The 'freedom' to sign the contract is really just the freedom to choose which master will extract that surplus from you. The coercion is built into the very fabric of how we survive.
Capitalism is based on coercion. The real problems are wage labor and private investment that would keep on increasing income inequality and keep everyone slaves except for few elites.


Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know, Miles, I was thinking about how we’re told that taking a job is this totally voluntary, "free" choice. But for most of us, if we don’t show up and follow an unelected boss's orders, we’re out on the street. It feels less like a choice and more like, well, a "tanning," as Marx put it.
Miles: Right! It’s that classic "threat of the sack." While a feudal lord might have used physical force, capitalism uses the "outside"—that dread of being thrown into the reserve army of the unemployed where life is incredibly difficult. It’s a form of implicit coercion that keeps the whole system disciplined.
Lena: Exactly, and it’s fascinating because even if you’re a superstar like Wilt Chamberlain making millions, some philosophers argue that your wealth eventually translates into power over everyone else.
Miles: That’s the friction we’re diving into today: the tension between the "legal freedom" to sign a contract and the "actual inequality" that keeps the working class collectively trapped. Let's explore how this structural trap really works.