposed by judicial arrangements, not by legislation, and very tightly integrated and linked to the powerful states, [which are] [un]distinguish[able]...from the multinational corporate system, the conglomerates that rely on them, that have a relation of both dependency and domination to them...[T]heir intellectual roots...come out of the same neo-[[Hegelian]] conceptions of the rights of organic entities that led to [[bolshevism]] and [[fascism]]."''<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20050518.htm State and Corp., Noam Chomsky interviewed by uncredited interviewer]</ref><ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20011127.htm On the War in Afghanistan, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Pervez Hoodbhoy]</ref>


The close link between property and the state has been noted by many outstanding thinkers. For example [[John Locke]], who in 1690 wrote that ''"[t]he great and chief end...of men's uniting into commonwealths, and putting themselves under government, is the preservation of their property"''<ref>[http://www.constitution.org/jl/2ndtr09.htm John Locke: Second Treatise of Civil Government: Chapter 9]</ref> or [[Adam Smith]] who described how ''"...as the necessity of civil government gradually grows up with the acquisition of valuable property, so the principal causes which naturally introduce subordination gradually grow up with the growth of that valuable property... Wherever there is great property there is great inequality. For one very rich man there must be at least five hundred poor, and the affluence of the few supposes the indigence of the many. The affluence of the rich excites the indignation of the poor, who are often both driven by want, and prompted by envy, to invade his possessions...The appropriation of herds and flocks which introduced an inequality of fortune was that which first gave rise to regular government. Till there be property there can be no government, the very end of which is to secure wealth, and to defend the rich from the poor"''<ref>[http://www.adamsmith.org/smith/won-b5-c1-pt-2.htm Adam Smith - An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations - The Adam Smith Institute]</ref>This tight link between property and state was also noted by [[John Jay]] (who repeatedly said that "Those who own the country ought to govern it,")<ref>http://www.bartleby.com/73/764.html Frank Monaghan, John Jay, chapter 15, p. 323 (1935). According to Monaghan, this “was one of his favorite maxims.”</ref>and by US Founding Father [[James Madison]], who said that government ''"...ought to be so constituted as to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority."''<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=BjkOAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA450&lpg=PA450&dq=landholders+ought+to+have+a+share+in+the+government+to+support+these+invaluable+interests+and+to+balance+and+check+the+other&source=web&ots=cnTSolkpJJ&sig=fuggu7aSK5rBblWw90eOYRmFbf0#PPA450,M1]</ref>
{| class="messagebox {{#ifeq:|yes|small|standard}}-talk"
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|[[Image:Updated DYK query.svg|15px|Updated DYK query]]
|On [[15 July]], [[2008]], '''[[:Template:Did you know|Did you know?]]''' was updated with {{#if:|facts|a fact}} from the article{{#if:|s|}} '''''[[Boreray (sheep)]]'''''{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{4}}}]]'''''
}}{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{5}}}]]'''''
}}{{#if:|, and '''''[[{{{6}}}]]'''''}}, which you created or substantially expanded. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the [[:Template talk:Did you know|Did you know? talk page]].
|} <!-- [[{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}]], [[{{CURRENTYEAR}}]] --> --[[User:BorgQueen|BorgQueen]] ([[User talk:BorgQueen|talk]]) 17:23, 15 July 2008 (UTC)


In this respect, statist welfare measures can be seen as a consequence of the elite's fear of dispossession--yielding to some degree in order to appease the organized pressure of wage slaves.<ref>[p.199 Bad Samaritans, Ha-Joon Chang]</ref>
== Summer Time in the COTW ==


Though seemingly paradoxical, the most prominent current critic of wage slavery, the anarchist [[Noam Chomsky]], has defended the temporary use of state power on the grounds that it prevents even more oppressive forms of authority and wage slavery:
Hello again to those of the [[WP:ORE|WikiProject Oregon Clan]]. Time for another new edition of Collaboration of the Week. Last week there was some good improvements to [[William Clark (explorer)|William Clark]] and the legendary [[Oregon Bottle Bill]], great job to those who helped out. This week, by request is the '''[[Owyhee Reservoir]]''', which is short enough to easily conjure up a DYK. Then, also by request is a red link elimination drive on '''[[List of newspapers in Oregon|Oregon newspapers]]'''. Feel free to help out with either. [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Opting out|Click here to opt out of these messages]], or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Future collaborations|click here]] to make a suggestion for a future COTW. [[User:Aboutmovies|Aboutmovies]] ([[User talk:Aboutmovies|talk]]) 20:42, 16 July 2008 (UTC)


''"I don't think the federal government is a legitimate institution. I think it ought to be dismantled, in principle; just as... I don't think people ought to live in cages. On the other hand, if I'm in a cage and there's a saber tooth tiger outside, I'd be happy to keep the bars of the cage in place{{ndash}} even though I think the cage is illegitimate...The centralized government authority is at least to some extent under popular influence... The unaccountable private power outside is under no public control. What they call minimizing the state{{ndash}} transferring the decision making to unaccountable private interests{{ndash}} is not helpful to human beings or to democracy... so there is a temporary need to maintain the cage, and even to extend the cage."''<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/19970303.htm Radical Democracy, Noam Chomsky interviewed by John Nichols]</ref><ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/199808--.htm On Human Nature, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Kate Soper]</ref>
== RfA Thanks ==


== Treatment in various economic systems==
{| class="messagebox standard-talk" style="border: 5px solid #CCCCCC; background-color: #FF9999;"
[[Image:Pinkerton escorts hocking valley leslies.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Pinkerton National Detective Agency|Pinkerton guards]] escort strikebreakers in Buchtel, Ohio, 1884. [[Union busting]] is a traditional way of maintaining wage slavery.]]
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Wage slavery exists in various systems, including [[communist state]]s, but given the prevalence of modern capitalism, it is often described as a lack of [[rights]] in the market system; especially in the absence of extra-capitalist structures stemming from some degree of democratic input (welfare system, retirement income, etc.). The concept seeks to point out how the only rights a worker has are the rights he or she gains on the labor [[market]]. S/he faces starvation when unable or unwilling to rent him/herself to those who own the capital and means of production. [[Capitalists]], and sometimes a state elite, own the means of life (land, industry etc) and gain profit or power simply from granting permission to use them. This they do in exchange for wages.
|align="center"|Thank you for voting in [[Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/Ben MacDui|my RfA]], which passed with '''90 support''', '''2 oppose''', and '''0 neutral'''.
Though most opponents of wage slavery favor possessions for non-exploitative personal use, they oppose the "freedom" to use property for the exploitation of others; claiming that private ownership of the means of life is theft and that sometimes a person's freedom ends where another person's begins<ref>[[Property is theft]].</ref> (e.g. my freedom to opress, kill, steal etc violates yours). Given that workers are the majority, they believe that the elite maintain wage [[slavery]] and a divided working class through their influence over the media and entertainment industry,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/19/144225 |title=Democracy Now |date=2007-10-19}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/1992----02.htm |title=Interview |date=1992 |author=CHOMSKY, Noam}}</ref> educational institutions, unjust laws, nationalist and corporate [[propaganda]], pressures and incentives to internalize values serviceable to the power structure,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://question-everything.mahost.org/Socio-Politics/thoughtcontrol.html |title=Thought Control |work=Socio-Politics |publisher=Question Everything}}</ref> [[state]] violence (the police will arrest workers who freely collect food & medicine or try to democratically run a capitalist's factory), fear of unemployment and a historical legacy of exploitation under prior systems:
Great work on Boreray sheep too!


{{quote |“Other workers, not capitalists, produced the means of production. The capitalist often obtains them with the money from previous profits. Those profits in turn came from previous profits and so on back to the origins of capitalism. Those original accumulations of money used to start this whole process of capitalist accumulation came from fortunes made as a result of conquest & direct expropriation (such as colonialism, the slaughter of native Americans etc) as well as fortunes achieved under pre-capitalist class societies such as feudalism or slavery. Thus from a historical perspective capitalism cannot be considered just.”<ref name = "Question" />}}
All the best, [[User:Ben MacDui|Ben MacDui]]<sup><font color="#228B22">[[User talk:Ben MacDui|Talk]]</font></sup><font color="#228B22">/</font><small><font color="#228B22">[[Special:Contributions/Ben MacDui|Walk]]</font></small> 20:28, 16 July 2008 (UTC) <!-- this thank-you created with Template:RfA-thanks -->
[[Image:AdamSmith.jpg|thumb|right|[[Adam Smith]]]]
|}
[[Adam Smith]], who offered an argument for markets based on the notion that under conditions of perfect liberty, markets would lead to perfect equality, articulated in the Wealth of Nations some factors in the development of wage slavery:


''The interest of the dealers in any particular branch and trade or manufactures, is always in some respects different from and even opposite to, that of the public.... [They] have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public...We rarely hear, it has been said, of the combinations of masters, though frequently of those of workmen. But whoever imagines, upon this account, that masters rarely combine, is as ignorant of the world as of the subject. Masters are always and everywhere in a sort of tacit, but constant and uniform combination, not to raise the wages of labor above their actual rate... It is not, however, difficult to foresee which of the two parties must, upon all ordinary occasions, have the advantage in the dispute, and force the other into a compliance with their terms. The masters, being fewer in number, can combine much more easily... [while] [t]he man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects are perhaps always the same, or very nearly the same, has no occasion to exert his understanding or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur. He naturally loses, therefore, the habit of such exertion, and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible to become for a human creature to become. The torpor of his mind renders him not only incapable of relishing or bearing a part in any rational conversation, but of conceiving any generous, noble, or tender sentiment, and consequently of forming any just judgment concerning many even of the ordinary duties of private life. ''<ref>[http://www.adamsmith.org/smith/won-b5-c1-article-2-ss3.htm Adam Smith - An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations - The Adam Smith Institute]</ref><ref>[http://www.geocities.com/stewjackmail/Tripod-2.html Adam Smith For The Working Class]</ref><ref>[http://www.onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_499.shtml Free-market activists distort original message of Adam Smith&#x2019;s &#x201C;invisible hand&#x201D]</ref>
== Romeo and Juliet collaboration ==
Greetings! The current Shakespeare Project Collaboration is ''[[Romeo and Juliet]]''. This project is currently going a thorough peer review and copyedit before moving on to FAC. The link to the peer review is [[Wikipedia:Peer review/Romeo and Juliet/archive1]]. Have a look! '''«''' <font face="Tahoma">[[User:Diligent Terrier|<span style=color:gray>'''Diligent Terrier'''</span>]] [[User:Diligent Terrier Bot|<span style=color:black>'''Bot''']] [[User talk:Diligent Terrier|<span style=color:black>'''<small>(talk)</small>''']]</span></font> 20:52, 19 July 2008 (UTC)


===Capitalism===
== List of Shuffle Albums ==
Wage slavery as a concept is often a criticism of capitalism, defined as a condition in which a capitalist class (often a minority of the population) controls all of the necessary non-human components of production ([[Capital (economics)|capital]], [[Land rights|land, industry etc]]) that other people (workers) use to produce goods. This sort of criticism is generally associated with [[socialism|socialist]] and [[anarchist]] criticisms of capitalism, and could conceivably be traced back to pre-capitalist figures like [[Gerrard Winstanley]] from the radical Christian [[Diggers]] movement in England, who wrote in his 1649 pamphlet, ''The New Law of Righteousness'', that there "shall be no buying or selling, no fairs nor markets, but the whole earth shall be a common treasury for every man," and "there shall be none Lord over others, but every one shall be a Lord of himself."<ref name="Graham-2005">Robert Graham, ''Anarchism - A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas - Volume One: From Anarchy to Anarchism (300CE to 1939)'', Black Rose Books, 2005</ref> Though perhaps the concept dates back to [[Cicero]], who in 44 BC wrote that "...vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labour, not for artistic skill; for in their case the very wage they receive is a pledge of their slavery."<ref>[[De Officiis]] Liber I XI.II</ref>
Somewhat similar criticisms have also been expressed by some proponents of [[liberalism]], like [[Henry George]]<ref name="schalkenbach1"/>, [[Silvio Gesell]] and [[Thomas Paine]]<ref>[http://www.ssa.gov/history/paine4.html Social Security Online History Pages]</ref>, as well as the [[Distributism|Distributist]] school of thought within the [[Roman Catholic Church]]. Criticism of capitalism on these grounds, however, might not always be connected to the belief that one should have [[Freedom (political)|freedom]] to work without a boss. [[Image:Kropotkin Nadar.jpg|thumb|right|Anarcho-communist [[Peter Kropotkin]]]]


The extreme subordination generated by wage slavery has also been recognized by right wing bosses like US financier & railroad businessman [[Jay Gould]] (1836–1892), who famously said "I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half."<ref>[http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/33148.html]</ref> The concept of '''wage slavery''' suggests that even where the conditions of chattel slavery do not apply, wage earners may experience social and psychological predicaments which are similar to those stemming from [[chattel slavery]].
A discography is a list of albums, so calling it that instead of using the explicit word discography is not a way around WP:NFC. The use still clearly violates the policy against using NFC in discographies. Do not add them again. Steven Walling (talk) formerly VanTucky 23:19, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
:It has already been discussed. They were removed because of fair use overuse and because of the claim that it was a discography. There were several editors, including me, that took the position that it wasn't fair use overuse because they were being used one per album. It wasn't a discography because if the albums had their own pages, then there would be no images there (the usual case). It was then argued that there should be no images because the albums lack notability. The answer to that was that there are 406,000 hits on google and the fact that something doesnt have a page does not necessarily mean that it is not notable and doesnt deserve one. [[User:Grk1011|Grk1011]] ([[User talk:Grk1011|talk]]) 23:25, 19 July 2008 (UTC)


Anthropologist [[David Graeber]] has noted that, historically, the first wage labor contracts we know about{{ndash}} whether in ancient [[Greece]] or [[Rome]], or in the [[Malay]] or [[Swahili]] city states in the [[Indian ocean]]{{ndash}} were in fact contracts for the rental of chattel slaves (usually the owner would receive a share of the money, and the slave, another, with which to maintain his or her living expenses.) Such arrangements were quite common in [[New World]] slavery as well, whether in the [[United States]] or [[Brazil]].
== Tai Chi Chuan / Taijiquan ==
C. L. R. James made a famous argument that most of the techniques of human organization employed on factory workers during the [[industrial revolution]] were first developed on slave [[plantations]].<ref>[http://www.prickly-paradigm.com/paradigm14.pdf Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology - David Graeber]</ref>


[[Image:Karl Marx 001.jpg|thumb|left|[[Karl Marx]]]]
Hi. I see you reverted my move (of Tai Chi Chuan to Taijiquan) without commenting on your reversion. Please go to [[Talk:Tai chi chuan]] to discuss. I proposed this move on that page several days ago. Thanks. [[User:Bertport|Bertport]] ([[User talk:Bertport|talk]]) 14:11, 20 July 2008 (UTC)
To [[Marx]] and anarchist thinkers like [[Bakunin]] and [[Kropotkin]] wage slavery was a [[class (social)|class condition]] in place due to the existence of [[private property]] and the [[state]]. This class situation rested primarily on
#the concentration of ownership in few hands,
#the lack of direct access by workers to the [[means of production]] and consumption goods
#the existence of the [[Reserve army of labour|reserve army of unemployed workers]].


and secondarily on
== U.S. Sheep Experiment Station DYK ==


#the waste of workers' efforts and resources on producing useless luxuries;
{| class="messagebox {{#ifeq:|yes|small|standard}}-talk"
#the waste of goods so that their price may remain high; and
|-
#the waste of all those who sit between the producer and consumer, taking their own shares at each stage without actually contributing to the production of goods.
|[[Image:Updated DYK query.svg|15px|Updated DYK query]]
[[Image:Bakuninfull.jpg|thumb|right|Collectivist anarchist [[Mikhail Bakunin]]]]
|On [[22 July]], [[2008]], '''[[:Template:Did you know|Did you know?]]''' was updated with {{#if:|facts|a fact}} from the article{{#if:|s|}} '''''[[U.S. Sheep Experiment Station]]'''''{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{4}}}]]'''''
A disparity in bargaining power compels wage slaves to accept a predicament they wouldn't otherwise consent to. Some critics of capitalism argue that wage slavery is present in all capitalist societies, even the richest ones. This has to do with two factors:
}}{{#if:|{{#if:|, |, and}} '''''[[{{{5}}}]]'''''
}}{{#if:|, and '''''[[{{{6}}}]]'''''}}, which you created or substantially expanded. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the [[:Template talk:Did you know|Did you know? talk page]].
|} <!-- [[{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}]], [[{{CURRENTYEAR}}]] --> Congratulations! --[[User:PeterSymonds|PeterSymonds]] [[User talk:PeterSymonds|<small>(talk)</small>]] 19:46, 22 July 2008 (UTC)


# '''Wealth disparities''': Even in a rich country like "the United States, the richest 1% of the population... owns more wealth then the bottom 95% of the population combined. It is physically impossible for that one percent to work harder than the other ninety-five percent. The average American worker works around 50 hours a week; for the capitalists to work ninety-five times more than the average worker he would have to work 4,250 hours a week. There are only 168 hours in a week; it's not possible for this wealth disparity to be the result of capitalists working harder."<ref>[http://question-everything.mahost.org/Socio-Politics/capitalism.html Tyranny of the Invisible Hand]</ref><ref>[http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0701-05.htm Economic Inequality in US]</ref>
== Twitter ==
#'''Power disparities''': The higher wages received by some workers in industrialized countries do not obviate the authoritarianism critics perceive in capitalist institutions—just as the improving material conditions of chattel slaves in the American south didn't obviate chattel slavery. Labor is treated as commodity, just like food or healthcare. The lack of democratic control of industry means that workers do not have a say over decisions in proportion to how much they are affected by those decisions. This, in turn prevents workers from directing their destinies and achieving a society where ''"work is not only a means of life, but the highest want in life."''<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=3ORu91WxxL4C&pg=PA165&lpg=PA165&dq=work+is+not+only+a+means+of+life+but+the+highest+want+in+life&source=web&ots=7K7vySW27U&sig=NEewXNcC9ATXVFJUkfHHhBS4-C8#PPA128,M1]</ref> Even high -paid professionals and intellectuals like lawyers and scientists may be considered wage slaves, since many of them rent and subordinate their mental powers to capitalists and other elites— getting ahead in the hierarchy by internalizing values that are serviceable to the powers that be. Even if every wage slave managed to become well fed, clothed, had healthcare etc; he'd still be in a position of subordination and deprivation of freedom.


To this argument, Marx added:
Hi Steven, I thought you would be interested to know (if you didn't already) that http://enwp.org/Article_name is an auto-shortener to [[Article name]]. This could be useful for posting [[template:TFA|TFA]] on Twitter. (BTW in the spirit of [[free culture|Freeness]] I think you should use [[identi.ca]]. :)) cheers --[[User:pfctdayelise|pfctdayelise]] <small>([[user talk:pfctdayelise|talk]])</small> 18:31, 26 July 2008 (UTC)


"''The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto honored and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage laborers...Masses of laborers, crowded into the factory, are organized like soldiers. As privates of the industrial army, they are placed under the command of a perfect hierarchy of officers and sergeants. Not only are they slaves of the bourgeois class, and of the bourgeois state; they are daily and hourly enslaved by the machine, by the overlooker, and, above all, by the individual bourgeois manufacturer himself. The more openly this despotism proclaims gain to be its end and aim, the more petty, the more hateful and the more embittering it is...The selfish misconception that induces you to transform into eternal laws of nature and of reason the social forms stringing from your present mode of production and form of property{{ndash}} historical relations that rise and disappear in the progress of production{{ndash}} this misconception you share with every ruling class that has preceded you. What you see clearly in the case of ancient property, what you admit in the case of feudal property, you are of course forbidden to admit in the case of your own bourgeois form of property...You are horrified at our intending to do away with private ownership of the means of production. But in your existing society, private property is already done away with for nine-tenths of the population; its existence for the few is solely due to its non-existence in the hands of those nine-tenths. You reproach us, therefore, with intending to do away with a form of property, the necessary condition for whose existence is the non-existence of any property for the immense majority of society."''<ref>[http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/hst/european/TheCommunistManifesto/chap2.html The Communist Manifesto - Section II]</ref><ref name="marx1"/>
==Happy Birthday==
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|align="center" width="100%"|<font face="Comic Sans MS" font color="darkblue">Hey, <b> {{PAGENAME}}. </b> Just stopping by to wish you a Happy Birthday from the [[WP:BDC|Wikipedia Birthday Committee]]! <br> Have a great day!</font>-- [[User:Kipoc|Kipoc]] ([[User talk:Kipoc|talk]]) 02:39, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
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Many advocates of wage slavery claim that consumer choice in capitalist societies constitutes an improvement in the standard of living and that today's wage slaves have many more consumer choices than chattel slaves. They claim that the market system reflects "what people want" and that people "vote with their dollars".<ref>[http://www.lp.org/issues/platform_all.shtml Official Website of the Libertarian National Committee]</ref> There is indeed evidence that many wage slaves in the 21st century have higher standards of living and more consumer choice than chattel slaves in the 18th and 19th century (although 21st century wealth inequalities are vast)<ref>[http://www.epi.org/content.cfm/webfeatures_snapshots_20060823 Wealth inequality is vast and growing]</ref>; but some historians don't find the comparison of vastly disparate time periods to be particularly revealing. Historians Fogel and Engerman, for example, reported that slaves' material conditions in the 19th century were "better than what was typically available to free [i.e. wage] urban laborers at the time"<ref>Without Consent or Contract, New York: Norton, 1989, p. 391</ref> Wage slaves' standard of living has improved since the beginning of the industrial revolution and similarly, American chattel slaves in the 19th century had improved their standard of living from the 18th century<ref>[http://www.jstor.org/pss/2121481 A Peculiar Population: The Nutrition, Health, and Mortality of American Slaves from Childhood to Mortality]</ref><ref>[http://www.jstor.org/pss/206033 The Economics of Antebellum: Slave Heights Reconsidered]</ref>
== Zebras are not allowed to participate at COTW, but penguins may ==


Critics of capitalism claim that "voting with dollars" means that those with more dollars have more votes. They maintain that several undiscussed factors affect consumer behavior. For example, educational institutions cater to the ideological needs of the biggest employers (government, corporations); the media are profit seeking corporations selling affluent audiences to advertisers and relying primarily on business and government information; intellectuals tend to get ahead in the hierarchy and become influential by adopting and disseminating ideas that are serviceable to power; and a stated purpose of the advertising industry is to artificially "create wants" and stir away from consumer choices that may harm capitalist power (e.g. the most popular newspaper in England, the Daily Herald went out of circulation because of advertiser discrimination; news organizations stir away from programs hinting at systemic causes for societal problems even if these programs are popular.)<ref>[http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Herman%20/Manufac_Consent_Prop_Model.html Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky]</ref>. All this, they claim, distorts the framework of consumer choice and the psychological make up of consumers in a way that reflects elite interests and will, rather than that of consumers. Furthermore, in state capitalist societies, corporations in conjunction with governments have pushed for measures such as elimination of public transportation and alternate forms of energy, as well as propaganda to justify subidies to high technology industry through military expenditures. These measures, as well as the subsidies, bailouts and protectionism that allowed many countries to develop and create products at the public's expense (and without their consent), altered available choices and ideas and also allowed many industries to become competitive in subsequent "free markets"<ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/comment/hajoon-chang-protectionism-the-truth-is-on-a-10-bill-458396.html Ha-Joon Chang: Protectionism... the truth is on a $10 bill - Business Comment, Business - The Independent]</ref> whose development had therefore little to do with consumer choice<ref>[http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4436308024413305073&q=chomsky&total=333&start=0&num=10&so=1&type=search&plindex=8 Noam Chomsky speaking in New Zealand, 1998 Part 2/6]</ref>
Howdy ya’ll, its [[WP:ORE|WikiProject Oregon]] Collaboration of the Week time! Thanks to those who helped improve [[Owyhee Reservoir]] and start some new [[List of newspapers in Oregon|Oregon newspaper]] article, we had four new ones. This week it is time for a '''[[:Category:Stub-Class Oregon articles|Stub Improvement Drive]]'''. So select a Stub, any Stub, and try to improve it to at least a Start class. If you expand it by 5X, then think about nominating it at [[WP:DYK|Did You Know]] so it can be featured on the main page. [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Opting out|Click here to opt out of these messages]], or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Future collaborations|click here]] to make a suggestion for a future COTW. [[User:Aboutmovies|Aboutmovies]] ([[User talk:Aboutmovies|talk]]) 09:30, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
A number of psychologists and environmental experts have presented evidence showing that rampant western consumerism is harming the planet (and human beings), and becoming a substitute for activities that are emotionally more fulfilling.<ref>[http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Consumption.asp Behind Consumption and Consumerism - Global Issues]</ref><ref> [http://books.google.com/books?id=JvG85s966koC&dq=to+have+or+to+be&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=2UgoxeNKqC&sig=VjUDve9XNLswp9ui2etRAvarKYo]</ref>
Most importantly, critics claim that "consumer choice" is only half the story, because people are not only consumers— they are also workers, and very often, their choice in the capitalist work environment is "work for a boss or starve"; i.e. it is limited to a (sometimes possible) choice among bosses and it doesn't involve choices and decisions regarding production, distribution, working hours, regulations, hierarchy etc (i.e. the choice to have higher control over one's productive life therefore one's destiny) because the workplace and the economy (including the advertising industry and entertainment industry) are not run democratically.


Already in the 19th century, Marx had pointed out some of the ways in which technology could be used to alienate workers: ''"Owing to the extensive use of machinery, and to the division of labor, the work of the proletarians has lost all individual character, and, consequently, all charm for the workman. He becomes an appendage of the machine, and it is only the most simple, most monotonous, and most easily acquired knack, that is required of him. Hence, the cost of production of a workman is restricted, almost entirely, to the means of subsistence that he requires for maintenance, and for the propagation of his race. But the price of a commodity, and therefore also of labor, is equal to its cost of production. In proportion, therefore, as the repulsiveness of the work increases, the wage decreases. What is more, in proportion as the use of machinery and division of labor increases, in the same proportion the burden of toil also increases, whether by prolongation of the working hours, by the increase of the work exacted in a given time, or by increased speed of machinery, etc."''<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=Q2GzsvWurCMC&pg=PA37&lpg=PA37&dq=Owing+to+the+extensive+use+of+machinery,+and+to+the+division+of+labor,+the+work+of+the+proletarians+has+lost+all+individual+character,+and,+consequently,+all+charm+for+the+workman&source=web&ots=qdH4mG-20A&sig=odKAEEH4lENnxDb39IXdnHGB1Cw&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result The Communist Manifesto By Karl Marx p.37]</ref>
== Thanks for the welcome ==
Psychoanalyst [[Erich Fromm]] believed that the lack of worker's control and unhappiness/ dissatisfaction at the workplace means that people compensate their emptiness by seeking substitutes elsewhere (religious fundamentalism, drugs, consumerism etc). Fromm thought it very likely that a democratic, not-for-profit work environment would enable more choices for workers, having a drastic effect on subsequent consumer choice and all the mechanisms currently associated with it (advertising, marketing, concentration of capital etc){{ndash}} as well as on the human psyche.<ref>[http://www.erich-fromm.de/data/pdf/1977e-e.pdf To Have Or to Be? - That’s the Question: Interview with Giovanna Maria Pace ]</ref>
[[Image:Manugactorinconsent2.jpg|200px|thumb|left|[[Manufacturing Consent]] analyzes institutional factors causing journalistic subordination in the corporate [[capitalist]] wage system.]]
In [[Manufacturing Consent]] and "The Myth of the Liberal Media" [[Edward S. Herman]] and Noam Chomsky present a substantial body of evidence showing striking qualitative and quantitative differences in the coverage of facts and events in the corporate capitalist media on the basis of their serviceability to elite groups. Their [[propaganda model]] identifies 5 major institutional factors affecting media behavior. In order to be hired, journalists, like other intellectual wage laborers, are pressured to internalize the ideological constraints of the institutional structure-- a task that usually starts in educational institutions and works as a filtering system. Therefore, unlike journalists in totalitarian states, western journalists can serve elite interests without being subject to state coercion. As their counterparts in totalitarian states, they identify freedom with the elite that dominates their power structure:


''"We have a free press, meaning it’s not state controlled but corporate controlled; that’s what we call freedom. What we call freedom is corporate control. We have a free press because it’s corporate monopoly, or oligopoly, and that’s called freedom. We have a free political system because there’s one party run by business; there's a business party with two factions, so that’s a free political system. The terms freedom and democracy, as used in our Orwellian political discourse, are; based on the assumption that a particular form of domination—namely, by owners, by business elements—is freedom."''<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/1991----.htm Language, Politics, and Composition, by Noam Chomsky]</ref>
Hi Steven, and thanks for the welcome on my Talk page. Will do my best to adhere to the standards as advised and will enquire here if I have any further queries. Appreciate the offer. [[User:Browndog72|Browndog72]] ([[User talk:Browndog72|talk]]) 18:28, 27 July 2008 (UTC)
Oh and coincidentally, it's your birthday, so Many Happy Returns of the Day! [[User:Browndog72|Browndog72]] ([[User talk:Browndog72|talk]]) 18:29, 27 July 2008 (UTC)


In a thorough study of war coverage comparing Soviet and western journalism, [[Media Lens]] concluded that
== Happy birthday to you too! ==


"''[l]ike the Soviet media, Western professional journalists adopt and echo government statements as their own, as self-evidently true, without subjecting them to rational analysis and challenge. As a result, they allow themselves to become the mouthpieces of state power. It is fundamentally the same role performed by the media under Soviet totalitarianism."''<ref>[http://medialens.org/alerts/07/071120_invasion_a_comparison.php INVASION - A COMPARISON OF SOVIET AND WESTERN MEDIA PERFORMANCE - PART 1]</ref>
Well happy belated birthday to you too! Thanks for the thought! '''<font color="midnightblue" face="Trebuchet MS">[[User:Voyaging|Voyaging]]</font>'''<sup><font color="teal">[[User talk:Voyaging|(talk)]]</font></sup> 17:52, 28 July 2008 (UTC)


A number of economic think tanks and analysts have favored a return to the days of Keynesian state capitalism, suggesting that the increased inequalities and slower rate of world economic growth in the neoliberal period (from the 70s till the present), as well as the "undemocratic... virtual senate of investors and lenders" created by financial liberalization, exacerbate the conditions of wage slavery.<ref>[http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secC8.html Infoshop.org - An Anarchist FAQ - C.8 Is state control of credit the cause of the business cycle?]</ref> <ref>[http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/opinion/2008/1010/1223560345968.html Irish Times: Anti-democratic nature of US capitalism is being exposed]</ref>
== w00t ==


Other economists consider wage labor to be the central cause of the capitalist [[business cycle]]:
Congrats on the adminship. Very well deserved. Cheers, [[User:Cacophony|Cacophony]] ([[User talk:Cacophony|talk]]) 06:14, 29 July 2008 (UTC)


''The key to understanding the business cycle is to understand that, to use [[Proudhon]]'s words, "Property sells products to the labourer for more than it pays him for them; therefore it is impossible." In other words... the system is based upon wage labour and the producers are not producing for themselves.... Capitalism is production for profit and when the capitalist class does not (collectively) get a sufficient rate of profit for whatever reason then a slump is the result. If workers produced for themselves, this decisive factor would not be an issue as no capitalist class would exist. Until that happens the business cycle will continue, driven by "subjective" and "objective" pressures{{ndash}} pressures that are related directly to the nature of capitalist production and the wage labour on which it is based. Which pressure will predominate in any given period will be dependent on the relative power of classes. One way to look at it is that slumps can be caused when working class people are "too strong" or "too weak." The former means that we are able to reduce the rate of exploitation, squeezing the profit rate by keeping an increased share of the surplus value we produce. The later means we are too weak to stop income distribution being shifted in favour of the capitalist class, which results in over-accumulation and rendering the economy prone to a failure in aggregate demand. The 1960s and 1970s are the classic example of what happens when "subjective" pressures predominate while the 1920s and 1930s show the "objective" ones at work...At its most basic...the resistance to hierarchy in all its forms... is the main cause of the business cycle.... [C]apitalists in order to exploit a worker must first oppress them. But where there is oppression, there is resistance; where there is authority, there is the will to freedom. Hence capitalism is marked by a continuous struggle between worker and boss at the point of production as well as struggle outside of the workplace against other forms of hierarchy.''<ref>[http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secC7.html Infoshop.org - An Anarchist FAQ - C.7 What causes the capitalist business cycle?]</ref>
:Nevermind, that is old news. I'm an idiot and should go to bed allready. [[User:Cacophony|Cacophony]] ([[User talk:Cacophony|talk]]) 06:20, 29 July 2008 (UTC)


== horns ==
===Communism===
[[Image:Lenin.jpg|thumb|right|[[Vladimir Lenin]]]]
Arguably, there is as much difference (e.g. in economic policies, popular participation, atrocity levels etc) between states termed "communist" as there is between states termed "capitalist"<ref>[http://www.spectrezine.org/global/chomsky.htm]}}</ref><ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/articles/199011--.htm</ref>-- in spite of the lack of distinctions (as well as propagandistic labeling) that has been applied (particularly to the former), due to elite ideological influence in wage systems.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iEcLXi0NsFUC&pg=PA300&lpg=PA300&dq=anticommunism+as+a+control+mechanism&source=web&ots=iTv2kW4ety&sig=CcsBiTO000OTUGshR9Ahfydv4pc&hl=en#PPA301,M1]</ref> In fact, even opponents of wage slavery who condemn abuses by states termed "communist," have credited certain communist parties with providing forums of public participation that helped ameliorate conditions of wage slavery, among other things.<ref>[http://chomsky-must-read.blogspot.com/2008/03/dd-c11-s05.html Deterring Democracy: The Smaller Workshops]</ref> <ref>http://chomsky-must-read.blogspot.com/2008/03/dd-c07-s05.html The Fruits of VIctory: Latin America</ref>However, the isolation of some states termed communist has prevented them from acquiring the foreign technology required for an economic growth that can sometimes allow workers to struggle more effectively for a less oppressive form of wage slavery. North Korea is a case in point. In contrast, South Korea, applying a mixture of trade with state controls and protectionism<ref>[http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=9653 Essays: 'Protecting the global poor' by Ha-Joon Chang | Prospect Magazine July 2007 issue 136]</ref> --originally through a harsh dictatorship-- developed into an industrial powerhouse with a workforce that is better equipped to combat wage slavery.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93rYQcBScYg YouTube - Illegal Protest - Dec. 1st, 2006]</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lv_8PQi794s YouTube - South Korean National Labor Union Protest]</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgcwkNLY814 YouTube - Illegal Labor Union Stike - Pohang, South Korea]</ref> At the same time, some analysts have pointed out that a less oppressive form of wage slavery would have been achieved by communist, socialist, and other radical or reformist movements in places like Vietnam and Guatemala, were not for the attacks by states termed "capitalist" like the US and France--which feared the demonstration effect of successful and independent socioeconomic development in the third world, from which they derive cheap labor and resources. This was a development that, according to Noam Chomsky, was monolithically labeled "communist" and "totalitarian" as a pretext to act against it and maintain the exploitation that is seen in "free market" zones in places like Bangladesh, Burma, Indonesia, Guatemala, Haiti etc<ref>[http://www.democracynow.org/2000/5/1/teach_in_on_the_25th_anniversary Democracy Now! | Teach-in On the 25th Anniversary of the End of the Vietnam War: Noam Chomsky]</ref> Such policies seem compatible with the observation of Korean economist [[Ha-Joon Chang]], that the developed countries want to prevent economic independence in the third world by forcing them to institute "free market" policies, which "kick away the ladder"<ref>[http://www.paecon.net/PAEtexts/Chang1.htm Ha-Joon Chang, &quot;Kicking Away the Ladder&quot]</ref> because the rich countries developed with extensive state intervention and protection of what US Founding Father [[Alexander Hamilton]] called "infant industry".<ref>[p.49-50 Bad Samaritans, Ha-Joon Chang]</ref>


Alleged benefits of state economies over private ones include non-profit production, increased equity among citizens, the ability to maintain employment (thus consumption) in times of recession (which increases demand and helps the economy get out of recession); the development of "natural" monopolies such as electricity, water, gas, railways, landline telephones etc, and the improvement upon capitalist monopolies and competitive markets in pricing and production of socially optimal quantities due the decline in the profit motive, which, in capitalist monopolies causes them to "produce only up to the quantity where its profit is maximized... [which] under normal circumstances [is] lower than the socially optimal one" while in a competitive market it may cause [[overproduction]], phenomena such as the [[80/20 rule]] and other inefficiencies due to the absence of communication among competitors and lack of "freedom to set the price, as a rival can always undercut them until the point where lowering the price further will result in a loss."<ref>[p.114 Bad Samaritans Ha-Joon Chang]</ref>
moved to article talk. <font style="font-family: Georgia">[[User:Steven Walling|Steven Walling]] [[User talk:Steven Walling|(talk)]]</font> 21:19, 31 July 2008 (UTC)


[[Anarchists]], who have also been called "libertarian communists", believe that as long as any elite is in power, oppressive forms of authority such as wage slavery will continue. They describe how in all self-designated "[[communist]]" states the working class follows orders and does not do away with wage labor— at the point of production workers just switch bosses (from capitalists to state [[bureaucrats]])<ref name="chomsky1">[http://www.chomsky.info/articles/1986----.htm The Soviet Union Versus Socialism, by Noam Chomsky]</ref>. The state bureaucracy controls the means of production—not the workers. This, they argue, is why [[Vladimir Lenin]]'s view of socialism was that it'' "is nothing but state capitalist monopoly made to benefit the whole people,"''<ref>[http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/russia/lenin_quotes.html Nasty quote from Lenin and Trotsky]</ref>who must trust the benevolence of their leaders.
== Regarding Knol external link ==


Anarchists believe that true socialism (self-management and worker's democratic control of the means of production) will come only with the elimination of both, capitalism and the state, via the creation of a decentralized system of free associations with consumer and [[worker's councils]], regional federations, national [[assemblies]] and part-time rotative [[delegates]] with no power above others i.e. with no professional politicians, as was achieved to some extent, during the [[Spanish anarchist]] revolution. [[Image:Woman with cntfai flag.jpg|thumb|right|Spanish [[anarcho-syndicalist]]s successfully organized [[Anarchist communities#Spanish revolution .281936 to 1939.29|autonomous communities]] during the [[Spanish Revolution]] (1936 – 1939).]]
Hi Steven, Sorry for inserting external link not in the reference format. I am still learning Wikipedia. I just want to confirm if you put my link in your Spam list or blacklist. I am a nice WikiPedia user and want to follow all rules here. Sorry for that external link. Thanks [[User:Sunil gupta20801|Sunil Kumar Gupta]] ([[User talk:Sunil gupta20801|talk]]) 09:59, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
As the Infoshop FAQ points out:


''"Anarchists consider one of the defining aspects of the state is its [[hierarchical]] nature. In other words, the delegation of power into the hands of a few. As such, it violates the core idea of socialism, namely social equality. Those who make up the governing bodies in a state have more power than those who have elected them. Hence these comments by Malatesta and Hamon: 'It could be argued with much more reason that we are the most logical and most complete socialists, since we demand for every person not just his [or her] entire measure of the wealth of society but also his [or her] portion of social power."''<ref>[No Gods, No Masters, vol. 2, p. 20]</ref><ref>[http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secH1.html Infoshop.org - An Anarchist FAQ - H.1 Have anarchists always opposed state socialism?]</ref>


The rejection of the state is also advocated by some [[libertarian]] Marxists, such as [[Anton Pannekoek]], who observed talking about revolution that "this goal is not reached and cannot be reached by a new directing and governing class substituting itself for the [[bourgeoisie]]", but can only be "realized by the workers themselves being master over production."<ref name="chomsky1"/>
Thanks Steven [[User:Sunil gupta20801|Sunil Kumar Gupta]] ([[User talk:Sunil gupta20801|talk]]) 01:36, 5 August 2008 (UTC)
Libertarian socialists thus believe that rejecting such goals on the grounds that they were featured regularly in the rhetoric of leaders like Lenin and Stalin, is as illogical as rejecting freedom and peace on the grounds they were stated goals of Hitler and many other dictators. As [[Noam Chomsky]] says:
"''No rational person pays the slightest attention to declarations of benign intent on the part of leaders, no matter who they are. And the reason is they're completely predictable, including the worst monsters, Stalin, Hitler the rest. Always full of benign intent. Yes that's their task. Therefore, since they're predictable, we disregard them, they carry no information. What we do is, look at the facts. That's true if they're Bush or Blair or Stalin or anyone else. That's the beginning of rationality.''"<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20051218.htm On the Iraq Election, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Andy Clark]</ref>
Just as critics of capitalism don't believe that improvements in the standard of living under capitalist wage slavery justify it, critics of state Communism don't think communist wage slavery is justified by the fact that the poorest workers in Communist Russia in the late 80s (during the 'fall of communism') were better off than the poorest workers in 1916 (right before the Bolshevik take over), or 1918 (right after).<ref name="youtube1">[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFxYyXGMfZM YouTube - Noam Chomsky: Is Capitalism Making Life Better?]</ref>


Chomsky has found striking similarities in the elite managerial ideology of wage slavery in communist and capitalist states:
== COI at WWB and NMS Bill ==


''...[[Lenin]] was to decree that the leadership must assume "dictatorial powers" over the workers, who must accept "unquestioning submission to a single will" and "in the interests of socialism," must "unquestioningly obey the single will of the leaders of the labour process." As Lenin and Trotsky proceeded with the militarization of labour, the transformation of the society into a labour army submitted to their single will, Lenin explained that subordination of the worker to "individual authority" is "the system which more than any other assures the best utilization of human resources"{{ndash}} or as [[Robert McNamara]] expressed the same idea, "vital decision-making...must remain at the top...the real threat to democracy comes not from over management, but from under management"; "if it is not reason that rules man, then man falls short of his potential," and management is nothing other than the rule of reason, which keeps us free.''<ref>[http://www.zmag.org/Chomsky/articles/86-soviet-socialism.html]</ref>
Hello, Steven, I've just posted [[User_talk:WWB#COI|a reply to your comment]] on my talk page about editing on behalf of Disney and my employer. It's a bit long, so I won't post it here, but figured it was important enough to tip you that I'd replied. Look forward to hearing back from you. [[User:WWB|WWB]] ([[User talk:WWB|talk]]) 20:47, 5 August 2008 (UTC)


== Can you help? ==
===Fascism===
The various authoritarian ideologies of fascism (such as race-based theories of superiority and Social Darwinism) affected social and economic relations, but in terms of economic structure, fascism has traditionally consisted, like most modern first world economies, of a closely interlinked mixture of state and private control. Fascism, however, was more discriminating of trade unions than modern economies like Spain or the United States (countries which nevertheless do implement [[union busting]] and laws to limit union influence).<ref>[[Fascism]]</ref><ref>[[Taft-Hartley Act]]</ref><ref>[http://www.iww.org/en/node/2341 Madrid, Spain: Thousands March Against New Labour Laws | Industrial Workers of the World]</ref>


Workers didn't control the workplace democratically. They worked for wages provided by their superiors in hierarchical institutions like corporations and the state—therefore, wage slavery continued. Fascist economic policies were widely accepted (and praised) in the 1920s and 30s and foreign (especially US) corporate investment in Italy and Germany shot up after the fascist take over.<ref>[http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Fascism/Trading_Enemy_excerpts.html Excerpts Trading with the Enemy The Nazi - American Money Plot 1933-1949]</ref><ref>[http://web.mit.edu/thistle/www/v13/3/oil.html A People&#x2019;s History of the United States]</ref> In Germany, this foreign investment, in conjunction with Hitler's economic policies, led to economic growth and an increase in the standard of living of some Germans,<ref>[http://www.germannotes.com/hist_ww2.shtml Nazi Germany 1939-1945 and World War 2 (WW2) - History of Hitler and Holocaust]</ref> though critics do not believe that such improvements justify fascism nor wage slavery.<ref name="youtube1"/>
You previously helped with some editing disputes at [[Patrick T. McHenry]]. I've tried the BLP noticeboard, requesting a third opinion--and so far no response. I know admins are busy though. Here are the links where I've tried to work out the dispute: [[Wikipedia:Biographies_of_living_persons/Noticeboard#Patrick_T._McHenry]]<br>
Fascism has been perceived by some notable critics, like [[Buenaventura Durruti]], to be a last resort weapon of the privileged to ensure the maintenance of wage slavery:
[[Talk:Patrick_T._McHenry#Neutrality]]<br>
[[User_talk:Ziegfest]]<br>
[[User_talk:Ystava]]<br>
Thanks!! [[User:Ystava|Ystava]] ([[User talk:Ystava|talk]]) 14:08, 9 August 2008 (UTC)


''"No government fights fascism to destroy it. When the [[bourgeoisie]] sees that power is slipping out of its hands, it brings up fascism to hold onto their privileges."'' <ref>[http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/b/buenaventu325901.html]</ref>
== FA article you worked on reached the main page ==


==Psychological effects==
Congrats! [[Parapsychology]] is today's featured article. --'''[[User:Nealparr|<span style="color:#000">Nealparr</span>]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Nealparr|talk to me]])</sup> 02:05, 11 August 2008 (UTC)


[[Image:WilhelmvonHumboldt.jpg|thumb|right|[[Wilhelm von Humboldt]]]]
Analysis of the psychological implications of wage slavery goes back to the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] era. In his 1791 book On the Limits of State Action, classical liberal thinker [[Wilhelm von Humboldt]] exlained how "whatever does not spring from a man's free choice, or is only the result of instruction and guidance, does not enter into his very nature; he does not perform it with truly human energies, but merely with mechanical exactness"— and so when the laborer works under external control, "we may admire what he does, but we despise what he is."<ref>[http://www.zmag.org/Chomsky/year/year-c01-s06.html#TXT19 Year 501: Chapter One [6/12&#93;<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>


More recently, investigative journalist [[Robert Kuttner]] in Everything for Sale, analyzes the work of public-Health scholars Jeffrey Johnson and Ellen Hall and concludes that "''to be in a life situation where one experiences relentless demands by others, over which one has relatively little control, is to be at risk of poor health, physically as well as mentally.''" Under wage slavery, "''a relatively small elite demands and gets empowerment, self-actualisation, autonomy, and other work satisfaction that partially compensate for long hours''" while "epidemiological data confirm that lower-paid, lower-status workers are more likely to experience the most clinically damaging forms of stress, in part because they have less control over their work.''"<ref>Kuttner, Op. Cit., p. 153 and p. 154</ref>
Stress and other emotional problems, might be closely related to suicide and diseases such as obesity and nicotine addiction.


Wage slavery, and the educational system that precedes it "''implies power held by the leader. Without power the leader is inept. The possession of power inevitably leads to corruption… in spite of… good intentions … [Leadership means] power of initiative, this sense of responsibility, the self-respect which comes from expressed manhood, is taken from the men, and consolidated in the leader. The sum of their initiative, their responsibility, their self-respect becomes his … [and the] order and system he maintains is based upon the suppression of the men, from being independent thinkers into being 'the men' … In a word, he is compelled to become an autocrat and a foe to democracy." For the "leader", such marginalisation can be beneficial, for a leader "sees no need for any high level of intelligence in the rank and file, except to applaud his actions. Indeed such intelligence from his point of view, by breeding criticism and opposition, is an obstacle and causes confusion.''"<ref>The Miners' Next Step, pp. 16-17 and p. 15</ref> Wage slavery "''implies erosion of the human personality… [because] some men submit to the will of others, arousing in these instincts which predispose them to cruelty and indifference in the face of the suffering of their fellows.''"<ref>quoted by Jose Peirats, The CNT in the Spanish Revolution, vol. 2, p. 76</ref>
[[Image:MurrayBookchin.jpg|thumb|right]]
According to [[anarchist]] [[Murray Bookchin]], "''a hierarchical mentality", stemming from mechanisms such as wage slavery "fosters the renunciation of the pleasures of life. It justifies toil, guilt, and sacrifice by the 'inferiors,' and pleasure and the indulgent gratification of virtually every caprice by their 'superiors.' The objective history of the social structure becomes internalised as a subjective history of the psychic structure… Hierarchy, class, and ultimately the State, penetrate the very integument of the human psyche and establish within it unreflective internal powers of coercion and constraint…By using guilt and self-blame, the inner State can control behaviour long before fear of the coercive powers of the State have to be invoked."''<ref>The Ecology of Freedom, p. 72 and p. 189</ref> Similarly, the anarchist [[Mikhail Bakunin]] pointed out that "power and authority corrupt those who exercise them as much as those who are compelled to submit to them.''"<ref>The Political Philosophy of Bakunin, p. 249</ref> ''"Power operates destructively, even on those who have it, reducing their individuality as it 'renders them stupid and brutal, even when they were originally endowed with the best of talents. One who is constantly striving to force everything into a mechanical order at last becomes a machine himself and loses all human feeling.'''" <ref>Rudolf Rocker, Anarcho-Syndicalism, pp. 17-8</ref><ref name="infoshop1">[http://infoshop.org/faq/secB1.html#secb11 Infoshop.org - An Anarchist FAQ - B.1 Why are anarchists against authority and hierarchy?<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
[[Image:Movie_poster_the_corporation.jpg|thumb|left|The documentary [[The Corporation]] analyzes the magnification of negative psychological tendencies in wage labor-based corporate systems]]
As the [[Infoshop]] FAQ points out "''[[Tacitus]] said, 'We hate those whom we injure.' Those who oppress others always find reasons to regard their victims as 'inferior' and hence deserving of their fate. Elites need some way to justify their superior social and economic positions. Since the social system is obviously unfair and elitist, attention must be distracted to other, less inconvenient, 'facts,' such as alleged superiority based on biology or 'nature.'''"<ref name="infoshop1"/>— "facts" that may be internalized by the victims themselves.


[[Philip Zimbardo]], the [[psychologist]] who conducted the famous [[Stanford prison experiment]], said:
== 1 Year of the Collaboration of the Week ==


"''Most of the evil of the world comes about not out of evil motives, but somebody saying get with the program, be a team player…When a person feels, I am not personally responsible, I am not accountable, it's the role I'm playing or these are the orders I've gotten, then you allow yourself to do things you would never do under ordinary circumstances. [My book] The Lucifer Effect is really a celebration of the human mind's infinite capacity to be kind, or cruel, caring or selfish, creative or destructive. To make some of us be villains and some of us heroes. And it all depends on the situation. When we have total freedom, we choose situations that we know we can control. But when we're in situations where other people are in charge, in the military, in prisons, in some schools, in some families, we are – we can be transformed.''"<ref>[http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/03/30/1335257&mode=thread&tid=25 Democracy Now! | Understanding How Good People Turn Evil: Renowned Psychologist Philip Zimbardo On his Landmark Stanford Prison Experiment, Abu Ghraib and More<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
Hello again to those of [[WP:ORE|WikiProject Oregon]]. It is time again for another Collaboration of the Week. The last two weeks were a Stub Improvement Drive, and thank you to those who improved any Stubs.


The magnification of negative human tendencies in wage labor-based state and corporate systems has prompted some experts to regard them as psychopathic. For example, using diagnostic criteria from the DSM-IV; [[Robert Hare (psychologist)|Robert Hare]], a [[University of British Columbia]] Psychology Professor and FBI consultant, provides a detailed analysis comparing the legal person embodied in the modern, profit-driven corporation to that of a clinically diagnosed psychopath. His findings corroborate typical psychopathic behavior such as superficiality, callous unconcern for the feelings of others, incapacity to maintain enduring relationships, diffusion of responsibility, emphasis on short-term goals, predatory egotism, reckless disregard for the safety of others, deceitfulness: repeated lying to and deceiving of others for profit, incapacity to experience guilt, failure to conform to the social norms with respect to lawful behaviors etc.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ui9C6xVpVf0] [[The Corporation]]</ref>
This week marks the one week anniversary of the COTW, so a brief highlight reel:
*At least 10 DYKs
*Three articles passed GA after being listed at COTW
*Probably around 25 articles started
*Almost all Top importance articles are now better than Stub class
And now on with our countdown. This week we have two requests, the '''[[Willamette Meteorite]]''' and '''[[Tom McCall]]'''. Hopefully we can get both to GA quality. [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Opting out|Click here to opt out of these messages]], or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Future collaborations|click here]] to make a suggestion for a future COTW. Thank you. [[User:Aboutmovies|Aboutmovies]] ([[User talk:Aboutmovies|talk]]) 09:50, 15 August 2008 (UTC)


In Marx's opinion,"''[t]he following elements are contained in wage labor: (1) the chance relationship and alienation of labor from the laboring subject; (2) the chance relationship and alienation of labor from its object; (3) the determination of the laborer through social needs which are an alien compulsion to him, a compulsion to which he submits out of egoistic need and distress...(4) the maintenance of his individual existence appears to the worker as the goal of his activity and his real action is only a means; he lives to acquire the means of living…" And so "the more the worker expends himself in his work, the more powerful becomes the world of objects which he creates in face of himself, and the poorer he himself becomes in his inner life, the less he belongs to himself. It is just the same as in religion. The more of himself man attributes to God, the less he has left in himself. The worker puts his life into the object, and his life then belongs no longer to him but to the object. The greater his activity, therefore, the less he possesses … the alienation of the worker in his product means not only that his labour becomes an object, takes on its own existence, but that it exists outside him, independently and alien to him, and that it stands opposed to him as an autonomous power. '''The life which he has given to the object sets itself against him as an alien and hostile force'''… the alienated character of work for the worker appears in the fact that it is not his work but work for someone else, that in work he does not belong to himself but to another person.'''''"<ref>[http://infoshop.org/library/Fredy_Perlman:_Intro_Commodity_Fetishism#_ref-5 Fredy Perlman: Intro Commodity Fetishism - Infoshop Library<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
== [[Wikipedia:Requests_for_adminship/Paul_Erik#Support]] ==


German-Jewish psychoanalyst [[Erich Fromm]] argued that wage slavery fosters alienation and is "''connected with the marginalisation and disempowerment of those without authority''" because "''[t]hose who have these symbols of authority and those who benefit from them must dull their subject people's realistic, i.e. critical, thinking and make them believe the fiction [that irrational authority is rational and necessary], … [so] the mind is lulled into submission by clichés … [and] people are made dumb because they become dependent and lose their capacity to trust their eyes and judgement.''" [Erich Fromm, To Have or To Be?, p. 47]. Fromm noted that advertising, consumerism, and other means of off-work elite control, also contribute to these psychological effects.
I have indented your duplicate vote. <font face="Verdana">[[User:Gary King|<font color="#02e">Gary</font>&nbsp;<font color="#02b"><b>King</b></font>]]&nbsp;([[User talk:Gary King|<font color="#02e">talk</font>]])</font> 07:28, 16 August 2008 (UTC)
:Hey Steve, you and I made the same mistake! {{(:}} [[User:Masterpiece2000|<font color="green">Masterpiece2000</font>]] ([[User talk:Masterpiece2000|<font color="green">talk</font>]]) 08:02, 16 August 2008 (UTC)


Psychologists themselves are subject to these pressures and often work on behalf of elites—helping individuals adjust to the status quo, pathologizing rebellion against authority<ref>[http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/75081/?page=1 How Teenage Rebellion Has Become a Mental Illness | Health and Wellness | AlterNet]</ref> and sometimes participating in advertising, propaganda, unnecessary profit-driven drug prescriptions, war and torture.<ref>[http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20070605_a_hypocritical_oath_psychologists_and_torture Truthdig - Reports - Hypocritical Oath: Psychologists and Torture<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
:: I do like how eager you were to give me that extra bit of support. :) Thanks. If ever you have any concerns about my actions, adminly or otherwise, don't hesitate to let me know. Best wishes, <font face="Comic sans MS">[[User:Paul Erik|Paul Erik]]</font> <small><sup><font color="Blue">[[User_talk:Paul Erik|(talk)]]</font><font color="Green">[[Special:Contributions/Paul Erik|(contribs)]]</font></sup></small> 21:16, 16 August 2008 (UTC)


It is important to note that wage slaves, just like chattel slaves, remain so even if they identify with their oppressors or think of themselves as free due to propaganda, self-deception, or [[false consciousness]]. Critics of capitalism point at the fact that chattel slavery was once also perceived as legitimate because of the ideological influences of its power structure, and that, in fact, moral arguments were offered in its favor.<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/199811--.htm On Humanism and Morality, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Tor Wennerberg]</ref><ref>[http://docsouth.unc.edu/southlit/fitzhughcan/menu.html George Fitzhugh, 1806-1881 Cannibals All! or, Slaves Without Masters]</ref>. [[Noam Chomsky]] claims that there is no reason to believe that one day humans won't look back at the days of wage slavery with the same moral outrage with which they react to chattel slavery. People, in his view, have to learn that they are not free, and engage in the kind of "consciousness raising" activities that enabled women in the [[women's movement]], to perceive that they were oppressed.<ref>[Language and Politics p. 468-469]</ref>
== Elonka ==


==Social effects==
Re your [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AElonka&diff=232599676&oldid=232576672 endorsement] of the recall of Elonka: at [[Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Elonka#Comments by Coppertwig]], I refuted the evidence, and I haven't noticed anyone refuting my refutations or attempting to. I'm curious as to what motivated your endorsement. I would appreciate it if you would supply me with one to three diffs of Elonka's editing showing what you consider to be inappropriate behaviour justifying recall. Thank you. (I'm not going around asking all the endorsers. I'm not sure but I think you're the first one I asked. It's because you said there was evidence of clearly improper behaviour, so I'd like to see what evidence you're talking about. Is there a second RfC I don't know about?) <span style="color:Orange; font-size:1.5em;">☺</span> [[User:Coppertwig|Coppertwig]] ([[User talk:Coppertwig|talk]]) 02:21, 18 August 2008 (UTC)
Systems based on wage slavery have been blamed for creating a cruel society that represses our moral instincts and pits people against each other for the benefit of elites. Such systems have also been blamed for the deaths of tens of millions of human beings. For example, Nobel Prize winning economist [[Amartya Sen]] did a study of democratic post-colonial India from 1949-1979, which had an economic system based--as much as western democracies-- on private ownership of the means of production<ref>http://unpan1.un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/APCITY/UNPAN019738.pdf</ref> and concluded that "every eight years or so more people in addition die in India{{ndash}} in comparison with Chinese mortality rates{{ndash}} than the total number that died in the gigantic Chinese famine" of the late 50's<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/articles/199011--.htm The Victors, by Noam Chomsky]</ref>— i.e. over 100 million in those 30 years alone.
:The issue for me is that Elonka seems to have a pattern of hovering over controversial articles, trying to act as an editorial board cum mediator in a very heavy-handed fashion. As you can see in the RFC, there are multiple examples of this. Whether any individual editor disagreed with the outcome of her actions or her style is rather irrelevant to me. What is relevant is that she fundamentally misunderstands the role of sysops on a wiki. We are here to be janitors, to make it easy for other users to do good work, not to try and police things. Combine that distasteful manner with her frequent unresponsiveness to constructive criticism from the community, and she isn't fit to wield the mop, in my opinion. Plus, the whole flip-flopping on recall is disgusting. To open yourself up to recall and then decline to follow through when the shit hits the fan is low. <font style="font-family: Georgia">[[User:Steven Walling|Steven Walling]] [[User talk:Steven Walling|(talk)]]</font> 02:26, 18 August 2008 (UTC)


In many instances —such as Stalin's Gulags, the Holocaust and various wars— wage slavery was only one of several interlinked contributing factors (others being racism, nationalism, social Darwinism etc). Some experts deem that tens of millions of human beings die every year due to the direct and indirect consequences of systems based on wage slavery (e.g. wars, work-related injury/illness, deaths associated with rampant consumerism, environmental destruction, suicide, people dying of hunger and disease because they don't have access to the means of life and it's not profitable to help them, etc).<ref>[http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Facts.asp Poverty Facts and Stats - Global Issues]</ref>
==Buckeye Chicken==
[[Image:Freedom affirmation poster, USAF · DF-SD-04-09863.JPEG|thumb|200px|right|[[Nationalism]], like news media, entertainment and consumerism, can serve to veil wage slavery]]
Thanks, Steven. I wasn't sure what constituted a thread on Wiki Talk: if I should post at the bottom of the whole page, the bottom of the section, or the bottom of what seemed to be a discussion of the sentence in question. I will probably be an infrequent contributor, but I hope I'll learn the correct conventions so I don't manage to annoy the regulars! (In fact, I hope I've replied correctly, here.) I do appreciate your assistance. [[User:Llysse|Llysse]] ([[User talk:Llysse|talk]]) 19:58, 18 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Calutrons at Oak Ridge.jpg|thumb|220px|left|Wage laborers enriching uranium for [[nuclear weapons]] production.]]
[[Image:San tribesman.jpg|thumb|150px|left|The [[Bushmen]] are an example of a leisurely, very non-hierarchical [[hunter-gatherer]] society with a [[gift economy]]]]
Environmental degradation and the handling of nuclear weapons by people following orders for wages hint at the mass suicidal tendencies of hierarchical systems such as wage slavery. This may be due to an incompatibility with the moral and survival instincts that developed in the more decentralized pre-civilization power structures that possibly encompassed most of hominidae evolution—though too little is known about [[Homo Erectus]] to know for certain. Anecdotal evidence suggests that humans retain strong altruistic and anti-hierarchical tendencies.<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWkhlxX3xUs YouTube - The anti-capitalist anarchist in all of us p.1]</ref><ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjzogtaySTY YouTube - The anti-capitalist anarchist in all of us p.2]</ref> Also, the anecdotal evidence in Lawrence Keeley's book "The Myth of the Noble Savage"<ref>{{cite book |last=Ellingson |first=Terry |title=The Myth of the Noble Savage |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley |year=2001 |isbn=9780520226104 }}</ref> was counterbalanced by William Eckhardt's statistical and mathematical evidence, which together produced the possible conclusion that primitive warfare among the more violent tribes was constant but of a very low intensity, and mainly psychological. According to Eckhardt, wars of civilizations produce far more destruction than all of the primitive wars, both absolutely and proportionally.<ref>[http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0022-3433(1975)12%3A1%3C55%3APM%3E2.0.CO%3B2-I Cookie Absent]</ref> Agriculture meant that humans shifted from taking what nature offered to a mode of control of nature. This shift to control ultimately led to the creation of our current forms of civilized hierarchy--probably based on the creation or magnification of abstract notions of land ownership.<ref>http://www.jeffvail.net/atheoryofpower.pdf</ref> The perceived psychological roots and ramifications of facts such as that "[t]he human status as top mammal depends without question on [agricultural] food production" and that the "[h]unter gatherer[]... lifestyle, in terms of long-term stability and reliability, has been the most successful in human history"<ref>[First Farmers by Peter Bellwood p. 1-2]</ref> has prompted [[anarcho-primitivist]] author [[John Zerzan]] to consider wage slavery as simply part of a continuum of "hierarchy... domestication...[c]onformity, repetition, and regularity [that] were the keys to civilisation upon its triumph, replacing the [relative lack of disease...egalitarianism, autonomy] spontaneity, enchantment, discovery [and lack of strict hierarchy...between the human and the non human species] of the pre-agricultural human state that survived so very long"<ref>[http://www.eco-action.org/dt/futureprim.html Future Primitive by John Zerzan<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>


However, according to Anthropologist David Graber, the picture is in some respects more mixed: "There were hunter-gatherer societies with nobles and slaves, there are agrarian societies that are fiercely egalitarian. Even in . . . Amazonia, one finds some groups who can justly be described as anarchists, like the Piaroa, living alongside others; say, the warlike Sherentre, who are clearly anything but."<ref>[Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, pp. 53-4]</ref>
==WikiProject Good Articles Newsletter==
While most anarchists believe that people should be able to seek non-technological ways of living, they think it possible to achieve an anti-authoritarian society devoid of wage slavery and artificial alienation without resorting to such drastic measures as dismantling modern civilization, which would entail such seemingly unrealistic actions as renouncing all technology and massively reducing the earth's population. Even if desirable, a voluntary reduction in birth rates and safe decommissioning of industry would require a long transitional period (probably centuries) that could only consist of something like a traditional anarchism<ref>[http://youtube.com/watch?v=J-KLP2BZtxw Noam Chomsky interviewed by Barry Pateman]</ref><ref>[http://www.punksinscience.org/kleanthes/courses/UK04S/WV/Anarchism_Zerzan.html Zerzan? by Michael Albert]</ref><ref>[http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secA3.html#seca33 An Anarchist FAQ - A.3 What types of anarchism are there?<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
Sorry about the delay. [[WP:AWB|AWB]] has been having a few issues lately. Here is the august issue of the WikiProject Good Articles Newsletter! [[User:Derek.cashman|Dr. Cash]] ([[User talk:Derek.cashman|talk]]) 20:58, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
According to the Anarchist FAQ, however, "few anarchists are convinced by an ideology which, as Brian Morris notes, dismisses the 'last eight thousand years or so of human history' as little more than a source 'of tyranny, hierarchical control, mechanised routine devoid of any spontaneity. All those products of the human creative imagination{{ndash}} farming, art, philosophy, technology, science, urban living, symbolic culture{{ndash}} are viewed negatively by Zerzan{{ndash}} in a monolithic sense.' "<ref>[http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secA3.html#seca39 Morris, Op. Cit., p. 38]</ref>


===Human nature, law, and war===
{{Wikipedia:WikiProject Good articles/Newsletter/August 2008}}
[[Image:Inspection-New-Colours.JPG|thumb|Militaries epitomize the subordination of labor]]
[[Image:JMR-Memphis1.jpg|thumb|right|[[Lady Justice]] or Justitia is a personification of the moral force that supposedly underlies the legal system. Her blindfold symbolizes [[equality]] under the law through impartiality towards its subjects, the weighing scales represent the [[balance (metaphysics)|balancing]] of people's interests under the law, and her sword denotes the law's force of [[reason]] and the power of the sovereign to enforce the law.]] [[Image:James Madison Presidential $1 Coin obverse.png|150px|thumb|right|Madison dollar, released November 2007]]
The general environment of obedience and subordination created by those who are forced to rent themselves in order to survive and/or prosper—from police and lawyers, to the general population— entails that wage slavery is a primary element of law formation and enforcement, though in many parts of the world, to varying degrees, grassroots struggles have also been able to exert a positive counteracting influence. The subordination to the needs, interests and perceptions of elite groups in society has an inordinate influence on most aspects of the law—distorting the framework used to apply our intrinsic moral and intellectual faculties. This also means that the law doesn't exist in a vacuum. Apart from the direct influence of powerful groups, it is also shaped by other factors. For example, educational institutions catering to the ideological needs of the biggest employers (government, corporations); natural mechanisms that induce intellectuals to get ahead in the hierarchy, make money and become influential by adopting and disseminating ideas that are serviceable to power; the mainstream media—which are profit seeking corporations selling affluent audiences to advertisers and relying primarily on business and government information; economic phenomena like capital flight, nationalistic and commercial values and propaganda spread by a huge advertising industry and powerful government apparatus, the threat of unemployment or even the passivity and ideology spread by spectator sports and entertainment industry<ref>[http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/10/19/144225 Democracy Now! | Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People]</ref><ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/1992----02.htm Excerpts from Manufacturing Consent, Noam Chomsky interviewed by various interviewers]</ref> The influence of elite groups on the law and conception of "democracy" is seen in even the most advanced government systems prior to the era of [[corporate globalization]]. For example, in the first part of his magisterial two volume work The Transformation of American Law, Morton J. Horwitz writes:


''"During the eighty years after the American Revolution, a major transformation of the legal system took place... [which] enabled emergent entrepreneurial and commercial groups to win a disproportionate share of wealth and power in American society. The transformed character of legal regulation thus became a major instrument in the hands of these newly powerful groups."''<ref>[Transformation of American Law 1780-1860 p. xvi Morton J. Horwitz]</ref>
==RfA thank you==


And even before this transformation, US Founding Father [[James Madison]] had already stated at the [[Philadelphia Convention|Constitutional Convention]] that:
<div style="background-color: white; border: #5B92E5 solid 2px; margin-bottom:.5em; padding: 5px; font-family: trebuchet ms, sans-serif;">[[Image:Broom_icon.svg|left|75px]]<font color="#084C9E">{{PAGENAME}}, I wish to say thanks for your support in my successful [[Wikipedia:Requests for adminship/JGHowes|request for adminship]], which ended with '''82''' supports, '''3''' opposes, and '''1''' neutral. I will do my best to live up to your expectations. I would especially like to thank <span style="font-family: verdana;"> [[User:Rlevse|<span style="color:#060;">'''''R''levse'''</span>]] for nominating me and [[User:Wizardman|<span style="color:#060">'''''Wizardman'''''</span>]] for co-nominating me.<br/>{{spaces|50}}&mdash; <i><b>[[User:JGHowes|<font color = "green">JGHowes</font>]]<font color = "darkblue"> <sup>[[User talk:JGHowes|''talk'']]</sup></font></b> - </i> 19 August 2008</div>


{{quote |“In England, at this day, if elections were open to all classes of people, the property of landed proprietors would be insecure. An agrarian law would soon take place. If these observations be just, our government ought to secure the permanent interests of the country against innovation. Landholders ought to have a share in the government, to support these invaluable interests and to balance and check the other. They ought to be so constituted as to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority.”<ref>{{cite web |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=BjkOAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA450&lpg=PA450&dq=landholders+ought+to+have+a+share+in+the+government+to+support+these+invaluable+interests+and+to+balance+and+check+the+other&source=web&ots=cnTSolkpJJ&sig=fuggu7aSK5rBblWw90eOYRmFbf0#PPA450,M1 |title=Books |publisher=Google}}</ref>}}
==Little Miss Sunshine FAC==
I have nominated ''[[Little Miss Sunshine]]'' at WP:FAC, and after looking at the talk page, I saw that [[Talk:Little_Miss_Sunshine#Passed_GA_nomination|you wanted me to contact you]] when I took the FAC plunge. I'm not searching for votes, but would appreciate if you could take a look at the article (its come a long way since February!) and let me know on the article's [[Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Little Miss Sunshine|nomination page]] if there are any issues that should be corrected. Thanks again for reviewing it at its GA stage, and if you are able, I would appreciate another look as the article moves further up in classes. Happy editing! --[[User:Nehrams2020|Nehrams2020]] ([[User talk:Nehrams2020|talk]]) 08:50, 23 August 2008 (UTC)


Similarly, the President of the Continental Congress and first Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, John Jay said repeatedly that "The people who own the country ought to govern it."<ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/quotations/122003.html December 2003. Quotations of the Day Archive. Bartleby.com]</ref> Accordingly, police function developed in the context of maintaining a layered societal structure and protecting property.<ref>{{cite book |last=Siegel |first=Larry J. |title=Criminolgy |pages=p. 515-516 |publisher=Thomson Wadsworth |year=2005}} [http://books.google.com/books?id=PRmhu3M2jv8C&pg=PA515&lpg=PA515&dq=police+american+colonies&source=web&ots=Dxk8AuzQR6&sig=KokKB0NmB0Gs5DWxF3Jl3OhQQcI&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result]</ref>
== A sheepish note: I'm impressed! ==


This ideology has often been rationalized with appeals to "the tyranny of the majority"; self-servingly assuming that 1) rule by the minority is better because the masses are incapable of organizing themselves effectively; and 2) democracy always means majority rule, rather than "people having a say over decisions in proportion to the degree they are affected by them"<ref>[http://www.zmag.org/parecon/capvsparecon/html/decisions.html]</ref>{{ndash}} which entails respect for the legitimate rights of minorities.
A whole 3 minutes passed between me getting [[Taleshi (sheep)]] listed on [[List of sheep breeds]] and you coming in with real knowledge about the subject matter to fix the article. Most wonderful! (I picked the article up from [[Wikipedia:Dead-end pages]] and did some basic editing on it - wonderful to see such fast tag-team editing from people who don't even know about each other!) --[[User:Alvestrand|Alvestrand]] ([[User talk:Alvestrand|talk]]) 07:16, 25 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Noam chomsky cropped.jpg|thumb|left|Noam Chomsky]]


Noam Chomsky believes that the rationalizations for this elite government function have been fallacious:
== Jim N E Cricket, its another Oregon Collaboration of the Week ==


{{quote |“Modern political theory stresses Madison's belief that "in a just and a free government the rights both of property and of persons ought to be effectually guarded." But in this case too it is useful to look at the doctrine more carefully. There are no rights of property, only rights to property that is, rights of persons with property. Perhaps I have a right to my car, but my car has no rights. The right to property also differs from others in that one person's possession of property deprives another of that right if I own my car, you do not; but in a just and free society, my freedom of speech would not limit yours. The Madisonian principle, then, is that government must guard the rights of persons generally, but must provide special and additional guarantees for the rights of one class of persons, property owners"<ref>[http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Chomsky/ConsentPOP_Chom.html Consent Without Consent Profit Over People Noam Chomsky]</ref> ""[In] [r]epresentative democracy, as in, say, the United States or Great Britain… there is a monopoly of power centralized in the state, and secondly{{ndash}} and critically{{ndash}} […] the representative democracy is limited to the political sphere and in no serious way encroaches on the economic sphere. Anarchists of this tradition have always held that democratic control of one's productive life is at the core of any serious human liberation, or, for that matter, of any significant democratic practice. That is, as long as individuals are compelled to rent themselves on the market to those who are willing to hire them, as long as their role in production is simply that of ancillary tools, then there are striking elements of coercion and oppression that make talk of democracy very limited, if even meaningful…”<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/19760725.htm |title=Interview |publisher=Chomsky}}</ref>}}
Greetings [[WP:ORE|WikiProject Oregon folks]], it is time for another edition of the Collaboration of the Week! A big thanks to those who helped out in improving [[Tom McCall]] and the [[Willamette Meteorite]] last week. This week we have a request for Mr. '''[[Greg Oden]]''' who has been back in the news as of late, so hopefully we can get him up to B class before training camp starts. Then we have a '''[[List of hospitals in Oregon|Hospital red link drive]]''' with plenty of opportunity for DYKs! As always, [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Opting out|click here to opt out of these messages]], or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Oregon/Collaboration#Future collaborations|click here]] to make a suggestion for a future COTW. Bu bye. [[User:Aboutmovies|Aboutmovies]] ([[User talk:Aboutmovies|talk]]) 15:51, 25 August 2008 (UTC)

Marx's indictment of elite systems of justice contains similar observations:

''"The civilization and justice of bourgeois order comes out in its lurid light whenever the slaves and drudges of that order rise against their masters. Then this civilization and justice stand forth as undisguised savagery and lawless revenge...the infernal deeds of the soldiery reflect the innate spirit of that civilization of which they are the mercenary vindicators....The bourgeoisie of the whole world, which looks complacently upon the wholesale massacre after the battle, is convulsed by horror at the destruction of brick and mortar."''<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=iAAmt0r75y4C&pg=PA248&lpg=PA248&dq=the+civilization+and+justice+of+bourgeois+order+comes+out+in+its+lurid+light+whenever+the+slaves+and+drudges+of+that+order+rise+against+their+masters&source=web&ots=bcC167G52I&sig=i5YGRybPIv3mgRJQ8iVLqzw2-8s&hl=en]</ref> More generally, Marx perceived that ''"[y]our very ideas [of freedom, culture, law, etc] are but the outgrowth of the conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class made into a law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economical conditions of existence of your class."''<ref name="marx1"/>

A large percentage of lawyers do work to defend the interests of corporate and state elites— though the potential for change becomes apparent when despite pressures, incentives and other elite-driven selection processes, some determined lawyers don't. The law has also been shaped by their struggles, as well as those of other constituencies e.g. labor movements, women's and civil rights movements or even the liberal values of economically conservative elites who don't want state oppression to affect them personally, or are in favor of oppression only to maintain their privileges (thus opposing laws against gays, ethnic groups, abortion etc). Nevertheless, if it's true, as Frederik Douglass said, that "power concedes nothing without a demand; it never has and it never will"<ref>[http://www.wisdomquotes.com/cat_power.html Power Quotes | Power Quotations | Power Sayings | Wisdom Quotes]</ref> wage slavery, so long as it exists, will remain a strong factor ensuring the resiliency of a system of law that overcriminalizes the powerless and decriminalizes the powerful. The law can ensure that moral principles are applied, but will tend to do so only when it does not fundamentally alter the hierarchical status quo that is at the root of most crime in society. Given that most lawyers and judges will resist the idea that they maintain a system of injustice, this double standard will be maintained by ignoring the corrupting influences of elite rule on the general population, and through the application of rationalizations, selective rationality and morality (e.g. criminalizing marijuana and other drugs rather than the more lethal tobacco, punishing petty thieves rather than big exploiting corporations, prosecuting subnational terrorists rather than state war criminals, criminalizing individual support for terrorist groups, but not state support for dictatorships or terrorist groups like the [[Contras]], etc). Wage slavery also contributes to making powerful groups unaccountable to the law (e.g. US violations of international law,<ref>[http://www.chomsky.info/articles/20040806.htm From Central America to Iraq, by Noam Chomsky]</ref> police brutality<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tOVkT2YESU}}</ref> etc). The capacity to unjustly and arbitrarily influence or violate the law is related to the concentration of power and wealth in the hands of the few. Those who advocate the elimination of wage slavery and the decentralization of power and wealth, (e.g. anarchists) maintain that the law —together with the general culture—should more pervasively reflect human instincts of justice and freedom and should therefore be used not to maintain hierarchy, but to maintain an ''absence'' of hierarchy by placing a heavy burden of proof on those who advocate authoritarian measures such as violence and exploitation.
{{Anarchism sidebar}}
Such legal notions are based on the belief that hierarchical institutions magnify the worst features of human nature (violence, greed etc) and that by relinquishing their subordinate role as subservient, unthinking and insentient "cogs in a machine", people would feel more independent, responsible and aware of their actions; they wouldn't be indoctrinated by centers of power, and would become appalled by behavior that now is condoned within the hierarchical institutional structures. From this perspective, the root causes of war and environmental destruction lie in hierarchical mechanisms like wage slavery. In other words, if the state was eliminated and people directly controlled the economy democratically, they would use it for their own benefit rather than for the benefit of elites, and would therefore foster values of solidarity, equality, peace, generosity, creativity and long term survival of the planet.

Several assumptions underlie this rationale:

1 - In hierarchies there's an incentive to not be completely honest with one's superior and to tell him/her want s/he wants to hear. This lack of honest communication builds up the higher it goes up the hierarchy and is reflected once again onto the society by those powerful enough to exert influence{{ndash}} primarily the elite who, having a lot to lose, have strong incentives to subordinate and atomize the general population by spreading untruths.

2 - It becomes easier to abuse people when one has power over them.

3 - Human beings often numb their independent sense of morality when they subordinate themselves to arbitrary decree from above (one can dismiss one's complicity in a destructive system by simply saying "I'm just following orders" or "I'm just doing my job, earning my bread," "My superiors are good and know what they are doing" etc).

4 - Under authority people tend to become instruments of someone else, instead of free agents directing their own destiny, discovering and gaining a taste for more freedom. This entails that even when the outcome of actions is positive, the framework in which they're undertaken will remain to a large extent amoral and fortuitous. From this point of view, hierarchical structures like the state and capitalism foster dependence and a lack of personal responsibility vis a vis humanity and the environment—allowing those on top to influence the lives and thoughts of society, and corrupting human behavior:

{{quote|Most people don't go around punching and killing people, and the average person wouldn't steal food from a child just because there are no police around and he happened to be hungry. If he did we'd find such behavior pathological, not normal (as you'd expect if we were really so greedy).Yet states have killed millions through war, and corporations will literally take away water from children for profit (e.g. Bechtel in Cochabamba, Bolivia) and kill millions of workers through horrible working conditions and negligence. They act as magnified projections of our worst tendencies, and negate the fact that cooperation is more important for survival than competition, (as Russian scientist Kropotkin demonstrated in his book Mutual Aid). If you count the number of people killed (and the amount of money stolen) by capitalist and state institutions and compare it to the smaller criminals (bank robbers, serial killers, gangs, Islamic terrorists etc), it is not even close. Furthermore, evidence shows that, contrary to popular belief, institutions of power do not restrain criminal behavior, but actually promote the alienation, violence and socio-economic disparity that creates most of these smaller criminals… Even a saint who gains state power will become an important cog in a repressive power structure, just like CEOs and slave owners could be very nice people, yet in their institutional role they are oppressive. "Good" men in power are responsible for much more death and suffering than "evil" men without power, that's why unlike capitalists and Marxists, anarchists have never imposed dictatorship and mass murder on anyone.}}<ref name="infoshop2">[http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=20070405083727637 Infoshop News - Refuting Steven Pinker&#x2019;s &#x201C;A History of Violence&#x201D]</ref>
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:David graeber.png|right|thumb|David Graeber]] -->
According to some thinkers, however, there's something called the "bad apple theory" that argues states are natural structures. Anthropologist [[David Graeber]] explains it:

{{quote|All you need is one group in a fairly large region that decides to be predatory raiders and beat up on their neighbors and everyone has to either militarize their own society, or endure being periodically victimized. But consider this: if we have a biological inclination to be warlike and aggressive, then why is it so few take the former option? Studies show that most tribes don't immediately imitate the aggressive group and start organizing for war in self-defense, but endure the raids (which happen on average every five or ten years) just so they don't have to. If we have a natural tendency, it's not to organize ourselves for war, because even people with a very concrete material interest in doing so often don't do it.}}<ref name="infoshop2"/>
[[Image:Howard Zinn bombardier England 1945.jpg|left|thumb|Howard Zinn]]
Some historians , like [[Howard Zinn]] argue that most soldiers do not go to war out of an intrinsic desire to kill. They have to be trained, deceived and desensitized:

{{quote |“Wars don't take place out of the rush of a population demanding war: it's the leaders who demand war and who prepare the population for war. You didn't have the American public clamoring to go to WW1… people did not want to go to war…. That's why Wilson [to get elected] said "no we are not going to war". Then he is elected, and almost immediately calls upon the nation to go to war [and] a massive propaganda campaign was mounted. On the one hand you had the propaganda, and on the other you had the [state] coercion, the draft and the punishment… in other words, it takes powerful inducements and threats to mobilize the young population of a nation for war and if you had a spontaneous urge for war you wouldn't have to do that. The consequence of believing that war happens as a result of human nature is to place the blame on the citizenry, and to take it away from the leaders of the nation who are driving the country to war… it's like telling the poor that your poor because of your own faults,…”<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=subwDAZtEN0 |title=YouTube |publisher=Google}}</ref>}}

Similarly, Noam Chomsky explained how

{{quote |“...you want to distinguish between the institution and the individual. So, slavery, for example, or other forms of tyranny, are inherently monstrous, but the individuals participating in them may be the nicest guys you could imagine – benevolent, friendly, nice to their children, even nice to their slaves, caring about other people. I mean, as individuals they may be anything. In their institutional role they are monsters because the institution is monstrous.”<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.thecorporation.com/media/Transcript_finalpt1%20copy.pdf|title=The Corporation transcript |date=2006-11-13}}</ref>}}

The struggle against wage slavery has often been linked to other anti-hierarchical struggles. For example, [[Mujeres Libres]] (English:Free Women) was an anarchist women's organization with over 20,000 members in Spain that aimed to empower working class women by pushing the idea of a "double struggle" for women's liberation and (anti-capitalist anti-statist) social revolution. The organization argued that the two objectives were equally important and should be pursued in parallel. In the revolutionary Spain of the 1930s, many anarchist women were angry with what they viewed as persistent sexism amongst anarchist men and their marginalized status within a movement that ostensibly sought to abolish domination and hierarchy. They saw women's problems as inseparable from the social problems of the day; while they shared their compañero's desire for social revolution and vehemently opposed the Nationalists, they also pushed for recognition of women's abilities and organized in their communities to achieve that goal. Citing the anarchist assertion that the means of revolutionary struggle must model the desired organization of revolutionary society, they rejected mainstream Spanish anarchism's assertion that women's equality would follow automatically from the social revolution. To prepare women for active roles in the anarchist movement, they organized schools, women-only social groups and a women-only newspaper so that women could gain self-esteem and confidence in their abilities and network with one another to develop their political consciousness.
Despite these activities, the group refused to identify itself as feminist due to feminism's perceived association with upper class, conservative women in Spain who called for capitalist political reform. Unlike other leftist women's organizations in Spain at the time, the Mujeres Libres was unique in that it insisted on remaining autonomous from the male-dominated CNT, FAI, and FIJL and fought for equal status with these established anarchist organizations.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://struggle.ws/ws98/ws54_mujeres_libres.html |title=Mujeres Libres |publisher=Struggle}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geocities.com/Paris/2159/womspain.html |title=Women in Spain}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.wsm.ie/story/3131 |title=WSM}}</ref>

===Environmental destruction===
[[Image:AirPollutionSource.jpg|thumb|air pollution]]
According to [[Murray Bookchin]], "it is not until we eliminate domination in all its forms … that we will really create a rational, ecological society." [Murray Bookchin, Remaking Society, p. 44] In other words, to save the planet, people must "emphasise that ecological degradation is, in great part, a product of the degradation of human beings by hunger, material insecurity, class rule, hierarchical domination, patriarchy, ethnic discrimination, and competition."<ref>Bookchin, "The Future of the Ecology Movement", pp. 1–20.</ref><ref>Bookchin, Which Way for the Ecology Movement?, p. 17.</ref>. "[N]ature, as every materialist knows, is not something merely external to humanity. We are a part of nature. Consequently, in dominating nature we not only dominate an 'external world'{{ndash}} we also dominate ourselves."<ref>John Clark, The Anarchist Moment, p. 114.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://infoshop.org/faq/secE1.html |title=FAQ |publisher=Infoshop}}</ref>

From this point of view, the materialistic and competitive "grow or die" maxim of capitalism is inherently anti-ecological. A centralized state structure, though partially restraining of destructive market forces, cedes great power to a few individuals, which has the consequence of standardising and disempowering the majority while imbuing it with an inability to handle the complexities and diversity of life and its ecological systems.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secEcon.html |title=Economy |work=FAQ |publisher=Infoshop}}</ref>

==Criticism==
[[Gary Young]] argues that the same basic reasoning that considers the individual to be forced to sell his labor to a capitalist in order to survive, also applies to the capitalist in that he is forced to hire a worker to survive otherwise his capital will be exhausted through consumption leaving him nothing to purchase the necessities of life.<ref>Young, Gary. 1978. Justice and Capitalist Production. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 8, no. 3, p. 448</ref> In this sense, the capitalists are as "enslaved" by the workers as the workers are by the capitalists. Some point out that the owner of capital does have a third alternative, which is to sell his labor power to another employer, i.e. accept the condition he would impose on others.<ref>Nino, Carlos Santiago. 1992. Rights. NYU Press. p.343</ref>

According to the viewpoint of [[Austrian economics|Austrian economical]] theory<ref name="humanaction">[http://www.mises.org/humanaction/pdf/ha_10.pdf interpersonal exchange] on The Ludwig von Mises Institute accessed at [[March 11]] [[2008]]</ref>, what is exchanged between individuals is irrelevant for the result. In the context of Austrian economics, the concept of compensation would extend to cover everything received by workers from employers for their labor. For consistency then compensation in forms other than wages should also be condemned by those who consider capitalist production wage slavery. That is to say, anything other than a revolutionary restructuring of the labor-employer relation leaves the original condition, the one advocated by the school in question, largely untouched.

Further, utilizing the Misesian analytics of individual action, human beings must always engage in production in order to consume and survive. Thus, man would be enslaved to nature itself. If man is always enslaved in some form or another, according to this view, the concept of slavery is of little use in order to draw distinctions between what is a coercive interpersonal relationship and what is not, thereby defeating the analytical purpose of wage slavery theory.

Wage slavery is also in contradiction to the [[Murray Rothbard|Rothbardian]] notion of [[self-ownership]].{{Fact|date=August 2008}} Under this view, a man is not free unless he can sell himself, because if a man does not own himself, he must be owned by either another individual or a group of individuals. The ability for anyone to consent to an activity or action would then be placed in the hands of a third party. Further, the third-party's ownership would also be in the hands of yet another individual or group. This regression of ownership would transfer ad infinitum and leave no one with the ability to coordinate their own actions or those of anyone else. The conclusion is therefore that if under wage slavery, self-ownership is not legitimate, there is no right for anyone then to claim enslavement to wages in the first place.<ref name="humanaction" />

According to Eric Foner, black [[abolitionist]]s in the U.S. regarded the analogy of wage earners to slaves, symbolized by the term "wage slavery," as spurious. When [[Frederick Douglass]] escaped slavery and took a paying job, he declared "Now I am my own master." According to Douglas, wage labor did not represent oppression but fair exchange and former slaves for the first time receiving the fruits of their labor. According to abolitionist [[William Lloyd Garrison]], "wage slavery" (in a time when chattel slavery was still common) was an "abuse of language."<ref>Foner, Eric. 1998. The Story of American Freedom. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 66</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}

==See also==
*[[Alienation]]
*[[9 to 5]]
*[[Basic income]]
*[[Citizen's dividend]]
*[[Capitalist mode of production]]
*[[Distributism]]
*[[Freiwirtschaft]]
*[[Full employment]]
*[[Trafficking in human beings|Human trafficking]]
*[[Libertarian socialism]]
*[[Marxism]]
*[[Proletariat]]
*[[Race to the bottom]]
*[[Reserve army of labour]]
*[[Sarariman]]
*[[Socialism]]
*[[Syndicalism]]
*[[The Idler (1993)]]
*[[Truck system]]
*[[Wage labour]]
*[[Working poor]]
*[[Young Marx]]

==External links==
*[http://www.basicincome.org BIEN - Basic Income Earth Network-Aternative to Wage Slavery]
*[http://www.antenna.nl/~waterman/gorz.html André Gorz, Critique of Economic Reason and the Wage Slavery,1989]
*[http://www.whywork.org/ Creating Livable Alternatives to Wage Slavery]
*[http://www.cpm.ll.ehime-u.ac.jp/AkamacHomePage/Akamac_E-text/Materials/akmc.pdf Das Kapital ]
*[http://www.newslavery.org Essay on Societal Slavery]
*[http://www.iww.org Industrial Workers of the World]
*[http://www.ditext.com/us/us.html Land and Liberty]
* [http://www.eduardomartino.com/pages/slavery_brazil.html Photo-story on modern-day slavery in Brazil by photographer Eduardo Martino]
*[http://irregulartimes.com/saipan.html Special situations in the USA]
*[http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1847/wage-labour/index.htm Wage Labour and Capital]
*[http://fakenirvana.com/nakedking.org/nations.php Wage slavery as a part of a larger picture]
*[http://libcom.org/library/working-wages-martin-glaberman Working for Wages, Martin Glaberman and Seymour Faber]
*[http://www.infoshop.org/wiki/index.php/Wage_slavery Wage slavery] at OpenWiki
*[http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8669221438323698547&hl=en Evilness of Power: A documentary-montage examining hierarchy and wage slavery]
[[Category:Anarchist theory]]
[[Category:Labor]]
[[Category:Marxist terminology]]
[[Category:Poverty]]
[[Category:Socialism]]
[[Category:Ethically disputed business practices]]

[[de:Lohnsklaverei]]
[[hr:Ropstvo kroz plaću]]
[[es:Esclavitud del salario]]
[[fr:Esclavage salarié]]
[[pt:Escravidão do salário]]
[[fi:Palkkaorjuus]]

Revision as of 20:10, 10 October 2008

The abolition of wage slavery is a stated goal of unions like the IWW

Wage slavery is a term first coined by the Lowell Mill Girls in 1836,[1] though articulated as a concept at least as early as Cicero[2] and elaborated by subsequent thinkers, particularly with the advent of the industrial revolution.[3] It refers to the similarities between owning and renting a person, and denotes a hierarchical social condition in which a person chooses a job within a coerced set of choices (primarily working for a boss under threat of starvation, poverty or status diminution),[4][5][6][7] which make that "person dependent on wages or a salary for a livelihood,"[8] "esp[ecially] with total and immediate dependency on the income derived from...[wage] labor".[9] Wage slavery, in the libertarian socialist or anarchist usage of the term, is often understood as the absence of:

  1. A democratic or anti-authoritarian society, especially with nonhierarchical worker's control of the workplace and the economy as a whole,[10][11][12]
  2. Unconditional access to non-exploitative property and a fair share of the basic necessities of life,[13][14] and
  3. The ability of persons to have say over economic decisions in proportion to the degree they are affected by those decisions.[15]

In terminology used by some critics of capitalism, statism and various authoritarian systems, wage slavery is the condition under which a person must sell his or her labor power, submitting to the authority of an employer in order to prosper or merely to subsist.[16][17][18]

Comparison with chattel slavery

Negroes picking cotton on a plantation in the South

The first articulate description of wage slavery was made by Simon Linguet in 1763, describing how it undermined beingness and individual autonomy, by basing them on a materialistic concept of the body and its liberty i.e. as something that is sold, rented or alienated in a class society:

“The slave was precious to his master because of the money he had cost him… Men's blood had some price in the days of slavery. They were worth at least as much as they could be sold for in the market…It is the impossibility of living by any other means that compels our farm labourers to till the soil whose fruits they will not eat, and our masons to construct buildings in which they will not live. It is want that drags them to those markets where they await masters who will do them the kindness of buying them. It is want that compels them to go down on their knees to the rich man in order to get from him permission to enrich him… what effective gain [has] the suppression of slavery brought [him ?] He is free, you say. Ah! That is his misfortune… These men, it is said, have no master—they have one, and the most terrible, the most imperious of masters, that is, need. It is this that reduces them to the most cruel dependence. They live only by hiring out their arms. They must therefore find someone to hire them, or die of hunger. Is that to be free?”[19]

Emma Goldman famously denounced wage slavery by saying: "The only difference is that you are hired slaves instead of block slaves" [20]

According to this view, then, the fundamental differences between a chattel slave and a wage slave are:

1. The chattel slave is property ("capital"). As such, the chattel slave's value to an economically rational owner is in some ways higher than that of a wage slave who can be fired, replaced or harmed at no (or less) cost, since the chattel slave's owner has made a greater investment in terms of the money he paid for the slave. For this reason, in times of recession, chattel slaves couldn't be fired like wage laborers. American chattel slaves in the 19th century had improved their standard of living from the 18th century[21] and, as historians Fogel and Engerman's reported, slaves' material conditions in the 19th century were "better than what was typically available to free [i.e. wage slave] urban laborers at the time"[22]. This was partially due to slave psychological strategies under an economic system different from capitalist wage slavery:

“…the preindustrial nature of these labor systems allowed slaves to establish a distinctive African American culture which eschewed the values embraced by the master class. Although intrusive and oppressive, paternalism, the way masters employed it, and the methods slaves used to manipulate it, rendered slaveholders' attempts to institute capitalistic work regimens on their plantation ineffective and so allowed slaves to carve out a degree of autonomy, manifest in their cultural assumptions and behavior, under slavery. On the one hand, planters wanted to see themselves as beneficent masters, a position which their exploitation of slave labor required them to qualify. On the other, slaves exposed the hypocrisy of the paternalist double standard and by merely obeying but not necessarily complying with their masters' orders 'acted consciously and unconsciously to transform paternalism into a doctrine of protection of their own rights,' an 'assertion of their humanity,' and, ultimately, the transformation of privileges into customary rights and the attendant affirmation of their African American identity (Genovese, 1976, p.49) The effect of this accommodation-resistance dialectic, so fully described by Eugene Genovese, was to render slave-holders non-capitalist masters and, more importantly for this section, made slaves pre-industrial workers whose insistence on customary rights frustrated planters who were trying to exploit slave labor. (Genovese, 1976) […] Slaves' partial retention of an African, essentially preindustrial work ethic which, according to Genovese, stressed hard work but within a cultural framework which eschewed freneticism, time discipline, materialism, and acquisitive individualism, was a product of slaves' labor on southern plantations which were run by essentially precapitalist masters. This experience enabled slaves to create autonomous spheres– personal relationships, familial bonds, [and] a distinctive slave religion. [Slaves] developed a variety of subtle techniques such as feigning illness, sabotage, and deliberate go-slows in order to protect themselves and their culture… slave women, by using contraceptives, engaging in sexual abstinence, and occasionally practicing infanticide, not only limited their own exploitation but circumscribed the planters' profits (Hine, 1979)… Once this [slave] system came under increasing political attack in the 1850's by northern proponents of free wage labor, southern masters found themselves fighting for their political independence by defending a slave society and plantation system that while not economically profitable was nonetheless ideologically and socially crucial to their way of life.”[23]

Similarly, various strategies and struggles adopted by wage slaves are deemed to have created extra-capitalist structures (unions, welfare institutions etc) that can constrain the destructive mechanisms of wage slavery. These institutions could test the limits of wage systems and eventually lead to their overthrow, though they can temporarily also appease the masses; preventing the overthrow of the elites that often take credit for the creation of these institutions.

2. A wage slave's starkest choice is "work for a boss or face poverty/starvation". Indirectly, prison, beatings, insults and other punishments, including death lay in store for those who try to survive without working for (or becoming) a boss (e.g. workers trying to democratically run a capitalist's factory, live freely in buildings or grow and collect food, medicine and other goods freely from the land and factories capitalists own etc). If a chattel slave refuses to work, a number of punishments are also available; from beatings to food deprivation--although economically rational slave owners practiced positive reinforcement to achieve best results and before losing their investment (or even friendship) by killing an expensive slave.[24][25][26]

3. Unlike a chattel slave, a wage slave can sometimes choose his boss, but he can't choose to have no boss unless he wants to face starvation, poverty or status diminution.

4. “The slave is sold once and for all; the proletarian must sell himself daily and hourly. The individual slave, property of one master, is assured an existence, however miserable it may be, because of the master's interest. The individual proletarian, property as it were of the entire bourgeois class which buys his labor only when someone has need of it, has no secure existence. This existence is assured only to the class as a whole. The slave is outside competition; the proletarian is in it and experiences all its vagaries.” (Karl Marx)[27]

Tintype of two young women in Lowell, Massachusetts

The similarities between chattel and wage slavery were certainly noticed by the workers themselves; for example, the 19th century Lowell Mill Girls, who, without any knowledge of European radicalism, condemned the "degradation and subordination" of the newly emerging industrial system, and the "new spirit of the age: gain wealth, forgetting all but self", maintaining that "those who work in the mills should own them."[28][29] In their 1836 strike, this was one of their protest songs:

Oh! isn't it a pity, such a pretty girl as I
Should be sent to the factory to pine away and die?
Oh! I cannot be a slave, I will not be a slave,
For I'm so fond of liberty,
That I cannot be a slave.[30]

Noam Chomsky, who believes that such sentiments are "just below the surface"[31], has used the militant history of labor movements, Bakunin's theories about an "instinct for freedom", Kropotkin's mutual aid evolutionary principle of survival and Marc Hauser's evidence supporting an innate and universal moral faculty[32], to explain the incompatibility of such oppression and greed with certain aspects of human nature.[33]

Supporters of wage and chattel slavery have linked some of the unavoidable features of reality (the subjection of man to nature) with the seemingly avoidable conditions of social structures (the subjection of man to man); arguing that hierarchy and their preferred system's particular relations of production represent human nature and are no more coercive than the reality of life itself, which therefore cannot be improved upon by social structures--only made worse. Consequentially, any well-intentioned attempt to fundamentally change the status quo is naively utopian and will result in more oppressive conditions.[34][35][36]Bosses in both of these long-lasting systems argued that their system created a lot of wealth and prosperity. Both did, in some sense create jobs and their investment entailed risk. For example, slave owners might have risked losing money by buying expensive slaves who later became ill or died; or might have used those slaves to make products that didn't sell well on the market. Marginally, both chattel and wage slaves may become bosses; sometimes by working hard. It may be the "rags to riches" story which occasionally occurs in capitalism, or the "slave to master" story that occurred in places like colonial Brazil, where slaves could buy their own freedom and become slave owners themselves[37][38] Social mobility, or the hard work and risk that it may entail, are thus not considered to be a redeeming factor by critics of capitalist wage slavery:

Even if the amount of social mobility in capitalism were as great as supporters of capitalism claim, it would not matter. If it is possible for someone to move from the lowest position of an authoritarian system to the highest position, it is still unethical because it is an authoritarian system. If it were possible to go from homeless person to dictator within a fascist system, fascism would still be wrong. In many Leninist states there were individuals who went from being a worker to being part of the ruling class, in some cases even joining the Politburo, yet that does not make Marxist totalitarianism an acceptable system. In Colonial Brazil, there were slaves who managed to become free and even become slave owners themselves. It was as rare as workers becoming capitalists in contemporary capitalism, but it did happen and was theoretically possible for many slaves. Just as the theoretical possibility of a slave becoming a slave owner does not justify slavery, the theoretical ability of a wage-slave to become a capitalist does not justify capitalism. The existence of social mobility does not justify a social system… Capitalists like to claim that their wealth is the result of them working hard by running their business, managing portfolios, etc. A mafia boss also does lots of work to plan his robberies and keep his illicit enterprise going but his actions are still theft. Many capitalists don’t even run a company, they derive their income solely from stocks, bonds, interest, dividends, rent, etc. This attempt to justify capitalist exploitation completely fails in these cases because they aren’t even running a company or doing any work at all. Manipulating portfolios doesn’t produce anything useful; sticking money in the bank and letting it accumulate interest isn’t hard work. It is true that investing usually entails taking risks (one could lose the investment), but just because someone is taking a risk does not mean that s/he is producing anything. Most human activity involves risks of some sort. If a criminal robs someone at gunpoint s/he is taking a risk as well. S/he could go to jail, the robbery could go wrong, s/he could get hurt, etc. That does not change the fact that it is robbery. The same is true of the risks taken by capitalists. The workers take as much of a risk, if not more, as the capitalist. If the business fails the worker is unemployed. The worker is then usually in a worse situation then the capitalist because the capitalist is wealthy and can weather such a situation much easier than those on lower levels of the hierarchy. In addition, many jobs entail risks to workers' life or limb, whereas investment does not.”[39]

File:E l bernays-1928-propaganda.png
Edward Bernays' 1928 book, Propaganda.

The methods of control in wage systems, differ substantially from those in chattel systems. For example, in his book, Disciplined Minds, American physicist and writer Jeff Schmidt points out that professionals are trusted to run organisations in the interests of their employers. The key word is ’trust’. Because employers cannot be on hand to manage every decision, professionals are trained to “ensure that each and every detail of their work favours the right interests – or skewers the disfavoured ones” in the absence of overt control. Schmidt continues:

"The resulting professional is an obedient thinker, an intellectual property whom employers can trust to experiment, theorize, innovate and create safely within the confines of an assigned ideology."[40] Schmit goes on to show with statistical evidence that subordination to elite ideology, including aggression, is greater among those with more schooling,[41] a conclusion corroborated in other studies as well.[42] In Propaganda (1928), the father of public relations Edward Bernays argued that "[t]he conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society. Those who manipulate this unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of."[43] Similarly Walter Lippmann argued that "the manufacture of consent" amounted to "a revolution" in "the practice of democracy" and allowed the "bewildered herd" to be controlled by their betters.[44]

Some supporters of chattel slavery claimed that those who hadn't studied in depth the economic and social aspects of slavery, could not form a reasoned opinion on the matter.[45] Similarly, some modern economists believe that the uneducated are not in a position to reject economic systems involving wage slavery. For example Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Samuelson asks: "…without the disciplined study of economic science, how can anyone form a reasoned opinion about the merits or lack of merits in the classical, traditional economics?"[46]

Role in the development of the modern nation-state

Soldiers surround peaceful demonstrators during the Lawrence textile strike in 1912.
Red Army troops attack Kronstadt libertarian socialist workers who had demanded among other things that "handicraft production be authorised provided it does not utilise wage labour."[47]

Wage slavery played a very important role in the modern consolidation of the nation-state structure that originated in the pre-capitalist "...feudal period with battles for power between feudal lords, kings, the Pope and other centers of power which gradually evolved into systems of nation states in which a combination of political power and economic interests converged enough to try to impose uniform systems on very varied societies...In the course of the development of the nation state system, there also developed on the side various economic arrangements which about a century ago turned into what became contemporary corporate capitalism, mostly imposed by judicial arrangements, not by legislation, and very tightly integrated and linked to the powerful states, [which are] [un]distinguish[able]...from the multinational corporate system, the conglomerates that rely on them, that have a relation of both dependency and domination to them...[T]heir intellectual roots...come out of the same neo-Hegelian conceptions of the rights of organic entities that led to bolshevism and fascism."[48][49]

The close link between property and the state has been noted by many outstanding thinkers. For example John Locke, who in 1690 wrote that "[t]he great and chief end...of men's uniting into commonwealths, and putting themselves under government, is the preservation of their property"[50] or Adam Smith who described how "...as the necessity of civil government gradually grows up with the acquisition of valuable property, so the principal causes which naturally introduce subordination gradually grow up with the growth of that valuable property... Wherever there is great property there is great inequality. For one very rich man there must be at least five hundred poor, and the affluence of the few supposes the indigence of the many. The affluence of the rich excites the indignation of the poor, who are often both driven by want, and prompted by envy, to invade his possessions...The appropriation of herds and flocks which introduced an inequality of fortune was that which first gave rise to regular government. Till there be property there can be no government, the very end of which is to secure wealth, and to defend the rich from the poor"[51]This tight link between property and state was also noted by John Jay (who repeatedly said that "Those who own the country ought to govern it,")[52]and by US Founding Father James Madison, who said that government "...ought to be so constituted as to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority."[53]

In this respect, statist welfare measures can be seen as a consequence of the elite's fear of dispossession--yielding to some degree in order to appease the organized pressure of wage slaves.[54]

Though seemingly paradoxical, the most prominent current critic of wage slavery, the anarchist Noam Chomsky, has defended the temporary use of state power on the grounds that it prevents even more oppressive forms of authority and wage slavery:

"I don't think the federal government is a legitimate institution. I think it ought to be dismantled, in principle; just as... I don't think people ought to live in cages. On the other hand, if I'm in a cage and there's a saber tooth tiger outside, I'd be happy to keep the bars of the cage in place– even though I think the cage is illegitimate...The centralized government authority is at least to some extent under popular influence... The unaccountable private power outside is under no public control. What they call minimizing the state– transferring the decision making to unaccountable private interests– is not helpful to human beings or to democracy... so there is a temporary need to maintain the cage, and even to extend the cage."[55][56]

Treatment in various economic systems

Pinkerton guards escort strikebreakers in Buchtel, Ohio, 1884. Union busting is a traditional way of maintaining wage slavery.

Wage slavery exists in various systems, including communist states, but given the prevalence of modern capitalism, it is often described as a lack of rights in the market system; especially in the absence of extra-capitalist structures stemming from some degree of democratic input (welfare system, retirement income, etc.). The concept seeks to point out how the only rights a worker has are the rights he or she gains on the labor market. S/he faces starvation when unable or unwilling to rent him/herself to those who own the capital and means of production. Capitalists, and sometimes a state elite, own the means of life (land, industry etc) and gain profit or power simply from granting permission to use them. This they do in exchange for wages. Though most opponents of wage slavery favor possessions for non-exploitative personal use, they oppose the "freedom" to use property for the exploitation of others; claiming that private ownership of the means of life is theft and that sometimes a person's freedom ends where another person's begins[57] (e.g. my freedom to opress, kill, steal etc violates yours). Given that workers are the majority, they believe that the elite maintain wage slavery and a divided working class through their influence over the media and entertainment industry,[58][59] educational institutions, unjust laws, nationalist and corporate propaganda, pressures and incentives to internalize values serviceable to the power structure,[60] state violence (the police will arrest workers who freely collect food & medicine or try to democratically run a capitalist's factory), fear of unemployment and a historical legacy of exploitation under prior systems:

“Other workers, not capitalists, produced the means of production. The capitalist often obtains them with the money from previous profits. Those profits in turn came from previous profits and so on back to the origins of capitalism. Those original accumulations of money used to start this whole process of capitalist accumulation came from fortunes made as a result of conquest & direct expropriation (such as colonialism, the slaughter of native Americans etc) as well as fortunes achieved under pre-capitalist class societies such as feudalism or slavery. Thus from a historical perspective capitalism cannot be considered just.”[39]

Adam Smith

Adam Smith, who offered an argument for markets based on the notion that under conditions of perfect liberty, markets would lead to perfect equality, articulated in the Wealth of Nations some factors in the development of wage slavery:

The interest of the dealers in any particular branch and trade or manufactures, is always in some respects different from and even opposite to, that of the public.... [They] have generally an interest to deceive and even to oppress the public...We rarely hear, it has been said, of the combinations of masters, though frequently of those of workmen. But whoever imagines, upon this account, that masters rarely combine, is as ignorant of the world as of the subject. Masters are always and everywhere in a sort of tacit, but constant and uniform combination, not to raise the wages of labor above their actual rate... It is not, however, difficult to foresee which of the two parties must, upon all ordinary occasions, have the advantage in the dispute, and force the other into a compliance with their terms. The masters, being fewer in number, can combine much more easily... [while] [t]he man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects are perhaps always the same, or very nearly the same, has no occasion to exert his understanding or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur. He naturally loses, therefore, the habit of such exertion, and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible to become for a human creature to become. The torpor of his mind renders him not only incapable of relishing or bearing a part in any rational conversation, but of conceiving any generous, noble, or tender sentiment, and consequently of forming any just judgment concerning many even of the ordinary duties of private life. [61][62][63]

Capitalism

Wage slavery as a concept is often a criticism of capitalism, defined as a condition in which a capitalist class (often a minority of the population) controls all of the necessary non-human components of production (capital, land, industry etc) that other people (workers) use to produce goods. This sort of criticism is generally associated with socialist and anarchist criticisms of capitalism, and could conceivably be traced back to pre-capitalist figures like Gerrard Winstanley from the radical Christian Diggers movement in England, who wrote in his 1649 pamphlet, The New Law of Righteousness, that there "shall be no buying or selling, no fairs nor markets, but the whole earth shall be a common treasury for every man," and "there shall be none Lord over others, but every one shall be a Lord of himself."[64] Though perhaps the concept dates back to Cicero, who in 44 BC wrote that "...vulgar are the means of livelihood of all hired workmen whom we pay for mere manual labour, not for artistic skill; for in their case the very wage they receive is a pledge of their slavery."[65]

Somewhat similar criticisms have also been expressed by some proponents of liberalism, like Henry George[5], Silvio Gesell and Thomas Paine[66], as well as the Distributist school of thought within the Roman Catholic Church. Criticism of capitalism on these grounds, however, might not always be connected to the belief that one should have freedom to work without a boss.

Anarcho-communist Peter Kropotkin

The extreme subordination generated by wage slavery has also been recognized by right wing bosses like US financier & railroad businessman Jay Gould (1836–1892), who famously said "I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half."[67] The concept of wage slavery suggests that even where the conditions of chattel slavery do not apply, wage earners may experience social and psychological predicaments which are similar to those stemming from chattel slavery.

Anthropologist David Graeber has noted that, historically, the first wage labor contracts we know about– whether in ancient Greece or Rome, or in the Malay or Swahili city states in the Indian ocean– were in fact contracts for the rental of chattel slaves (usually the owner would receive a share of the money, and the slave, another, with which to maintain his or her living expenses.) Such arrangements were quite common in New World slavery as well, whether in the United States or Brazil. C. L. R. James made a famous argument that most of the techniques of human organization employed on factory workers during the industrial revolution were first developed on slave plantations.[68]

Karl Marx

To Marx and anarchist thinkers like Bakunin and Kropotkin wage slavery was a class condition in place due to the existence of private property and the state. This class situation rested primarily on

  1. the concentration of ownership in few hands,
  2. the lack of direct access by workers to the means of production and consumption goods
  3. the existence of the reserve army of unemployed workers.

and secondarily on

  1. the waste of workers' efforts and resources on producing useless luxuries;
  2. the waste of goods so that their price may remain high; and
  3. the waste of all those who sit between the producer and consumer, taking their own shares at each stage without actually contributing to the production of goods.
Collectivist anarchist Mikhail Bakunin

A disparity in bargaining power compels wage slaves to accept a predicament they wouldn't otherwise consent to. Some critics of capitalism argue that wage slavery is present in all capitalist societies, even the richest ones. This has to do with two factors:

  1. Wealth disparities: Even in a rich country like "the United States, the richest 1% of the population... owns more wealth then the bottom 95% of the population combined. It is physically impossible for that one percent to work harder than the other ninety-five percent. The average American worker works around 50 hours a week; for the capitalists to work ninety-five times more than the average worker he would have to work 4,250 hours a week. There are only 168 hours in a week; it's not possible for this wealth disparity to be the result of capitalists working harder."[69][70]
  2. Power disparities: The higher wages received by some workers in industrialized countries do not obviate the authoritarianism critics perceive in capitalist institutions—just as the improving material conditions of chattel slaves in the American south didn't obviate chattel slavery. Labor is treated as commodity, just like food or healthcare. The lack of democratic control of industry means that workers do not have a say over decisions in proportion to how much they are affected by those decisions. This, in turn prevents workers from directing their destinies and achieving a society where "work is not only a means of life, but the highest want in life."[71] Even high -paid professionals and intellectuals like lawyers and scientists may be considered wage slaves, since many of them rent and subordinate their mental powers to capitalists and other elites— getting ahead in the hierarchy by internalizing values that are serviceable to the powers that be. Even if every wage slave managed to become well fed, clothed, had healthcare etc; he'd still be in a position of subordination and deprivation of freedom.

To this argument, Marx added:

"The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto honored and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage laborers...Masses of laborers, crowded into the factory, are organized like soldiers. As privates of the industrial army, they are placed under the command of a perfect hierarchy of officers and sergeants. Not only are they slaves of the bourgeois class, and of the bourgeois state; they are daily and hourly enslaved by the machine, by the overlooker, and, above all, by the individual bourgeois manufacturer himself. The more openly this despotism proclaims gain to be its end and aim, the more petty, the more hateful and the more embittering it is...The selfish misconception that induces you to transform into eternal laws of nature and of reason the social forms stringing from your present mode of production and form of property– historical relations that rise and disappear in the progress of production– this misconception you share with every ruling class that has preceded you. What you see clearly in the case of ancient property, what you admit in the case of feudal property, you are of course forbidden to admit in the case of your own bourgeois form of property...You are horrified at our intending to do away with private ownership of the means of production. But in your existing society, private property is already done away with for nine-tenths of the population; its existence for the few is solely due to its non-existence in the hands of those nine-tenths. You reproach us, therefore, with intending to do away with a form of property, the necessary condition for whose existence is the non-existence of any property for the immense majority of society."[72][10]

Many advocates of wage slavery claim that consumer choice in capitalist societies constitutes an improvement in the standard of living and that today's wage slaves have many more consumer choices than chattel slaves. They claim that the market system reflects "what people want" and that people "vote with their dollars".[73] There is indeed evidence that many wage slaves in the 21st century have higher standards of living and more consumer choice than chattel slaves in the 18th and 19th century (although 21st century wealth inequalities are vast)[74]; but some historians don't find the comparison of vastly disparate time periods to be particularly revealing. Historians Fogel and Engerman, for example, reported that slaves' material conditions in the 19th century were "better than what was typically available to free [i.e. wage] urban laborers at the time"[75] Wage slaves' standard of living has improved since the beginning of the industrial revolution and similarly, American chattel slaves in the 19th century had improved their standard of living from the 18th century[76][77]

Critics of capitalism claim that "voting with dollars" means that those with more dollars have more votes. They maintain that several undiscussed factors affect consumer behavior. For example, educational institutions cater to the ideological needs of the biggest employers (government, corporations); the media are profit seeking corporations selling affluent audiences to advertisers and relying primarily on business and government information; intellectuals tend to get ahead in the hierarchy and become influential by adopting and disseminating ideas that are serviceable to power; and a stated purpose of the advertising industry is to artificially "create wants" and stir away from consumer choices that may harm capitalist power (e.g. the most popular newspaper in England, the Daily Herald went out of circulation because of advertiser discrimination; news organizations stir away from programs hinting at systemic causes for societal problems even if these programs are popular.)[78]. All this, they claim, distorts the framework of consumer choice and the psychological make up of consumers in a way that reflects elite interests and will, rather than that of consumers. Furthermore, in state capitalist societies, corporations in conjunction with governments have pushed for measures such as elimination of public transportation and alternate forms of energy, as well as propaganda to justify subidies to high technology industry through military expenditures. These measures, as well as the subsidies, bailouts and protectionism that allowed many countries to develop and create products at the public's expense (and without their consent), altered available choices and ideas and also allowed many industries to become competitive in subsequent "free markets"[79] whose development had therefore little to do with consumer choice[80] A number of psychologists and environmental experts have presented evidence showing that rampant western consumerism is harming the planet (and human beings), and becoming a substitute for activities that are emotionally more fulfilling.[81][82] Most importantly, critics claim that "consumer choice" is only half the story, because people are not only consumers— they are also workers, and very often, their choice in the capitalist work environment is "work for a boss or starve"; i.e. it is limited to a (sometimes possible) choice among bosses and it doesn't involve choices and decisions regarding production, distribution, working hours, regulations, hierarchy etc (i.e. the choice to have higher control over one's productive life therefore one's destiny) because the workplace and the economy (including the advertising industry and entertainment industry) are not run democratically.

Already in the 19th century, Marx had pointed out some of the ways in which technology could be used to alienate workers: "Owing to the extensive use of machinery, and to the division of labor, the work of the proletarians has lost all individual character, and, consequently, all charm for the workman. He becomes an appendage of the machine, and it is only the most simple, most monotonous, and most easily acquired knack, that is required of him. Hence, the cost of production of a workman is restricted, almost entirely, to the means of subsistence that he requires for maintenance, and for the propagation of his race. But the price of a commodity, and therefore also of labor, is equal to its cost of production. In proportion, therefore, as the repulsiveness of the work increases, the wage decreases. What is more, in proportion as the use of machinery and division of labor increases, in the same proportion the burden of toil also increases, whether by prolongation of the working hours, by the increase of the work exacted in a given time, or by increased speed of machinery, etc."[83] Psychoanalyst Erich Fromm believed that the lack of worker's control and unhappiness/ dissatisfaction at the workplace means that people compensate their emptiness by seeking substitutes elsewhere (religious fundamentalism, drugs, consumerism etc). Fromm thought it very likely that a democratic, not-for-profit work environment would enable more choices for workers, having a drastic effect on subsequent consumer choice and all the mechanisms currently associated with it (advertising, marketing, concentration of capital etc)– as well as on the human psyche.[84]

Manufacturing Consent analyzes institutional factors causing journalistic subordination in the corporate capitalist wage system.

In Manufacturing Consent and "The Myth of the Liberal Media" Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky present a substantial body of evidence showing striking qualitative and quantitative differences in the coverage of facts and events in the corporate capitalist media on the basis of their serviceability to elite groups. Their propaganda model identifies 5 major institutional factors affecting media behavior. In order to be hired, journalists, like other intellectual wage laborers, are pressured to internalize the ideological constraints of the institutional structure-- a task that usually starts in educational institutions and works as a filtering system. Therefore, unlike journalists in totalitarian states, western journalists can serve elite interests without being subject to state coercion. As their counterparts in totalitarian states, they identify freedom with the elite that dominates their power structure:

"We have a free press, meaning it’s not state controlled but corporate controlled; that’s what we call freedom. What we call freedom is corporate control. We have a free press because it’s corporate monopoly, or oligopoly, and that’s called freedom. We have a free political system because there’s one party run by business; there's a business party with two factions, so that’s a free political system. The terms freedom and democracy, as used in our Orwellian political discourse, are; based on the assumption that a particular form of domination—namely, by owners, by business elements—is freedom."[85]

In a thorough study of war coverage comparing Soviet and western journalism, Media Lens concluded that

"[l]ike the Soviet media, Western professional journalists adopt and echo government statements as their own, as self-evidently true, without subjecting them to rational analysis and challenge. As a result, they allow themselves to become the mouthpieces of state power. It is fundamentally the same role performed by the media under Soviet totalitarianism."[86]

A number of economic think tanks and analysts have favored a return to the days of Keynesian state capitalism, suggesting that the increased inequalities and slower rate of world economic growth in the neoliberal period (from the 70s till the present), as well as the "undemocratic... virtual senate of investors and lenders" created by financial liberalization, exacerbate the conditions of wage slavery.[87] [88]

Other economists consider wage labor to be the central cause of the capitalist business cycle:

The key to understanding the business cycle is to understand that, to use Proudhon's words, "Property sells products to the labourer for more than it pays him for them; therefore it is impossible." In other words... the system is based upon wage labour and the producers are not producing for themselves.... Capitalism is production for profit and when the capitalist class does not (collectively) get a sufficient rate of profit for whatever reason then a slump is the result. If workers produced for themselves, this decisive factor would not be an issue as no capitalist class would exist. Until that happens the business cycle will continue, driven by "subjective" and "objective" pressures– pressures that are related directly to the nature of capitalist production and the wage labour on which it is based. Which pressure will predominate in any given period will be dependent on the relative power of classes. One way to look at it is that slumps can be caused when working class people are "too strong" or "too weak." The former means that we are able to reduce the rate of exploitation, squeezing the profit rate by keeping an increased share of the surplus value we produce. The later means we are too weak to stop income distribution being shifted in favour of the capitalist class, which results in over-accumulation and rendering the economy prone to a failure in aggregate demand. The 1960s and 1970s are the classic example of what happens when "subjective" pressures predominate while the 1920s and 1930s show the "objective" ones at work...At its most basic...the resistance to hierarchy in all its forms... is the main cause of the business cycle.... [C]apitalists in order to exploit a worker must first oppress them. But where there is oppression, there is resistance; where there is authority, there is the will to freedom. Hence capitalism is marked by a continuous struggle between worker and boss at the point of production as well as struggle outside of the workplace against other forms of hierarchy.[89]

Communism

Vladimir Lenin

Arguably, there is as much difference (e.g. in economic policies, popular participation, atrocity levels etc) between states termed "communist" as there is between states termed "capitalist"[90][91]-- in spite of the lack of distinctions (as well as propagandistic labeling) that has been applied (particularly to the former), due to elite ideological influence in wage systems.[92] In fact, even opponents of wage slavery who condemn abuses by states termed "communist," have credited certain communist parties with providing forums of public participation that helped ameliorate conditions of wage slavery, among other things.[93] [94]However, the isolation of some states termed communist has prevented them from acquiring the foreign technology required for an economic growth that can sometimes allow workers to struggle more effectively for a less oppressive form of wage slavery. North Korea is a case in point. In contrast, South Korea, applying a mixture of trade with state controls and protectionism[95] --originally through a harsh dictatorship-- developed into an industrial powerhouse with a workforce that is better equipped to combat wage slavery.[96][97][98] At the same time, some analysts have pointed out that a less oppressive form of wage slavery would have been achieved by communist, socialist, and other radical or reformist movements in places like Vietnam and Guatemala, were not for the attacks by states termed "capitalist" like the US and France--which feared the demonstration effect of successful and independent socioeconomic development in the third world, from which they derive cheap labor and resources. This was a development that, according to Noam Chomsky, was monolithically labeled "communist" and "totalitarian" as a pretext to act against it and maintain the exploitation that is seen in "free market" zones in places like Bangladesh, Burma, Indonesia, Guatemala, Haiti etc[99] Such policies seem compatible with the observation of Korean economist Ha-Joon Chang, that the developed countries want to prevent economic independence in the third world by forcing them to institute "free market" policies, which "kick away the ladder"[100] because the rich countries developed with extensive state intervention and protection of what US Founding Father Alexander Hamilton called "infant industry".[101]

Alleged benefits of state economies over private ones include non-profit production, increased equity among citizens, the ability to maintain employment (thus consumption) in times of recession (which increases demand and helps the economy get out of recession); the development of "natural" monopolies such as electricity, water, gas, railways, landline telephones etc, and the improvement upon capitalist monopolies and competitive markets in pricing and production of socially optimal quantities due the decline in the profit motive, which, in capitalist monopolies causes them to "produce only up to the quantity where its profit is maximized... [which] under normal circumstances [is] lower than the socially optimal one" while in a competitive market it may cause overproduction, phenomena such as the 80/20 rule and other inefficiencies due to the absence of communication among competitors and lack of "freedom to set the price, as a rival can always undercut them until the point where lowering the price further will result in a loss."[102]

Anarchists, who have also been called "libertarian communists", believe that as long as any elite is in power, oppressive forms of authority such as wage slavery will continue. They describe how in all self-designated "communist" states the working class follows orders and does not do away with wage labor— at the point of production workers just switch bosses (from capitalists to state bureaucrats)[103]. The state bureaucracy controls the means of production—not the workers. This, they argue, is why Vladimir Lenin's view of socialism was that it "is nothing but state capitalist monopoly made to benefit the whole people,"[104]who must trust the benevolence of their leaders.

Anarchists believe that true socialism (self-management and worker's democratic control of the means of production) will come only with the elimination of both, capitalism and the state, via the creation of a decentralized system of free associations with consumer and worker's councils, regional federations, national assemblies and part-time rotative delegates with no power above others i.e. with no professional politicians, as was achieved to some extent, during the Spanish anarchist revolution.

File:Woman with cntfai flag.jpg
Spanish anarcho-syndicalists successfully organized autonomous communities during the Spanish Revolution (1936 – 1939).

As the Infoshop FAQ points out:

"Anarchists consider one of the defining aspects of the state is its hierarchical nature. In other words, the delegation of power into the hands of a few. As such, it violates the core idea of socialism, namely social equality. Those who make up the governing bodies in a state have more power than those who have elected them. Hence these comments by Malatesta and Hamon: 'It could be argued with much more reason that we are the most logical and most complete socialists, since we demand for every person not just his [or her] entire measure of the wealth of society but also his [or her] portion of social power."[105][106]

The rejection of the state is also advocated by some libertarian Marxists, such as Anton Pannekoek, who observed talking about revolution that "this goal is not reached and cannot be reached by a new directing and governing class substituting itself for the bourgeoisie", but can only be "realized by the workers themselves being master over production."[103] Libertarian socialists thus believe that rejecting such goals on the grounds that they were featured regularly in the rhetoric of leaders like Lenin and Stalin, is as illogical as rejecting freedom and peace on the grounds they were stated goals of Hitler and many other dictators. As Noam Chomsky says: "No rational person pays the slightest attention to declarations of benign intent on the part of leaders, no matter who they are. And the reason is they're completely predictable, including the worst monsters, Stalin, Hitler the rest. Always full of benign intent. Yes that's their task. Therefore, since they're predictable, we disregard them, they carry no information. What we do is, look at the facts. That's true if they're Bush or Blair or Stalin or anyone else. That's the beginning of rationality."[107] Just as critics of capitalism don't believe that improvements in the standard of living under capitalist wage slavery justify it, critics of state Communism don't think communist wage slavery is justified by the fact that the poorest workers in Communist Russia in the late 80s (during the 'fall of communism') were better off than the poorest workers in 1916 (right before the Bolshevik take over), or 1918 (right after).[108]

Chomsky has found striking similarities in the elite managerial ideology of wage slavery in communist and capitalist states:

...Lenin was to decree that the leadership must assume "dictatorial powers" over the workers, who must accept "unquestioning submission to a single will" and "in the interests of socialism," must "unquestioningly obey the single will of the leaders of the labour process." As Lenin and Trotsky proceeded with the militarization of labour, the transformation of the society into a labour army submitted to their single will, Lenin explained that subordination of the worker to "individual authority" is "the system which more than any other assures the best utilization of human resources"– or as Robert McNamara expressed the same idea, "vital decision-making...must remain at the top...the real threat to democracy comes not from over management, but from under management"; "if it is not reason that rules man, then man falls short of his potential," and management is nothing other than the rule of reason, which keeps us free.[109]

Fascism

The various authoritarian ideologies of fascism (such as race-based theories of superiority and Social Darwinism) affected social and economic relations, but in terms of economic structure, fascism has traditionally consisted, like most modern first world economies, of a closely interlinked mixture of state and private control. Fascism, however, was more discriminating of trade unions than modern economies like Spain or the United States (countries which nevertheless do implement union busting and laws to limit union influence).[110][111][112]

Workers didn't control the workplace democratically. They worked for wages provided by their superiors in hierarchical institutions like corporations and the state—therefore, wage slavery continued. Fascist economic policies were widely accepted (and praised) in the 1920s and 30s and foreign (especially US) corporate investment in Italy and Germany shot up after the fascist take over.[113][114] In Germany, this foreign investment, in conjunction with Hitler's economic policies, led to economic growth and an increase in the standard of living of some Germans,[115] though critics do not believe that such improvements justify fascism nor wage slavery.[108] Fascism has been perceived by some notable critics, like Buenaventura Durruti, to be a last resort weapon of the privileged to ensure the maintenance of wage slavery:

"No government fights fascism to destroy it. When the bourgeoisie sees that power is slipping out of its hands, it brings up fascism to hold onto their privileges." [116]

Psychological effects

Wilhelm von Humboldt

Analysis of the psychological implications of wage slavery goes back to the Enlightenment era. In his 1791 book On the Limits of State Action, classical liberal thinker Wilhelm von Humboldt exlained how "whatever does not spring from a man's free choice, or is only the result of instruction and guidance, does not enter into his very nature; he does not perform it with truly human energies, but merely with mechanical exactness"— and so when the laborer works under external control, "we may admire what he does, but we despise what he is."[117]

More recently, investigative journalist Robert Kuttner in Everything for Sale, analyzes the work of public-Health scholars Jeffrey Johnson and Ellen Hall and concludes that "to be in a life situation where one experiences relentless demands by others, over which one has relatively little control, is to be at risk of poor health, physically as well as mentally." Under wage slavery, "a relatively small elite demands and gets empowerment, self-actualisation, autonomy, and other work satisfaction that partially compensate for long hours" while "epidemiological data confirm that lower-paid, lower-status workers are more likely to experience the most clinically damaging forms of stress, in part because they have less control over their work."[118] Stress and other emotional problems, might be closely related to suicide and diseases such as obesity and nicotine addiction.

Wage slavery, and the educational system that precedes it "implies power held by the leader. Without power the leader is inept. The possession of power inevitably leads to corruption… in spite of… good intentions … [Leadership means] power of initiative, this sense of responsibility, the self-respect which comes from expressed manhood, is taken from the men, and consolidated in the leader. The sum of their initiative, their responsibility, their self-respect becomes his … [and the] order and system he maintains is based upon the suppression of the men, from being independent thinkers into being 'the men' … In a word, he is compelled to become an autocrat and a foe to democracy." For the "leader", such marginalisation can be beneficial, for a leader "sees no need for any high level of intelligence in the rank and file, except to applaud his actions. Indeed such intelligence from his point of view, by breeding criticism and opposition, is an obstacle and causes confusion."[119] Wage slavery "implies erosion of the human personality… [because] some men submit to the will of others, arousing in these instincts which predispose them to cruelty and indifference in the face of the suffering of their fellows."[120]

File:MurrayBookchin.jpg

According to anarchist Murray Bookchin, "a hierarchical mentality", stemming from mechanisms such as wage slavery "fosters the renunciation of the pleasures of life. It justifies toil, guilt, and sacrifice by the 'inferiors,' and pleasure and the indulgent gratification of virtually every caprice by their 'superiors.' The objective history of the social structure becomes internalised as a subjective history of the psychic structure… Hierarchy, class, and ultimately the State, penetrate the very integument of the human psyche and establish within it unreflective internal powers of coercion and constraint…By using guilt and self-blame, the inner State can control behaviour long before fear of the coercive powers of the State have to be invoked."[121] Similarly, the anarchist Mikhail Bakunin pointed out that "power and authority corrupt those who exercise them as much as those who are compelled to submit to them."[122] "Power operates destructively, even on those who have it, reducing their individuality as it 'renders them stupid and brutal, even when they were originally endowed with the best of talents. One who is constantly striving to force everything into a mechanical order at last becomes a machine himself and loses all human feeling." [123][124]

The documentary The Corporation analyzes the magnification of negative psychological tendencies in wage labor-based corporate systems

As the Infoshop FAQ points out "Tacitus said, 'We hate those whom we injure.' Those who oppress others always find reasons to regard their victims as 'inferior' and hence deserving of their fate. Elites need some way to justify their superior social and economic positions. Since the social system is obviously unfair and elitist, attention must be distracted to other, less inconvenient, 'facts,' such as alleged superiority based on biology or 'nature.'"[124]— "facts" that may be internalized by the victims themselves.

Philip Zimbardo, the psychologist who conducted the famous Stanford prison experiment, said:

"Most of the evil of the world comes about not out of evil motives, but somebody saying get with the program, be a team player…When a person feels, I am not personally responsible, I am not accountable, it's the role I'm playing or these are the orders I've gotten, then you allow yourself to do things you would never do under ordinary circumstances. [My book] The Lucifer Effect is really a celebration of the human mind's infinite capacity to be kind, or cruel, caring or selfish, creative or destructive. To make some of us be villains and some of us heroes. And it all depends on the situation. When we have total freedom, we choose situations that we know we can control. But when we're in situations where other people are in charge, in the military, in prisons, in some schools, in some families, we are – we can be transformed."[125]

The magnification of negative human tendencies in wage labor-based state and corporate systems has prompted some experts to regard them as psychopathic. For example, using diagnostic criteria from the DSM-IV; Robert Hare, a University of British Columbia Psychology Professor and FBI consultant, provides a detailed analysis comparing the legal person embodied in the modern, profit-driven corporation to that of a clinically diagnosed psychopath. His findings corroborate typical psychopathic behavior such as superficiality, callous unconcern for the feelings of others, incapacity to maintain enduring relationships, diffusion of responsibility, emphasis on short-term goals, predatory egotism, reckless disregard for the safety of others, deceitfulness: repeated lying to and deceiving of others for profit, incapacity to experience guilt, failure to conform to the social norms with respect to lawful behaviors etc.[126]

In Marx's opinion,"[t]he following elements are contained in wage labor: (1) the chance relationship and alienation of labor from the laboring subject; (2) the chance relationship and alienation of labor from its object; (3) the determination of the laborer through social needs which are an alien compulsion to him, a compulsion to which he submits out of egoistic need and distress...(4) the maintenance of his individual existence appears to the worker as the goal of his activity and his real action is only a means; he lives to acquire the means of living…" And so "the more the worker expends himself in his work, the more powerful becomes the world of objects which he creates in face of himself, and the poorer he himself becomes in his inner life, the less he belongs to himself. It is just the same as in religion. The more of himself man attributes to God, the less he has left in himself. The worker puts his life into the object, and his life then belongs no longer to him but to the object. The greater his activity, therefore, the less he possesses … the alienation of the worker in his product means not only that his labour becomes an object, takes on its own existence, but that it exists outside him, independently and alien to him, and that it stands opposed to him as an autonomous power. The life which he has given to the object sets itself against him as an alien and hostile force… the alienated character of work for the worker appears in the fact that it is not his work but work for someone else, that in work he does not belong to himself but to another person."[127]

German-Jewish psychoanalyst Erich Fromm argued that wage slavery fosters alienation and is "connected with the marginalisation and disempowerment of those without authority" because "[t]hose who have these symbols of authority and those who benefit from them must dull their subject people's realistic, i.e. critical, thinking and make them believe the fiction [that irrational authority is rational and necessary], … [so] the mind is lulled into submission by clichés … [and] people are made dumb because they become dependent and lose their capacity to trust their eyes and judgement." [Erich Fromm, To Have or To Be?, p. 47]. Fromm noted that advertising, consumerism, and other means of off-work elite control, also contribute to these psychological effects.

Psychologists themselves are subject to these pressures and often work on behalf of elites—helping individuals adjust to the status quo, pathologizing rebellion against authority[128] and sometimes participating in advertising, propaganda, unnecessary profit-driven drug prescriptions, war and torture.[129]

It is important to note that wage slaves, just like chattel slaves, remain so even if they identify with their oppressors or think of themselves as free due to propaganda, self-deception, or false consciousness. Critics of capitalism point at the fact that chattel slavery was once also perceived as legitimate because of the ideological influences of its power structure, and that, in fact, moral arguments were offered in its favor.[130][131]. Noam Chomsky claims that there is no reason to believe that one day humans won't look back at the days of wage slavery with the same moral outrage with which they react to chattel slavery. People, in his view, have to learn that they are not free, and engage in the kind of "consciousness raising" activities that enabled women in the women's movement, to perceive that they were oppressed.[132]

Social effects

Systems based on wage slavery have been blamed for creating a cruel society that represses our moral instincts and pits people against each other for the benefit of elites. Such systems have also been blamed for the deaths of tens of millions of human beings. For example, Nobel Prize winning economist Amartya Sen did a study of democratic post-colonial India from 1949-1979, which had an economic system based--as much as western democracies-- on private ownership of the means of production[133] and concluded that "every eight years or so more people in addition die in India– in comparison with Chinese mortality rates– than the total number that died in the gigantic Chinese famine" of the late 50's[134]— i.e. over 100 million in those 30 years alone.

In many instances —such as Stalin's Gulags, the Holocaust and various wars— wage slavery was only one of several interlinked contributing factors (others being racism, nationalism, social Darwinism etc). Some experts deem that tens of millions of human beings die every year due to the direct and indirect consequences of systems based on wage slavery (e.g. wars, work-related injury/illness, deaths associated with rampant consumerism, environmental destruction, suicide, people dying of hunger and disease because they don't have access to the means of life and it's not profitable to help them, etc).[135]

Nationalism, like news media, entertainment and consumerism, can serve to veil wage slavery
Wage laborers enriching uranium for nuclear weapons production.
The Bushmen are an example of a leisurely, very non-hierarchical hunter-gatherer society with a gift economy

Environmental degradation and the handling of nuclear weapons by people following orders for wages hint at the mass suicidal tendencies of hierarchical systems such as wage slavery. This may be due to an incompatibility with the moral and survival instincts that developed in the more decentralized pre-civilization power structures that possibly encompassed most of hominidae evolution—though too little is known about Homo Erectus to know for certain. Anecdotal evidence suggests that humans retain strong altruistic and anti-hierarchical tendencies.[136][137] Also, the anecdotal evidence in Lawrence Keeley's book "The Myth of the Noble Savage"[138] was counterbalanced by William Eckhardt's statistical and mathematical evidence, which together produced the possible conclusion that primitive warfare among the more violent tribes was constant but of a very low intensity, and mainly psychological. According to Eckhardt, wars of civilizations produce far more destruction than all of the primitive wars, both absolutely and proportionally.[139] Agriculture meant that humans shifted from taking what nature offered to a mode of control of nature. This shift to control ultimately led to the creation of our current forms of civilized hierarchy--probably based on the creation or magnification of abstract notions of land ownership.[140] The perceived psychological roots and ramifications of facts such as that "[t]he human status as top mammal depends without question on [agricultural] food production" and that the "[h]unter gatherer[]... lifestyle, in terms of long-term stability and reliability, has been the most successful in human history"[141] has prompted anarcho-primitivist author John Zerzan to consider wage slavery as simply part of a continuum of "hierarchy... domestication...[c]onformity, repetition, and regularity [that] were the keys to civilisation upon its triumph, replacing the [relative lack of disease...egalitarianism, autonomy] spontaneity, enchantment, discovery [and lack of strict hierarchy...between the human and the non human species] of the pre-agricultural human state that survived so very long"[142]

However, according to Anthropologist David Graber, the picture is in some respects more mixed: "There were hunter-gatherer societies with nobles and slaves, there are agrarian societies that are fiercely egalitarian. Even in . . . Amazonia, one finds some groups who can justly be described as anarchists, like the Piaroa, living alongside others; say, the warlike Sherentre, who are clearly anything but."[143] While most anarchists believe that people should be able to seek non-technological ways of living, they think it possible to achieve an anti-authoritarian society devoid of wage slavery and artificial alienation without resorting to such drastic measures as dismantling modern civilization, which would entail such seemingly unrealistic actions as renouncing all technology and massively reducing the earth's population. Even if desirable, a voluntary reduction in birth rates and safe decommissioning of industry would require a long transitional period (probably centuries) that could only consist of something like a traditional anarchism[144][145][146] According to the Anarchist FAQ, however, "few anarchists are convinced by an ideology which, as Brian Morris notes, dismisses the 'last eight thousand years or so of human history' as little more than a source 'of tyranny, hierarchical control, mechanised routine devoid of any spontaneity. All those products of the human creative imagination– farming, art, philosophy, technology, science, urban living, symbolic culture– are viewed negatively by Zerzan– in a monolithic sense.' "[147]

Human nature, law, and war

Militaries epitomize the subordination of labor
Lady Justice or Justitia is a personification of the moral force that supposedly underlies the legal system. Her blindfold symbolizes equality under the law through impartiality towards its subjects, the weighing scales represent the balancing of people's interests under the law, and her sword denotes the law's force of reason and the power of the sovereign to enforce the law.
Madison dollar, released November 2007

The general environment of obedience and subordination created by those who are forced to rent themselves in order to survive and/or prosper—from police and lawyers, to the general population— entails that wage slavery is a primary element of law formation and enforcement, though in many parts of the world, to varying degrees, grassroots struggles have also been able to exert a positive counteracting influence. The subordination to the needs, interests and perceptions of elite groups in society has an inordinate influence on most aspects of the law—distorting the framework used to apply our intrinsic moral and intellectual faculties. This also means that the law doesn't exist in a vacuum. Apart from the direct influence of powerful groups, it is also shaped by other factors. For example, educational institutions catering to the ideological needs of the biggest employers (government, corporations); natural mechanisms that induce intellectuals to get ahead in the hierarchy, make money and become influential by adopting and disseminating ideas that are serviceable to power; the mainstream media—which are profit seeking corporations selling affluent audiences to advertisers and relying primarily on business and government information; economic phenomena like capital flight, nationalistic and commercial values and propaganda spread by a huge advertising industry and powerful government apparatus, the threat of unemployment or even the passivity and ideology spread by spectator sports and entertainment industry[148][149] The influence of elite groups on the law and conception of "democracy" is seen in even the most advanced government systems prior to the era of corporate globalization. For example, in the first part of his magisterial two volume work The Transformation of American Law, Morton J. Horwitz writes:

"During the eighty years after the American Revolution, a major transformation of the legal system took place... [which] enabled emergent entrepreneurial and commercial groups to win a disproportionate share of wealth and power in American society. The transformed character of legal regulation thus became a major instrument in the hands of these newly powerful groups."[150]

And even before this transformation, US Founding Father James Madison had already stated at the Constitutional Convention that:

“In England, at this day, if elections were open to all classes of people, the property of landed proprietors would be insecure. An agrarian law would soon take place. If these observations be just, our government ought to secure the permanent interests of the country against innovation. Landholders ought to have a share in the government, to support these invaluable interests and to balance and check the other. They ought to be so constituted as to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority.”[151]

Similarly, the President of the Continental Congress and first Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, John Jay said repeatedly that "The people who own the country ought to govern it."[152] Accordingly, police function developed in the context of maintaining a layered societal structure and protecting property.[153]

This ideology has often been rationalized with appeals to "the tyranny of the majority"; self-servingly assuming that 1) rule by the minority is better because the masses are incapable of organizing themselves effectively; and 2) democracy always means majority rule, rather than "people having a say over decisions in proportion to the degree they are affected by them"[154]– which entails respect for the legitimate rights of minorities.

Noam Chomsky

Noam Chomsky believes that the rationalizations for this elite government function have been fallacious:

“Modern political theory stresses Madison's belief that "in a just and a free government the rights both of property and of persons ought to be effectually guarded." But in this case too it is useful to look at the doctrine more carefully. There are no rights of property, only rights to property that is, rights of persons with property. Perhaps I have a right to my car, but my car has no rights. The right to property also differs from others in that one person's possession of property deprives another of that right if I own my car, you do not; but in a just and free society, my freedom of speech would not limit yours. The Madisonian principle, then, is that government must guard the rights of persons generally, but must provide special and additional guarantees for the rights of one class of persons, property owners"[155] ""[In] [r]epresentative democracy, as in, say, the United States or Great Britain… there is a monopoly of power centralized in the state, and secondly– and critically– […] the representative democracy is limited to the political sphere and in no serious way encroaches on the economic sphere. Anarchists of this tradition have always held that democratic control of one's productive life is at the core of any serious human liberation, or, for that matter, of any significant democratic practice. That is, as long as individuals are compelled to rent themselves on the market to those who are willing to hire them, as long as their role in production is simply that of ancillary tools, then there are striking elements of coercion and oppression that make talk of democracy very limited, if even meaningful…”[156]

Marx's indictment of elite systems of justice contains similar observations:

"The civilization and justice of bourgeois order comes out in its lurid light whenever the slaves and drudges of that order rise against their masters. Then this civilization and justice stand forth as undisguised savagery and lawless revenge...the infernal deeds of the soldiery reflect the innate spirit of that civilization of which they are the mercenary vindicators....The bourgeoisie of the whole world, which looks complacently upon the wholesale massacre after the battle, is convulsed by horror at the destruction of brick and mortar."[157] More generally, Marx perceived that "[y]our very ideas [of freedom, culture, law, etc] are but the outgrowth of the conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class made into a law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economical conditions of existence of your class."[10]

A large percentage of lawyers do work to defend the interests of corporate and state elites— though the potential for change becomes apparent when despite pressures, incentives and other elite-driven selection processes, some determined lawyers don't. The law has also been shaped by their struggles, as well as those of other constituencies e.g. labor movements, women's and civil rights movements or even the liberal values of economically conservative elites who don't want state oppression to affect them personally, or are in favor of oppression only to maintain their privileges (thus opposing laws against gays, ethnic groups, abortion etc). Nevertheless, if it's true, as Frederik Douglass said, that "power concedes nothing without a demand; it never has and it never will"[158] wage slavery, so long as it exists, will remain a strong factor ensuring the resiliency of a system of law that overcriminalizes the powerless and decriminalizes the powerful. The law can ensure that moral principles are applied, but will tend to do so only when it does not fundamentally alter the hierarchical status quo that is at the root of most crime in society. Given that most lawyers and judges will resist the idea that they maintain a system of injustice, this double standard will be maintained by ignoring the corrupting influences of elite rule on the general population, and through the application of rationalizations, selective rationality and morality (e.g. criminalizing marijuana and other drugs rather than the more lethal tobacco, punishing petty thieves rather than big exploiting corporations, prosecuting subnational terrorists rather than state war criminals, criminalizing individual support for terrorist groups, but not state support for dictatorships or terrorist groups like the Contras, etc). Wage slavery also contributes to making powerful groups unaccountable to the law (e.g. US violations of international law,[159] police brutality[160] etc). The capacity to unjustly and arbitrarily influence or violate the law is related to the concentration of power and wealth in the hands of the few. Those who advocate the elimination of wage slavery and the decentralization of power and wealth, (e.g. anarchists) maintain that the law —together with the general culture—should more pervasively reflect human instincts of justice and freedom and should therefore be used not to maintain hierarchy, but to maintain an absence of hierarchy by placing a heavy burden of proof on those who advocate authoritarian measures such as violence and exploitation.

Such legal notions are based on the belief that hierarchical institutions magnify the worst features of human nature (violence, greed etc) and that by relinquishing their subordinate role as subservient, unthinking and insentient "cogs in a machine", people would feel more independent, responsible and aware of their actions; they wouldn't be indoctrinated by centers of power, and would become appalled by behavior that now is condoned within the hierarchical institutional structures. From this perspective, the root causes of war and environmental destruction lie in hierarchical mechanisms like wage slavery. In other words, if the state was eliminated and people directly controlled the economy democratically, they would use it for their own benefit rather than for the benefit of elites, and would therefore foster values of solidarity, equality, peace, generosity, creativity and long term survival of the planet.

Several assumptions underlie this rationale:

1 - In hierarchies there's an incentive to not be completely honest with one's superior and to tell him/her want s/he wants to hear. This lack of honest communication builds up the higher it goes up the hierarchy and is reflected once again onto the society by those powerful enough to exert influence– primarily the elite who, having a lot to lose, have strong incentives to subordinate and atomize the general population by spreading untruths.

2 - It becomes easier to abuse people when one has power over them.

3 - Human beings often numb their independent sense of morality when they subordinate themselves to arbitrary decree from above (one can dismiss one's complicity in a destructive system by simply saying "I'm just following orders" or "I'm just doing my job, earning my bread," "My superiors are good and know what they are doing" etc).

4 - Under authority people tend to become instruments of someone else, instead of free agents directing their own destiny, discovering and gaining a taste for more freedom. This entails that even when the outcome of actions is positive, the framework in which they're undertaken will remain to a large extent amoral and fortuitous. From this point of view, hierarchical structures like the state and capitalism foster dependence and a lack of personal responsibility vis a vis humanity and the environment—allowing those on top to influence the lives and thoughts of society, and corrupting human behavior:

Most people don't go around punching and killing people, and the average person wouldn't steal food from a child just because there are no police around and he happened to be hungry. If he did we'd find such behavior pathological, not normal (as you'd expect if we were really so greedy).Yet states have killed millions through war, and corporations will literally take away water from children for profit (e.g. Bechtel in Cochabamba, Bolivia) and kill millions of workers through horrible working conditions and negligence. They act as magnified projections of our worst tendencies, and negate the fact that cooperation is more important for survival than competition, (as Russian scientist Kropotkin demonstrated in his book Mutual Aid). If you count the number of people killed (and the amount of money stolen) by capitalist and state institutions and compare it to the smaller criminals (bank robbers, serial killers, gangs, Islamic terrorists etc), it is not even close. Furthermore, evidence shows that, contrary to popular belief, institutions of power do not restrain criminal behavior, but actually promote the alienation, violence and socio-economic disparity that creates most of these smaller criminals… Even a saint who gains state power will become an important cog in a repressive power structure, just like CEOs and slave owners could be very nice people, yet in their institutional role they are oppressive. "Good" men in power are responsible for much more death and suffering than "evil" men without power, that's why unlike capitalists and Marxists, anarchists have never imposed dictatorship and mass murder on anyone.

[161]

According to some thinkers, however, there's something called the "bad apple theory" that argues states are natural structures. Anthropologist David Graeber explains it:

All you need is one group in a fairly large region that decides to be predatory raiders and beat up on their neighbors and everyone has to either militarize their own society, or endure being periodically victimized. But consider this: if we have a biological inclination to be warlike and aggressive, then why is it so few take the former option? Studies show that most tribes don't immediately imitate the aggressive group and start organizing for war in self-defense, but endure the raids (which happen on average every five or ten years) just so they don't have to. If we have a natural tendency, it's not to organize ourselves for war, because even people with a very concrete material interest in doing so often don't do it.

[161]

File:Howard Zinn bombardier England 1945.jpg
Howard Zinn

Some historians , like Howard Zinn argue that most soldiers do not go to war out of an intrinsic desire to kill. They have to be trained, deceived and desensitized:

“Wars don't take place out of the rush of a population demanding war: it's the leaders who demand war and who prepare the population for war. You didn't have the American public clamoring to go to WW1… people did not want to go to war…. That's why Wilson [to get elected] said "no we are not going to war". Then he is elected, and almost immediately calls upon the nation to go to war [and] a massive propaganda campaign was mounted. On the one hand you had the propaganda, and on the other you had the [state] coercion, the draft and the punishment… in other words, it takes powerful inducements and threats to mobilize the young population of a nation for war and if you had a spontaneous urge for war you wouldn't have to do that. The consequence of believing that war happens as a result of human nature is to place the blame on the citizenry, and to take it away from the leaders of the nation who are driving the country to war… it's like telling the poor that your poor because of your own faults,…”[162]

Similarly, Noam Chomsky explained how

“...you want to distinguish between the institution and the individual. So, slavery, for example, or other forms of tyranny, are inherently monstrous, but the individuals participating in them may be the nicest guys you could imagine – benevolent, friendly, nice to their children, even nice to their slaves, caring about other people. I mean, as individuals they may be anything. In their institutional role they are monsters because the institution is monstrous.”[163]

The struggle against wage slavery has often been linked to other anti-hierarchical struggles. For example, Mujeres Libres (English:Free Women) was an anarchist women's organization with over 20,000 members in Spain that aimed to empower working class women by pushing the idea of a "double struggle" for women's liberation and (anti-capitalist anti-statist) social revolution. The organization argued that the two objectives were equally important and should be pursued in parallel. In the revolutionary Spain of the 1930s, many anarchist women were angry with what they viewed as persistent sexism amongst anarchist men and their marginalized status within a movement that ostensibly sought to abolish domination and hierarchy. They saw women's problems as inseparable from the social problems of the day; while they shared their compañero's desire for social revolution and vehemently opposed the Nationalists, they also pushed for recognition of women's abilities and organized in their communities to achieve that goal. Citing the anarchist assertion that the means of revolutionary struggle must model the desired organization of revolutionary society, they rejected mainstream Spanish anarchism's assertion that women's equality would follow automatically from the social revolution. To prepare women for active roles in the anarchist movement, they organized schools, women-only social groups and a women-only newspaper so that women could gain self-esteem and confidence in their abilities and network with one another to develop their political consciousness. Despite these activities, the group refused to identify itself as feminist due to feminism's perceived association with upper class, conservative women in Spain who called for capitalist political reform. Unlike other leftist women's organizations in Spain at the time, the Mujeres Libres was unique in that it insisted on remaining autonomous from the male-dominated CNT, FAI, and FIJL and fought for equal status with these established anarchist organizations.[164][165][166]

Environmental destruction

air pollution

According to Murray Bookchin, "it is not until we eliminate domination in all its forms … that we will really create a rational, ecological society." [Murray Bookchin, Remaking Society, p. 44] In other words, to save the planet, people must "emphasise that ecological degradation is, in great part, a product of the degradation of human beings by hunger, material insecurity, class rule, hierarchical domination, patriarchy, ethnic discrimination, and competition."[167][168]. "[N]ature, as every materialist knows, is not something merely external to humanity. We are a part of nature. Consequently, in dominating nature we not only dominate an 'external world'– we also dominate ourselves."[169][170]

From this point of view, the materialistic and competitive "grow or die" maxim of capitalism is inherently anti-ecological. A centralized state structure, though partially restraining of destructive market forces, cedes great power to a few individuals, which has the consequence of standardising and disempowering the majority while imbuing it with an inability to handle the complexities and diversity of life and its ecological systems.[171]

Criticism

Gary Young argues that the same basic reasoning that considers the individual to be forced to sell his labor to a capitalist in order to survive, also applies to the capitalist in that he is forced to hire a worker to survive otherwise his capital will be exhausted through consumption leaving him nothing to purchase the necessities of life.[172] In this sense, the capitalists are as "enslaved" by the workers as the workers are by the capitalists. Some point out that the owner of capital does have a third alternative, which is to sell his labor power to another employer, i.e. accept the condition he would impose on others.[173]

According to the viewpoint of Austrian economical theory[174], what is exchanged between individuals is irrelevant for the result. In the context of Austrian economics, the concept of compensation would extend to cover everything received by workers from employers for their labor. For consistency then compensation in forms other than wages should also be condemned by those who consider capitalist production wage slavery. That is to say, anything other than a revolutionary restructuring of the labor-employer relation leaves the original condition, the one advocated by the school in question, largely untouched.

Further, utilizing the Misesian analytics of individual action, human beings must always engage in production in order to consume and survive. Thus, man would be enslaved to nature itself. If man is always enslaved in some form or another, according to this view, the concept of slavery is of little use in order to draw distinctions between what is a coercive interpersonal relationship and what is not, thereby defeating the analytical purpose of wage slavery theory.

Wage slavery is also in contradiction to the Rothbardian notion of self-ownership.[citation needed] Under this view, a man is not free unless he can sell himself, because if a man does not own himself, he must be owned by either another individual or a group of individuals. The ability for anyone to consent to an activity or action would then be placed in the hands of a third party. Further, the third-party's ownership would also be in the hands of yet another individual or group. This regression of ownership would transfer ad infinitum and leave no one with the ability to coordinate their own actions or those of anyone else. The conclusion is therefore that if under wage slavery, self-ownership is not legitimate, there is no right for anyone then to claim enslavement to wages in the first place.[174]

According to Eric Foner, black abolitionists in the U.S. regarded the analogy of wage earners to slaves, symbolized by the term "wage slavery," as spurious. When Frederick Douglass escaped slavery and took a paying job, he declared "Now I am my own master." According to Douglas, wage labor did not represent oppression but fair exchange and former slaves for the first time receiving the fruits of their labor. According to abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, "wage slavery" (in a time when chattel slavery was still common) was an "abuse of language."[175]

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See also

External links