Piracy, in today’s context of unauthorized sharing of digital content, is wrongly condemned as immoral theft. However, it is not piracy itself that is immoral. Rather, it is the greed-driven laws and practices that censor knowledge and creative works to maximize profits. At its core, piracy is about sharing information and creative works with others, which should be seen as a moral good. 🤑
@flambonkscious @RedCanasta And the people who made that work earn approximately 0.1% of what you pay for the work. The other 99.9% goes to shareholders. Wouldn’t it make more sense to give the workers 100%, or even 10% of the normal price?
So I agree with piracy, however one thing to keep in mind is that our economy and productivity are only in existence because of the land and equipment (as well as the labor) that it takes to produce them.
If 100% of income went to the workers, there’s nothing to pay for equipment and land that is also necessary for production. Ugly as capitalism is, the end result is a productive economy. A lot of the wealth is captured in land and equipment.
Now, you can argue that the workers should own the land and means of production. That I could agree with. But you simply can’t produce anything without paying for land and equipment plus labor.
@Feweroptions This is the story that capitalists tell you to justify why it’s okay for them to steal your money.
Land costs nothing, and equipment is just someone else’s labour.
Do note that if a manager or even a CEO does management work, that’s still work and should be rewarded as such.
Also note that CEOs and shareholders are massively overpaid in today’s society. If one person were to not pay them, they’d still be massively overpaid.
Land has value, and thus comes with a price. Equipment doesn’t spring forward from creativity and hard work alone - it also requires materials, and besides that, you have to pay for people’s innovation and hard work when buying equipment.
@Feweroptions materials are just someone else’s labour
innovation is just labour
@Feweroptions Thinking that price has anything to do with value is also a common mistake. Price is how much the owner of a thing can extort you for it, which is not the same as how useful it is.
Land has no certain intrinsic price (although it does have an intrinsic *quantity*, which is the total land divided by the total people). Land has a price because we live in an exploitative system.