PoliTalker
Diversity Makes Greatness
I was listening to Podcast #104 on Ben Franklin's World. Awesome website, btw. There is a new episode every week! They are all about early American history. Fascinating...
This episode was about the original interface between Europeans and Native Americans along the salt water coasts of New England.
I never knew the Native Americans had large sailing canoes capable of carrying 40 people! The invaders made quick work of them with cannons before driving the Natives from the coast. But a lot of trading also happened, each side learning what the other was interested in. The Europeans wanted furs, fish and lumber. The Native Americans wanted beads, knives, mirrors.
I was very surprised to learn that a sort of debt system emerged. "I'll give you this if you do that for me when you get the chance."
Whaling emerged because everyone saw the benefit of oil. The knowledge of whales was known to the Native Americans. The Europeans learned how to exploit it for profit. The Native Americans would use every part of whales that beached, but never set to sea to hunt them until the English and Dutch brought advanced seafaring technology. Together, whaling was invented. Early 17th Century whaling ships had crews of largely Native Americans.
Got me to thinking about debt. Debt is used as a weapon to force others to do things which benefit the loaner. Either do work directly for the loaner, or in order to earn profits to be paid back.
That system is still in place, except now the biggest egregious example is the super-rich who finance everything for everyone else, to their benefit. It makes them richer, giving them even more power over others.
The entire middle to lower middle class of America is pretty much in debt to the rich. This forces them to work like dogs, forgo family life, remain committed to earning and production.
Debt is really a soft form of slavery. Maybe that's why Muslims hate it.
The main weapon in the American Class War is debt.
Lately, in the pandemic, people are asking: "What is freedom?"
What does freedom mean? Freedom to make up your own pandemic response?
Well, this podcast made me realize what freedom really is.
Freedom is freedom from debt.
Being in debt is like an ankle iron with a big Iron Ball. Or perhaps like an ankle monitor, these days.
The super-rich have freedom. (mostly) Some of them are over-extended, and do not know freedom. (The king of debt?)
And many in the middle actually have freedom. People who get all their stuff paid off. House, cars, possessions, everything. That's freedom.
And even some homeless people have freedom! (not that their form of it is very desirable.)
I hope you find your own form of freedom.
This episode was about the original interface between Europeans and Native Americans along the salt water coasts of New England.
I never knew the Native Americans had large sailing canoes capable of carrying 40 people! The invaders made quick work of them with cannons before driving the Natives from the coast. But a lot of trading also happened, each side learning what the other was interested in. The Europeans wanted furs, fish and lumber. The Native Americans wanted beads, knives, mirrors.
I was very surprised to learn that a sort of debt system emerged. "I'll give you this if you do that for me when you get the chance."
Whaling emerged because everyone saw the benefit of oil. The knowledge of whales was known to the Native Americans. The Europeans learned how to exploit it for profit. The Native Americans would use every part of whales that beached, but never set to sea to hunt them until the English and Dutch brought advanced seafaring technology. Together, whaling was invented. Early 17th Century whaling ships had crews of largely Native Americans.
Got me to thinking about debt. Debt is used as a weapon to force others to do things which benefit the loaner. Either do work directly for the loaner, or in order to earn profits to be paid back.
That system is still in place, except now the biggest egregious example is the super-rich who finance everything for everyone else, to their benefit. It makes them richer, giving them even more power over others.
The entire middle to lower middle class of America is pretty much in debt to the rich. This forces them to work like dogs, forgo family life, remain committed to earning and production.
Debt is really a soft form of slavery. Maybe that's why Muslims hate it.
The main weapon in the American Class War is debt.
Lately, in the pandemic, people are asking: "What is freedom?"
What does freedom mean? Freedom to make up your own pandemic response?
Well, this podcast made me realize what freedom really is.
Freedom is freedom from debt.
Being in debt is like an ankle iron with a big Iron Ball. Or perhaps like an ankle monitor, these days.
The super-rich have freedom. (mostly) Some of them are over-extended, and do not know freedom. (The king of debt?)
And many in the middle actually have freedom. People who get all their stuff paid off. House, cars, possessions, everything. That's freedom.
And even some homeless people have freedom! (not that their form of it is very desirable.)
I hope you find your own form of freedom.