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| #Post#: 8847-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Columbia Confederates Date: September 1, 2015, 1:21 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Recently Columbia has been hit with hard questions in regards to | |
| its use of slaves. Slavery as by definition which treats humans | |
| as property and a unpaid workforce. What many don't realize is | |
| that there is a sub form of slavery called Voluntary slavery, a | |
| type of indentured servitude. Voluntary slavery is used by men | |
| and women alike, as well as their families, to give their free | |
| labor in exchange for protection, housing, and other costs. But | |
| still the term slavery has negative effects to it, so as a way | |
| to clear up any suspicions Governor Preston released a book of | |
| laws passed in the state of Columbia to protect the institution | |
| and protect the slaves inside the institution. | |
| Involuntary Slavery Abolishment Act | |
| -Passed in the year of 1876 by Governor Christian Rush. Passed | |
| with a vote of 130-33. Involuntary slavery was abolished with | |
| the passing of this bill by Governor Christian Rush. The | |
| transition period was rough, but rebounded nicely in the year | |
| 1880 when former slaves began to be contracted again into | |
| slavery. The economy became well balance and to this day has | |
| remained the economic driving force of Columbia. | |
| Slave Protection Act | |
| -After the Virginia v. Duncan case of 1888, Governor Humphrey | |
| Wilson proposed Congress to come up with a bill to protect the | |
| lives and rights of slaves. In 1892, the Slave Protection Act | |
| was signed in by Governor Jackson Douglass with a support of | |
| 101-61. The act confirmed that slaves were not to be abused to | |
| the extent of death and bodily injury (it did not outlaw limited | |
| lashings for misconduct). It also protected a slaves rights to | |
| arms, religion, votes, and free speech. | |
| Jailer Removal Act | |
| -In a gold rage 1892-1893, jail populations began to sprout up. | |
| In order to control jails, all able to work men and women were | |
| forced into slavery. Many leading progressives of the time | |
| called it a strict violation of the Involuntary Slavery Act. | |
| However, it was made a case by famous coal mine owner Sampson | |
| Ramsay that those who were jailed were no longer under certain | |
| protections of the law. In 1895 all able bodied prisoners were | |
| sold into slavery causing an outrage amongst Free-Soilers who | |
| sought to prevent the law from being thrown into place. The law | |
| is the most controversial to this day and was then as well being | |
| signed in by Jackson Douglass and a underwhelming support of | |
| 92-71. The Jailer Removal Act stated that they had to serve a | |
| certain period of time (sometimes decades) and were to be freed | |
| when their times were due. However, even with restricted times | |
| they are not protected by any slavery bill passed. They do not | |
| have a right to fire arms or voting. They are not protected from | |
| death or bodily injury as well, which is still a concern to | |
| modern day Free-Soilers known as the Carpenter Party. | |
| Official Slavery Standard Act | |
| -The official slavery standard act was passed in 1952 by | |
| Governor Henry Wallick and received a full out support of 160-3. | |
| The standard reassured the previous passed bills and made note | |
| that "Slavery is an institution bound by the decisions of | |
| peoples not the government and hereby the government shall no | |
| longer take part in its expansion or decay." The bill said that | |
| the state was to protect slavery and uphold the previous bills | |
| but that if slavery were on its way out by a change in the | |
| hearts and minds of peoples that the government couldn't throw | |
| subsidies at slavery or help the expansion of slavery. | |
| #Post#: 8848-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Caos Date: September 1, 2015, 1:26 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OOC: So they can be beaten for no reason at all? But they would | |
| SELL themselves into that? And how would they use that money? | |
| WHEN would they use that money, if at all? How long does this | |
| 'sale' last? And if that's true, why in gods name can you sell | |
| THEM to SPARTA? | |
| #Post#: 8850-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Columbia Confederates Date: September 1, 2015, 2:19 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OOC: Must of missed the part where it says that they sign | |
| themselves into specific contracts, and the part that says they | |
| are protected from harmful abuse from planters and slave owners. | |
| Okay, this is voluntary slavery, believe it or not it was common | |
| in Greece and very very common in feudal England. Don't take | |
| this too seriously man, it hurts watching you flip out over | |
| this. I don't think you realize this is a fictional world, with | |
| fictional slavery, and fictional slaves. Go protest real life in | |
| Africa and the middle east, brother. Defocus a bit. | |
| #Post#: 8851-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Caos Date: September 1, 2015, 2:24 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OOC: Feudal Europe practiced VOLUNTARY slavery? Dude, peasants | |
| physically had NO OTHER CHOICE. In Greece, it was captured | |
| people and criminals. Nine times out of ten, people work for | |
| pay. | |
| You're trying to defend something that is incredibly unrealistic | |
| and impossible in real life. It would never happen, and when I | |
| try to tell you this, you just go 'Dude lol go bother Africa'. | |
| You're just wrong. | |
| #Post#: 8852-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Columbia Confederates Date: September 1, 2015, 2:28 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OOC: But ya know what I'll explain each question to you. Just | |
| remember this is my NATIONS beliefs and laws not mine. So to | |
| your first question: No they can't be beaten for no reason. It | |
| says they can't be beaten, killed, or cause extensive bodily | |
| harm. The SPA is meant to prevent that, but it also allows that | |
| slave owners can discipline their VOLUNTARY slaves if it is for | |
| discipline terms only. If it isn't, then the slave can bring | |
| their master to court, it's one of the things that is protected. | |
| And yeah as I've said multiple times it happened before buddy. | |
| Early America, Greece, Rome, Feudal England, etc. Selling | |
| yourself into slavery was pretty common for poor families in | |
| England. It's the families decisions, they aren't forced into | |
| it, the people chose to do so. Involuntary slavery is outlawed | |
| so...that's kinda the very first slave law my state passed Caos. | |
| And they don't sell themselves for money ding dong, they sell | |
| themselves for four things that they couldn't afford otherwise: | |
| Protection, Stability, Food, and Housing. I laid that out | |
| perfectly in the laws. And then depending on a slave's contract | |
| they signed with a slave owner, they can be traded, much like a | |
| football player is traded to different teams (not really but you | |
| get it). We can sell them anywhere and then to anyone by a | |
| contract. In the details I gave Sparta I gave number of slaves | |
| with contracts that allowed trading, less than half of them | |
| allow trading in their contracts. So to say a slave trade is | |
| huge, no it's not. I traded 5,000 slaves, yeah that's alot, out | |
| of how many slaves? Over 500,000? And stop thinking so deep into | |
| this stuff Caos it's getting annoying. Once again these slaves | |
| are not real, this is all fiction buddy, or did you forget that? | |
| #Post#: 8853-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Caos Date: September 1, 2015, 3:02 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 1. No, it actually didn't outlaw beating. Here's a direct quote: | |
| [quote]The act confirmed that slaves were not to be abused to | |
| the extent of death and bodily injury (it did not outlaw limited | |
| lashings for misconduct).[/quote] | |
| He could be abused, whipped, or beaten for no reason. But as | |
| long as he was not killed or really injured, well, who cared? | |
| 2. All your examples were not selling themselves into slavery. | |
| You're using very, VERY flawed arguments based off of flawed | |
| understanding of the systems. Sure, there was indentured | |
| servitude, but that was just to get to the colonies. If you | |
| needed to get to America, you worked for seven years to pay it | |
| off. You weren't paid on the spot. | |
| Feudal England had peasants. They earned basically nothing and | |
| continued to work. NOT VOLUNTARY. They had no other choice. | |
| Romans used prisoners of war and criminals for INVOLUNTARY | |
| SLAVERY. Same with Greece. It was not common to sell yourself | |
| into slavery. But if you had a debt to pay, you were forced into | |
| it. | |
| 3. No, actually, your Criminals don't voluntarily go into | |
| something like that, and they AREN'T protected. And did they | |
| agree to be sold? You found 5,000 people who agreed to be | |
| slaves, who agreed to be sold? | |
| 4. Ohhhh, so they otherwise sell themselves to something that | |
| they can never get out of, is that it? They have to be slaves | |
| all their lives, because they don't have enough money to own | |
| things. | |
| 5. Just because you didn't think ahead doesn't mean I don't. I | |
| think ahead. And when I can pick apart something as flawed as | |
| this, then there's something wrong with your system. It's | |
| flawed. It's impossible. 250,000 people do NOT want to be ripped | |
| from their families, their homes, their lives, just so they can | |
| be traded to god knows where under god knows what conditions | |
| that they have no control over. 500,000 people are not so poor | |
| that they MUST be slaves all their lives in such an economy as | |
| yours. Either your economy is amazing and you favor only the | |
| rich, or your economy is shit and still only favors the rich. | |
| Either way, you've become so dependent on your people living | |
| shitty lives that if they started living good lives, your | |
| economy would shrink. | |
| If someone that's, what, 8 years younger can handle this better, | |
| can pick apart your system way better, and can give you a better | |
| alternative, then you have something wrong with your system. | |
| Either that, or I'm as smart as the rumors say. Or, the third | |
| option: you're attempting to insult me because you're defensive. | |
| Either way, I'm right. | |
| Your system is impossible and improbable. Virginia survived, | |
| yeah. But did you know that those 50 percent could not buy | |
| things? They only produced. They never consumed. They couldn't | |
| escape. They had no choice. They were commodities. Did you know | |
| that Virginia also wasn't a COUNTRY with it's own LAWS, | |
| CURRENCY, and ECONOMY? They had the rest of the bloody country | |
| for an economy. And things were pretty bad for people who didn't | |
| own slaves. | |
| Get to a history textbook before you come insulting me. People | |
| respect my opinions because, even if it's mean, it's got fact | |
| and truth behind it. You just don't respect anything that comes | |
| out of my mouth. | |
| Good try at the system. But this system means that your economy | |
| is basically people selling themselves into something because | |
| life sucks. Bad, bad, BAD system to base your life off of. | |
| #Post#: 8860-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Neexus63 Date: September 1, 2015, 6:14 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| OOC: Your laws don't apply in Sparta so you may actually be | |
| technically selling them into slavery. | |
| #Post#: 8862-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: West Phoenicia Date: September 1, 2015, 6:39 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Our issue is not that you have them. We have our own labor | |
| force. That is made up by a large portion of prison labor. | |
| Our outcry comes from you trading them to other state's. Sparta | |
| has one of the worst human rights abuse in the region. Thry jail | |
| polygamists among others with harsh penalties. If they treat | |
| their own citizens like that what hope does a Columbia | |
| Confederate slave have. You may give them rights I doubt they | |
| will follow through. | |
| #Post#: 8864-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Columbia Confederates Date: September 1, 2015, 6:46 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| WP, Caos' issue is that I have them. Because he thinks these | |
| fictional slaves have feelings, that he needs to protect their | |
| fictional rights. I'll speak with Sparta. The slaves are still | |
| under Colombian protection. I'll see if I can get Sparta to pass | |
| a law to prohibit slave abuse. | |
| #Post#: 8869-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Slavery in the State of Columbia | |
| By: Caos Date: September 1, 2015, 7:37 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Oh my god Columbia, you just.... | |
| You're so daft. You really are! | |
| MY ISSUE, AS STATED FOUR TIMES BEFORE BUT NEVER REALLY FREAKING | |
| ADDRESSED BY YOU FOR REASONS UNKNOWN, IS THAT THIS ENTIRE THING | |
| ABOUT YOU HAVING 55 PERCENT OF YOUR COUNTRY SLAVES, ESPECIALLY | |
| SLAVES WHO SOLD THEMSELVES INTO SLAVERY, IS COMPLETELY, UTTERLY, | |
| UNREALISTIC!!!!!! | |
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