Runaway Slaves

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas

I believe it’s safe to say that most all of us sympathise with anyone who’s living in a condition of relative slavery and, if he has the courage to attempt to free himself, we root for him to succeed. Those of us who are the most compassionate would even offer him support in his quest, if we were called upon to do so.

But few of us think about slavery as being a modern institution. We tend to see slaves as victims of a racial divide who suffered disgracefully in times gone by.

So, we should take a look at the definition of slavery. In essence, it’s a state in which the product of an individual’s labour is forcibly taken from him. (His condition may include abuse, bondage, etc., but these are symptoms, not a definition.) The purpose for enslavement is always the same: to obtain the fruits of the slave’s labour, without mutually agreed-upon compensation.

And so, if we look at the bare bones of the definition, we easily recognize that if all of the fruits of our labour are taken from us, we are entirely enslaved. If a portion of those fruits is taken from us, we are partially enslaved.

Taxation is unquestionably, by definition, partial enslavement. It’s safe to say that virtually no one in the present world has ever been asked to sign away to his government the power to tax him. Make no mistake about it – taxation is achieved through force. You don’t wish to pay whatever is demanded? You go to prison.

Throughout history, there have been governments that taxed their minions ever-increasingly, eventually reaching the point that people began to leave the country rather than pay the usurious tax. (Rome declined in the fourth century as countless merchants left to live in the more-primitive north, amongst the barbarians, in order to escape tax enslavement. Similar developments have occurred in other countries throughout history.)

Although, in bygone eras, total slavery was quite common and occurred in every continent at one time or another, in our own time, governments have recognized that partial slavery is more effective – give people the impression that they’re free, whilst taking a major portion of the fruits of their labours from them in the forms of taxation and inflation.

But, at some point, people tend to rebel against slavery. First a few try it and succeed, followed by greater numbers, followed again by even greater numbers. In today’s world, we read falsified statistics of the numbers leaving a given country and those giving up their citizenship and don’t realise that these numbers are far from correct. They’ve been adjusted radically downward to make those running for freedom seem like anomalies.

Yet, as the former “free world” becomes increasingly oppressive; as the economic system breaks down, political leaders will experience dramatically diminished revenues and the only solution to keeping themselves in tax dollars (and in power) will be to tax the few remaining productive people far more heavily, to make up for the shortfall. It is at that point that an exodus will begin – first, quietly, then in increasing numbers. Then, emphasis on preventing slaves from running away will increase dramatically.

This will occur in three ways, as it always does.

The Owner Will Try to Prevent an Escape

In days of old, a slave owner would be likely to spend money to advertise in newspapers and print flyers to be distributed, offering a significant reward for the return of a slave. If the slave were recaptured, he would likely be flogged and might even be hanged.

But why on earth would the owner kill a slave who had real value to him, just after paying for his return? Well, it served as an excellent example – 1) To advise other slaves that there is no escape. 2) That the punishment for attempting escape is something that the remaining slaves had better ponder before considering their own flight.

An oppressive government is much the same. They’ll be happy to make examples of those seeking freedom, if their flight occurs after a no-exit date has been declared.

The Owner Will Pressure Other Jurisdictions Not to Accept Runaways

Historically, states and countries that have endorsed slavery have put the pressure on their non-slave-holding neighbours, warning that they will suffer if they give safe harbour to escaped slaves. Limiting trade and controlling the movement of money are the most immediate sanctions.

And, in fact, we’re already seeing this in the US today. With FATCA, the US is putting enormous pressure on banks worldwide to provide extensive information on any American holding an account there. And, if the US is not satisfied with that reporting, they levy huge fines. The outcome is as intended – most banks in the world no longer want Americans as clients… at all – the punishment for welcoming them is too great.

The next logical step is to limit expatriation in the same way – that other countries will be punished for taking in Americans as refugees after an as-yet-unnamed date.

The Chosen Destinations Will Become Overrun

Many destinations are presently sympathetic, welcoming the first “runaways.” But as numbers increase, the receivers of refugees will become like Californians in the 1930’s, who originally welcomed the Okies as potential low-paid farmworkers, but later turned against them violently when too many arrived to absorb into the population comfortably.

At some point, each existing destination will declare a moratorium on further refugees. Those who got in under the wire would be safe and sound, but no new applicants would be considered. (Again, this has historically been the norm.)

The final outcome would likely be similar to that in Germany in the late 1930’s, when German Jews who saw the writing on the wall, attempted to leave the country in ever-greater numbers. But, by far, the majority decided to wait and see if conditions worsened before exiting. Two things happened: 1) Destination countries collectively closed their doors to any further immigration of German Jews and, 2) Germany eventually made expatriation for Jews illegal. Those who were trapped went in their millions to slave labour camps, where total slavery was the universal rule.

This is not an anomaly – countries that find themselves in a similar situation, in which large numbers wish to escape, tend to drop the pretense of respect for freedom and resort to full slavery. Whether it be Mao’s work camps, or the Gulags of Russia, once the mask is off, partial slavery often is done away with and full slavery ensues.

Of course, we’d like to argue that all of the above examples are extreme and that nothing that severe could happen today. But then, those who fell victim in these examples also felt that way at the time, or they wouldn’t have stayed put and allowed themselves to be victimized.

Those folks were essentially the same as you or I. Their only shortcoming was that they failed to anticipate the fact that the historical economic and political warnings were occurring all around them, and they failed to vote with their feet.

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10 Comments
Martin
Martin
February 4, 2019 1:22 pm

If I buy stuff made by slaves in China and sold by almost-slaves at Amazon does that mean I’m pro-slavery ?

noBabel
noBabel
February 4, 2019 1:50 pm

Civilization is impossible without slavery.
In the old days, they gave us chains and fences and outright death penalties to keep slaves where they were supposed to be.
Now they indoctrinate their slaves with the illusion that they are free. Their chains are comfort, civic and national or progressive pride, and fear of being seen as poor (or not progressive). These days, taxation is only the most overt way they claim our labor, but not even the largest. Commerce, trade, and the monetary system is how most of their gains are acquired.
The genius is that we do it voluntarily, thinking that we are free. And even better, the best enforcers of the plantation aren’t even the police… its the we slaves. They have us broken into camps debating about the best way to run the plantation, as if our vote ever meant something. We argue among ourselves about which rights we should be entitled to and how the system is corrupt, while we sit in our pen and continue to give them meat and milk.
The system began in the southeast Asia, spread to northern Africa and Southern Europe, and then spread to burn and expand through Europe, Asia, and Africa, and then eventually to the Americas, replacing the indigenous culture with the culture of commerce.
From a European perspective, the natives in Europe tried to fight it off, but the power granted to the elites and the comfort to the commoners was too enticing for the us to keep it at bay.
This ideology morphed over the centuries, seemingly different, but rooted in the same basic principles. It eventually became capitalism, then communism and socialism, and progressivism. Its all the same. It has the same outcomes eventually.
Unfortunately (or fortunately IMO), time and resources are running out. The money tricks are ending, and the inter-glacial period won’t last forever. Civilization will finally fall and we will again be free… well, those of us who have built a tribe related by blood or oath and who have a cultivated a culture of strength and resilience.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
February 4, 2019 2:30 pm

I would broaden the definition a bit. You are a slave any time you have no other choice. An example would be if you are not allowed to leave your country. I would call that slavery.

AC
AC
February 4, 2019 2:53 pm

I wonder what the response of the Neoliberal/Neoconservative Globohomogayplex will be to Russia opening its borders to all whites of good character and with some minimum IQ?

Would you rather turn over 70% of your income (to start with) to support stupid brown people forever, or learn to speak Russian?

anarchyst
anarchyst
February 4, 2019 2:53 pm

Most slaves did NOT work sixty hours a week for fifty-two weeks…In fact, most slaves worked long hours only during the planting and harvest seasons, whereas the rest of the time was relatively leisurely, with not much to do, while the slave owner still had to provide clothing, housing and other amenities for them.
Now, the “house slaves” working conditions were better, but they did have to work 52 weeks a year, unlike the “field hands”…
As for brutality against slaves, although it did exist, it was relatively uncommon. Getting work out of slaves who were mistreated would have been difficult and counterproductive.
The slave owners were not stupid; they used psychology to keep their charges “in line”. A misbehaving slave would be punished publicly in front of the slave womenfolk. This would encourage the woman slaves to do everything they could to keep the men slaves “in line”…making them “behave themselves”. Our present-day black matriarchal attitude so prevalent in the American black community is the result…

Ned
Ned
February 4, 2019 4:33 pm

The US was, is and always will be a slave nation. The Constitution was written by and for the slave owners/now corporations, and legislators. When you apply that filter it explains why the police will taze or kill you if you dare remind them of ‘your’ Constitutional rights.

Just because you drive your own car to the cotton field of your choice doesn’t make you any less of a slave.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
February 4, 2019 5:31 pm

I hear being a debt slave is in now ?

We are screwed
We are screwed
February 4, 2019 8:52 pm

You think the democrat socialist that are in power after Trump will secure a wall to keep us tax paying producers here and forced labor camps so their voting base can sit on their arse on wlefare, will Their wall be considered moral?surely THeir hypocrisy would garner CNN to tell these tales, surely…..

Free Speech Forum
Free Speech Forum
February 4, 2019 9:48 pm

Now that the US is a police state, there doesn’t seem to be much difference between being in prison or being outside of prison.

22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
February 4, 2019 10:22 pm

Read a book.

“Myths of American Slavery”