A little Vloging around Bristol showcasing the slave owner's houses who used to live here and own people. Twitter - / badmouse101 Patreon - / badmouse Find out more: www.ucl.ac.uk/...
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@BadMouseProductions5 жыл бұрын
For those watching 2019 onwards. Important thing I forgot to mention is that Queen Square 7:04 is not the same Queen Square as in the 1800's. In 1831 there was a big riot in the city and many of the buildings in the square were destroyed. All of the rich people fled to Clifton and the area became a shithole. Then in the 30's they built a main road straight through it, Yes thats right. At the turn of the century as part of general Urban renewal they restored it to how it looked when it was built. It is highly probable then that some of the slave owners houses were destroyed and thus we can't located them very easily.
@AdamRainStopper7 жыл бұрын
"I might be a bit nicer to my slaves" - Badmouse, 2017
@hmmmhmmm69175 жыл бұрын
@A A Wah wah
@CynicalHistorian7 жыл бұрын
Showing how mundane it was to own slaves in the early modern period is something vitally needed in today's discourse on the subject. Dressing it up with a local tour helps too. Local history has a way of being more personable. Great job on this! Hopefully you don't get hammered by the troglodytes who dwell in the comments section of slavery history videos.
@john-lenin5 жыл бұрын
The Cynical Historian Yeah, the Politics of Victimization is working out so well for black people everywhere.
@Godlike-875 жыл бұрын
@@john-lenin considering the circumstances we'd say it's worked out as good as it can. As an obsolete and discarded labour class the politics of victimization is probably one of the only lifelines that has kept us from just being outright obliterated (via genocide), deported (forcefully) or assimilated (gentrified and interbred). If right wingers got their way all of the above would be happening instead of just the latter two.
@ragnaroksora81297 жыл бұрын
notice how we still have sex slavery today.
@ragnaroksora81297 жыл бұрын
I know right
@Pincuishin7 жыл бұрын
Yea in non European countries. And the small underground in European countries are generally by non european countries themselves theres been a nice uptick though with all those islamic migrants you idiots let.
@owenharper59267 жыл бұрын
Cú_ Mara error 404: citation needed
@matthewmalpeli7 жыл бұрын
You're asking for a citation from a neo-Nazi? You dont understand neo-Nazism then...
@nihilistichobbit88917 жыл бұрын
Cú_ Mara Are you lost? Did you stray too far from your circlejerk or something?
@kennethk.54647 жыл бұрын
People just keep bastardizing Che's image and use it for products and marketing, is there any greater insult to a socialist?
@comradekalininkalinych20067 жыл бұрын
I guess you haven't heard of the Marx shoes then.
@MikeMafiaII7 жыл бұрын
It perfect mockery of a massmurderer tbh
@kennethk.54647 жыл бұрын
+Comrade Kalinin Kalinych ofc they're the high top canvas shoes that are popular with teens who would be just getting into politics and therefore kind of ignorant. No coincidence that the "Karl Marx backpack" is right next to it on the store page. I need a Stalin woodchipper to throw all this shit into.
@comradekalininkalinych20067 жыл бұрын
Couldn't have said better, now off to buy a signed toothbrush collection with Marxist-Sargonist's Sargon's face on them, since that obviously makes me look valid, like a nice self-respecting Socialist, right?
@kennethk.54647 жыл бұрын
+M. N. Odenheimer Far better than getting it from a company with sweatshops in southern Asia.
@PhilosophyTube7 жыл бұрын
This video is really cool, and a really good idea to have an on the ground look at the real places built by slavery! I think in the context of your other videos it's easy to infer your moral position on this, but to someone who hadn't seen any of your others ones I'm curious about whether talking about middle class slave owners and the understandability of the profit motive - without having an explicit moral condemnation of enjoying the ill-gotten wealth of slavery - could the first half of this video be read as trying to morally shrug it off and say "that's just how things were back then?" It kinda seems like slavery is just a thing that happened, rather than an unjustifiable horror that people deliberately chose to engage in? I dunno, I just worry that's how someone who didn't watch any of your other videos might read it... I think "good to their slaves" should be in massive quotes too - you can't be well-treated and be enslaved. Also, in the bit where you talk about the abolitionist pressures and the economic pressures I wonder if there could have been a bit more there about the slaves revolting, to tell a version of that story that restores a bit of agency to people like Sam Sharpe, fighting for their own freedom? These are meant to be constructive points though, I do like the video!
@oBCHANo7 жыл бұрын
" It kinda seems like slavery is just a thing that happened, rather than an unjustifiable horror that people deliberately chose to engage in? " Serious question, have you ever read a history book? Because it doesn't matter how much you try to revise history, it was a thing that just happened. Every major civilization throughout history had a massive slave trade and their civilizations were built by slaves. Whether it was the ancient greeks, the romans, the ancient egyptians, the mongolian empire, the arabs, the aztecs, etc. The way was paved for the transatlantic slave trade by the trans-saharan slave trade, both of which used abrahamic religion as justification, the africans were the descendants of ham, there was the table of nations, etc. So yes, it was just a normal thing in the world to have slaves, especially when there was no globalism, there was no long range communication past letters, when tribalism was so much more easily justified and people can be seen as "the other", when the bible was seen as infallible. Back when the only way to build an empire was through slave labour because no population was big enough to do it themselves. So no, back then it wasn't an unjustifiable horror that people chose to engage it, it was how the world worked.
@Grayhome7 жыл бұрын
+oBLACKIECHANoo Something can be totally normalized AND an unjustifiable horror that people choose to engage in. For modern equivalents, see: sweatshops, factory farming, and oil. These are all institutions that I would consider unjustifiable horrors, yet I freely support almost daily them because they are more convenient than the alternatives.
@oBCHANo7 жыл бұрын
+Tyler Graham I never said it wasn't horrible, but it being normalized meant it wasn't an unjustifiable horrible thing to the people who partook in it, it was everyday life and just how the world worked and so looking back in hindsight and shit talking these historical figures as if it puts us on a moral high ground is absurd. You might as well talk about how retarded they were for not understanding quantum mechanics too.
@pussylord10957 жыл бұрын
Well today many members of what you'd call the middle class invest in the stock market online, perhaps they invest in companies that use sweatshops, companies that hire death squads to crush unions. I guess if you were to choose a modern day equivalent that would be it; difference is that back then you would have had to inconvenience yourself a bit more to buy a slave and investing in unethical business stocks online could be done without being aware of the injustice being carried out (meanwhile buying slaves is very obviously unethical)
@DevinMacGregor7 жыл бұрын
The vast majority of the stock market is actually owned by the 1%. I mean like almost all of it. This is why the Stock Market has been ballooning. US executives compensation since the 1990s as well became more and more stock options. Ok back to the issue of slavery. In the US we have white washed indentured. We acknowledge that black slavery was wrong but we really do not come to grips that all of it was about cheap labor. So let us take morality out of it for a moment and think like a capitalist. Indentured, Chattel, and Wage. Three forms of slavery. Hold on ancaps ... wait for it. Indentured. In the American Colonies and am I am not excluding the rest of the British Colonies not enough workers existed for the demand. So indentured was encouraged. Btw early blacks were in fact indentured. Half to 2/3rds of white immigrants were indentured for various reasons. What is the upside of this? Well you get labor for X number of years. What is the downside of this? Well it has a huge cost upfront and then an ongoing cost of housing and food. Not to mention the sweet old cookie you may or may not give at the end of their contract for being a dick to them all those years. These are all costs you have to consider during their contract. You cannot just fire them if they are not producing because you are out of your investment. Plus they may die because you worked them too hard and thus you lose your investment. If they run away though they could easily disappear into the communities at large. It would be harder to retrieve them. Hey we are looking for a Willie Horton? Nope, no Willie Horton here. John Smith but no Willie Horton. Ummm alright and off you go. So now let us look at chattel. What is the upside? Well you get the labor for life and thus make all costs cheaper. Instead of 7 years of labor you could get several decades of labor and thus spread the costs out far. If they run away they are much easier to find. Hey we are looking for Willie Horton? You look out and see that one black guy in the crowd. Doh, there he is!! I can also lease their labor out after harvest and planting. What is the downside? It has much of the same downsides as indentured. You have the initial investment, ie the mortgage paid on the lifetime of labor. You have the ongoing of housing and food. You still have the issue of can't fire them or if they die. You also have the risk of revolt and hatred of their owners which even though they may be easier to find if running away the rate of runaway could as well be cost prohibitive. South Carolina was 80% chattel. Before I move on, I want to state justification for and against was very biblical. At least here in the States. Puritans were largely against. Even indentured was low in the north and btw not all in New England were Puritan. Half the Mayflower for example were not Puritans. Anglicans largely made up the southern states so it had a much higher indentured per capita. Most indentures were field labor with the rest being artisans. Black Africans they could biblically justify making them chattel. It was an easily seen "other" whereas sectarian division which existed was not apparent so much up front. Wage Capitalists sugar coats this a lot but that is because with the advent of the labor movement, unions, and social reforms putting pressure on govt to enact labor regulations has made them be kinder. What is the upside? No upfront costs. No housing or food costs. I can fire you for not producing at little to no loss to me. If you run away who gives a shit. There is another boat tomorrow arriving with more immigrants who are willing to work for those wages. Downside? Not having enough workers to make profit. I am not making money for a vacant seat. Workers may riot claiming unfair treatment, those ungrateful bastards. I might have to throw a bone to those ungrateful bastards periodically so they think I give a shit about them. Regardless wage labor is the cheapest form because it incurs the least amount of upfront costs to you the Capitalist.
@moorlandwandering33677 жыл бұрын
*People focusing on historical slavery would do well in turning their attention towards the sickening extent of the modern slave trade!*
@HxH2011DRA7 жыл бұрын
"We don’t really need to own people anymore, we just have to rent them" T T
@therat11177 жыл бұрын
I believe I heard a quote once - 'before the slave trade was ended, half the houses in Bristol had been built with the blood of slaves as the mortar'. Still mildly better than the US where the entire country was built on slavery.
@sabotabby33727 жыл бұрын
The Rat Still is, looks at the industrial prison complex
@thetigerking26137 жыл бұрын
Only the South had Slavery
@therat11177 жыл бұрын
Benito Mussolini No, some of the first slaves in North America were working for the Puritans in Massachucetts. The North had widespread slavery until after the Great American Awakening and the growth of industrial labour, roundabout the turn of the 19th century.
@9nidow7567 жыл бұрын
Similar to how many British industries were roped into the slave trade (as described in the video), US industries in the north benefited from slavery in other parts of the US.
@wisemankugelmemicus17017 жыл бұрын
+The Rat It wasn't. You can say that, in a metaphorical sense. But not a literal one.
@Karilina6667 жыл бұрын
"a person who is the legal property of another and is forced to obey them" "a person who works very hard without proper remuneration or appreciation" "a person who is excessively dependent upon or controlled by something" These are all definitions of "slave" Sounds eerily familiar to being a worker under capitalism
@nathanwoerpel63927 жыл бұрын
Both capitalism and corporatism makes slaves of us all.
@magnuscritikaleak50457 жыл бұрын
Nathan Woerpel yet they like to support it.
@rustyshackelford68346 жыл бұрын
Sounds even more like being a worker under socialism.
@rustyshackelford68346 жыл бұрын
I honestly don't give a fuck about China or India. I live in America.
@samueloak16006 жыл бұрын
@@rustyshackelford6834 kek
@WilliamGarland7 жыл бұрын
Funny thing, if you play the Grand-Strategy game Europa Universalis IV (which prides itself on historical simulation), (set 1444-1821) it hardly makes slavery seem like it was a big industry at all; if you colonize Africa a few plots will produce "Slaves" as a trade good, but it worth hardly any money. And if you abolish slavery there is a good chance you will make more money, because the provinces will magically begin producing a new trade good (often "exotic" goods, sometimes even gold) that make you even more money. The game gives you no indication that the slave trade was a profit driven industry, and never makes the player make a hard choice between making money and sparing human lives (in regards to slavery). Then again this is the same company that outright refuses to address the Nazi's racial and genocidal policies in it's WWII history simulators (Hearts of Iron).
@spanishinquisition76237 жыл бұрын
I can see why someone making a WWII grand strategy game may want to pussyfoot around the Holocaust, but around slavery? I've never heard someone say slavery was unprofitable, but then again I've never been around pro-slavery/slavery apologist circles.
@WilliamGarland7 жыл бұрын
You get some events in the game telling you the "Triangle Trade" has started, and explaining what it is, but there is no in game mechanics that simulate its economic effects, despite an (otherwise) very detailed simulation simulation of European colonization of America and Africa. If you ban the slave trade it has very little effect on your economy or colonies. In fact the game never seems to address where the slaves you are selling go, as they are treated like a consumable trade good like wool, salt, or fish. In fact, if you choose to play as the USA post independence, you get no indication that about 1/4 of your population is Black slaves, that half of your nations production relies on slave labor, or indeed any indication that slavery is even a issue, despite being a very divisive issue among the founders as early as the writing of the constitution.
@WilliamGarland7 жыл бұрын
The majority of (USA) slaves were owned by, I think a very small portion of the population, that is true, though what i would say to them is that it does not make it any less evil, any more than the fact that only a small part of the population are members of the bourgeois/owner class would somehow make capitalism any less exploitative. In that case it is not a matter of how many people own slaves, as how many slaves are owned. In many southern states the actual majority of the population were slaves, (and to this day the majority of those states are African descendants of those slaves) and it, in fact, displays an even greater injustice that the majority of said state's population ("property") were owned by a small bourgeois aristocracy, who helped keep that population in check by turning the white proletariat against them (the majority of soldiers in the Confederacy were, indeed, poverty stricken non-slave owning whites) by convincing them they were at the very least better off then their black counterparts. It is classic capitalist divisive "identity politics" tactics used to undermine the proletariat.
@cognitiveatlas62207 жыл бұрын
While EU4 probably downplays slavery, getting more gold by abolishing slavery might make sense. Slaves depresses the free man's wages, which means he buys less, and hence less taxes and tariffs for the government.
@WilliamGarland7 жыл бұрын
Of course, though, it makes the whole war feel like its just a another land grab between three coalitions, and not that there was serious bad shit within the philosophies and policies of the Fascists, as well as the French and English Imperialists, as well as nearly every power great power involved; in fact they barely touch the the struggles of India for independence of this period, as India is just well British resources for England to hurl at Europe. I think part of the reason the game has such popularity with modern "white nationalists" is because it allows them to play some power fantasy of "nordic world supremacy" without having to face the brutal atrocities of 20th century nationalism.
@shinx-hr6uq7 жыл бұрын
I really like this style, BadMouse, I thought it was interesting and helpful to see the locations to illustrate.
@monannywink7 жыл бұрын
I actually really loved this style of video! I'm Canadian and have only visited England once in my life so it was very interesting to come along on this walking tour of British history with you. Seeing the actual homes and streets and industries that were essentially built and supported by slave labour really helps in understanding the toxic impact of captialism in a rather nuanced way. Thanks!
@MarxistAudiobooks7 жыл бұрын
Let's be honest, "capitalism and slavery" is a tautology
@ryanjohnson73547 жыл бұрын
Huh, I squatted a building right by that first building about seven years ago.
@shawn88477 жыл бұрын
Fight and stop the right wing. Become a socialist.
@will64124 жыл бұрын
Berruti centrist?
@hitlermugabetashtwin7 жыл бұрын
I also live in Bristol, and walk about. The difference between us is, I'm always drinking, because I'm a dick, and I don't record the things I say, because everything I say is stupid.
@KlASELI7 жыл бұрын
Don't usually agree with your vids but this is one of the best you've made tbh.
@rogeresposito96757 жыл бұрын
Employees are like slaves. Except they're rented instead of being bought and sold.
@program42157 жыл бұрын
That's the worst analogy i've ever heard. When slaves were bought, the buyer paid the owner, not the slave. When you get an employee as an employer, you pay the person who is asking for work...
@Chocopacotaco14137 жыл бұрын
Employees can quit and most want to work...... slave were rented out and they still could not quit
@davidparry53107 жыл бұрын
+Cú_ Mara People only sign such 'contracts' because they have to, because the capitalists' hoarding of essential resources leaves them with little option. That's not really 'willing' as far as I'm concerned.
@Voidsworn7 жыл бұрын
You are kind of right. It is more like rent-a-serf or something like that than straight slavery. Long before this, people did work to survive (hunt, farm, fish, forage, etc) but they were not working for someone else to make out better than themselves nor did much of the resources (land, materials, tools, etc) "belong" to a relative few. Now, it resembles a "nicer" feudal system where one is born into the world but the resources/means are controlled by other individuals, sort of lesser "nobles" for their own gain. It has been rendered more difficult if not impossible to do anything, especially life necessities, without having some master determining whether or not you can get them. Land/means is owned by others, so no legal hunting/gardening/foraging/fishing/residing/etc for you. Most of us are born in a kind of serfdom, it seems.
@davidparry53107 жыл бұрын
+Cobi Lancaster 'When you get an employee as an employer, you pay the person who is asking for work' ... and who is only put in a position of having to ask you for work because you (along with everyone else who owns the means of production, collectively) hoard essential resources and are backed up by the violence of the state in so doing.
@samuelchaparro04107 жыл бұрын
Really great video man best one to date. Keep up the good work.
@todo79987 жыл бұрын
High Quality video. Some people find it awkward to vlog in public like this. Did you? You had good voice projection.
@KilgoreTroutAsf7 жыл бұрын
That was an excellent video. Unfortunately, KZbin decided to autoplay a Stephan Molyneux video right after.
@Godlike-875 жыл бұрын
@A A so you frequent Right Wing, neoliberal, racists for information and left wing social progressives? Agreeing with nothing, contributing nothing... besides condemnations. How virtuous of you. You sure are fair and balanced...
@_Fornad7 жыл бұрын
Hi Badmouse, I wrote my dissertation on Britain's enforcement of abolition and I thought I'd offer some points. Your analysis of abolition seems to come directly from Eric Williams - who, in neo-Marxian analysis entitled 'Capitalism and Slavery' (the title of your video), offered an explanatory model which attacked the motives of the abolitionists and argued that slavery was a phase of commercial capitalism which aroused opposition only when it had ceased to perform its economic function. Whilst this was influential, it was written in 1944 and is somewhat outdated in a historiographical sense. I'd recommend picking up Seymour Drescher's 'Econocide: British Slavery in the Era of Abolition'. Drescher proves that Britain's imperial economy took a significant hit as a result of abolition, and the work of Chaim Kaufmann and Robert Pape has found that, in relative terms, abolition and its enforcement (during which over 150'000 Africans were freed from transportation across the Atlantic) was the costliest moral action in modern history by a state. Ultimately there were genuine humanitarian intentions at all levels of British society, and it would be wrong to dismiss the whole thing simply as a result of economic requirement.
@BadMouseProductions7 жыл бұрын
Interesting stuff
@lightarmanov62667 жыл бұрын
I feel its wrong to dismiss it as one or the other the fact that slavery was becoming less profitable contributed to it being abolished along with a backlash from the public and slaves this is similar to smoking being limited to public spaces as its profit for the government was reducing but it was also a backlash from the public
@fantasticsituation94617 жыл бұрын
keep makin these amazing videos badmouse, there are people out there (like myself) who really fuckin appreciate it
@ZoneofA7 жыл бұрын
Very good video. Tank you for uploading.
@thefoggydewy7 жыл бұрын
No wonder the slave owners were also Tory MPs such as Edward Colston
@ceicli5 жыл бұрын
A good video, no one is really free of blame. The end is priceless!
@greenwaddledee17437 жыл бұрын
Amazing video keep up the good work!
@ShubhamBhushanCC6 жыл бұрын
Haitian revolution was the only revolution that made a society of free and equal men
@Aconitum_napellus7 жыл бұрын
I've long been suspicious about Mr Whippy ice cream vans.
@james1925997 жыл бұрын
All my comrades are welcome in my commune.
7 жыл бұрын
You're doing excellent work. Thanks.
@calderarecords5 жыл бұрын
As long as Capitalism exists, so will slavery. Amazon holds the whip; Microchipping people under the skin is the new shackles. The Venus Project.
@john-lenin5 жыл бұрын
Slavery wasn’t ordinary for southern white Americans. 75% of Southerners never owned slaves and worked their farms by themselves. They not only never profited from slavery, but slavery held back the economic development of the southern states and hurt the average southerner immeasurably. Yet they were the ones who had to fight.
@blackstork95047 жыл бұрын
Owning 20 slaves wasn't a hallmark of the average person back then. Slaves weren't cheap to purchase so the wealthy were slave owners.
@CyrusPieris4 жыл бұрын
Love it. This is going under my favourites. I read a book called the rent trap and I associate landlords as modern day slave owners. Even the companies we work for are the same. Hence my belief in Cooperatives. Owning the means of production, distribution and consumption. Thank you. Your videos are just excellent.
@DirakandDog7 жыл бұрын
I think this is one of your best videos. Really enjoyed the format. --dirak
@tomboz7777 жыл бұрын
A most unexpected tour of Bristol...I rather enjoyed it. :)
@jw68067 жыл бұрын
This was really insightful. Great vid. Show how the money in out pockets could be used to better the human race if only it wasn't always burning a hole in my pocket.
@anglo-irishbolshevik83716 жыл бұрын
Akala - ps. I forgot to mention that Akala has his own KZbin channel and since recently coming across him I just can't get enough of him.
@j0e6397 жыл бұрын
That billboard/sign-like thing at the end fucking disgusts me. What an insult to the legacy of Che.
@benjaminrobinson72037 жыл бұрын
Something else to point out is that for the animal industry, this is still extremely applicable. Modern day slavery is either wage slavery or the unpaid labor of animals and other groups of people like homemakers and child rearers. It becomes extremely apparent why so many industries don't want to see animal slavery or exploitation in general abolished, because they in profit from it in some way. The industries that supply the grain to the livestock, the markets that sell the finished products to consumers, the restaurants, the pharmaceutical industry which heavily profits off an extremely unhealthy population and from all the drugs that livestock are collectively injected with. And the root of the problem is again, capitalism. A person's mission to acquire more capital can only lead to others' lives being destroyed, even if only as a side effect.
@anarchist7 жыл бұрын
Disclaimer: this is not a "pat ourselves on the back" comment. For anyone interested, the case of Somerset v Stewart is a famous and fascinating one in English legal history in which the invocation of habeus corpus on behalf of a slave (James Somerset) imprisoned on a ship led to the legal recognition [in England] of slaves as people, not property.
@ohmsweetohm72147 жыл бұрын
Indeed, I believe that this judgement was made in around 1772? The legality use of African slaves in the British Isles (as opposed to the wider Empire) had been inconclusive in the 1600s and 1700s, with different Judges making different judgements based on their interpretation of the law. I believe that there were between 5000 and 10,000 African slaves in the British Isles by 1772 (and an additional 5000 free Africans), the vast majority of them being employed as domestic servants, some of whom had been successfully freed by individual judgements before 1772.
@santaclausewitz18915 жыл бұрын
They literally enslaved the proletariat in some regions, saying the parents sold their babies to the coal mine or bourgeoisie owner: "Scottish miners had been bonded to their "maisters" by a 1606 Act "Anent Coalyers and Salters". A Colliers and Salters (Scotland) Act 1775, recognised this to be "a state of slavery and bondage" and formally abolished it; this was made effective by a further law in 1799.[21][22]" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_coal_mining
@YaBoiHakim7 жыл бұрын
I had no idea more "regular" people owned slaves as well in Britain. Excellent video comrade, lovely research. Also, what the fuck was that at the end. Holy shit.
@sherifelsharkawyful7 жыл бұрын
This video was quite nice because of the format. You went around your native Bristol and reflected on the capitalist state of the town and looked at everyday things from a Marxist anti-capitalist angle. You should do videos like these more often, many people are unaware of what goes on around us everyday that is the result of capitalism, consumerism and exploitation and applying such ideas to things we interact with and see everyday will help us look at the state of our world more critically and with a more open mind. Keep it up!
@wickerchair09867 жыл бұрын
Yay, surprise field trip video.
@razieldumas6 жыл бұрын
That sweater looks so comfy.
@Johnycum7 жыл бұрын
I like how you showed all aspect of slavery
@nullset5607 жыл бұрын
That's a beautiful cardigan!
@phrophetsamgames5 жыл бұрын
“Don’t go out and egg them” Soooo egg them and don’t mention your name? Got it
@nknk52415 жыл бұрын
Doctors, lawyers are not mid class
@mk-ultraisnowwireless.64785 жыл бұрын
From working so hard my soul was defiled. I am now tormented day and night. It is not fair that you be exempt.
@jaybristowe23467 жыл бұрын
Nice video man
@debodatta73986 жыл бұрын
Amazing video
@Nosirrbro7 жыл бұрын
Now instead of having to work or not be given food by our owners, we have to work or not be given currency with which to purchase food by our owners. Progress is fun.
@xavierrodriguez24637 жыл бұрын
So its slavery with extra steps.
@legendary1767 жыл бұрын
Bravo
@JellyDonat5 жыл бұрын
I'm sure Birtain has benefited greatly from the slave trade, but from what I understand the single most important factor in sponsoring the industrial revolution was the plundering of India.
@flower-ld5id7 жыл бұрын
This is a good video, it's much more interesting as a vlog. I think slavery can be compared to the meat/animal trade today in it's importance in our economy atm and why that makes people reluctant to end it
@jerkjerkington38747 жыл бұрын
Well there's that, then there's the fact that people like me have meat based metabolisms which require us to eat meat at least once every few days or else we constantly feel weak and tired. Not to mention my hereditary tendency towards vitamin B deficiency which gives everyone in my family violent mood swings unless we either regularly take B-12 supplements or just eat a high-meat diet.
@OtherM1125947 жыл бұрын
Yo that ending had me dying LMAO! NO NOT CHE!!!
@Gandaleon6 жыл бұрын
FYI: The baronet Gladstone is still very much existant and thriving on the legacy of more than 250 years of exploitation and cruelty.
@MoolbniBrie7 жыл бұрын
You look just like Jack Nicholson. Also that tour was very informative, and also, that billboard was very funny.
@MrKiingpin7 жыл бұрын
You kinda look like a mouse no offence
@jakesuper64477 жыл бұрын
lmao
@redheadrusskie7 жыл бұрын
He's an attractive mouse
@sorrybutnoniggas.60297 жыл бұрын
He might have a mouse sized dick as well.
@Mexie7 жыл бұрын
how to get rid of slavery: legalize it. loved the vlog style and seeing Bristol again, it's so pretty! shame about its checkered past. lol, but I'm glad you brought up the links between slavery and Western wealth, and that it continues today. I really can't understand how people can't see it and keep blaming former colonies for their own poverty.
@rustyshackelford68346 жыл бұрын
"how to get rid of slavery: legalize it." says the college educated liberal. lol what a shocker!
@rustyshackelford68346 жыл бұрын
^ BAHAHAHAHAHAHA! ^
@victorvanvolt84256 жыл бұрын
So If slavery wasn't ebolished how much it will cost to own a slave? 1. Price of a slave, based on this video is 2500 pounds, but with what I have read an american slave cost was more like 20.000 pounds. 2. Basic neccesities : 2.1. Food. The cheapest food is bread, just make 600 grams per day of whole wheat bread (0.5 of wheat) or 15 kg of wheat per month or 8 pounds per month. 2.2. Hygean. A soap and 1/2 toothpaste . 2 pounds. 2.3 Clothing. If the slave is a farmer then clothing will cost 2 pounds/month. If his a servant then 20 pounds per month. 2.4 Electronics. Like a phone 2 pounds per month 2.5 Bills. Running water, electricity, phone bill . 100 pounds per month 2.6 Shelter. A 3 room apartment rent cost 1500 pounds and you can cram 5 in a room so the rent will be 100 pounds/month 2.7 Commute. Tube 150 pounds/month 2.8 Health Care. 100 pounds/month Total cost 400 pounds/month or ~5000 pounds/year The modern "wage slave" makes a minim of 7.5 pound/h or 1200 per month and there 5.000.000 people in this stage out of 40 million (12.5%). Conclusion: Yes having minimum wage sucks but you can still have a more decent life than an actual slave.
@rustyshackelford68346 жыл бұрын
Or you can quit your shitty minimum wage and start a business.
@victorvanvolt84256 жыл бұрын
Or, keep the shitty minimum wage job and make a business as a part time job (hobby) so you still have a income if you fuck up.
@thelordchancellor34547 жыл бұрын
I would watch a BadMouseProductions vlog.
@sharadowasdr4 жыл бұрын
I wonder if there are walking tours about this. Would be fascinating to go through Bristol and uncover its connection to slavery.
@p.a.52547 жыл бұрын
I like Che for his military tactics and such
@benjaminrobinson72037 жыл бұрын
This is quite an interesting style for videos. I like it. If you ever have another topic that you can take a field trip for, please do so!
@aargut6 жыл бұрын
Bristol: Welcome to Slavery Town . We've got Slave-mad ice cream and guess what? More Slaves! No refunds.
@assassinxex7 жыл бұрын
That rich Gladstone family wouldn't happen to have any relation to the former PM Gladstone would they
@warnpassion7 жыл бұрын
The history of Britain was mainly built upon the slavery, deindustrialisation and loot of India.
@blocking947 жыл бұрын
How did you keep the camera focused and still while walking? Was it an iPhone and selfie stick? Lol. Good video btw!
@rustyshackleford81707 жыл бұрын
You should make a video about how the state in western capitalist countries can take your property (right now) through "Civil asset forfeiture" and "Eminent Domian".
@Chronically_ChiII6 жыл бұрын
How many slaves existed in Brittany at that time? And how many is that percentage by comparison to the society at that time.
@markJohnson-ot7ny6 жыл бұрын
Guns , Drugs and Slaves is how the Western Hemisphere came into power. M
@paigejane1737 жыл бұрын
BadMouse, will you please debate Destiny? I like a lot of the ideas surrounding AnCom, but have a lot of pragmatic reservations about it's implementation in the United States (or other capitalist societies). I think that you make a lot of good points, but would like to see some of these incompatibilities fleshed out. Thanks my dude, keep up the good work.
@matthewmalpeli7 жыл бұрын
Great work! Sharing :-)
@Dave4519967 жыл бұрын
I simply adore Englands architecture and terrain. And then you do have as far as I know a decent social system, freedom of opinion and people who dare to use this freedom. No forced conscription, LGBT rights etc. Seems not *as* good as France but definitely one of the more livable western nations.
@aboot27547 жыл бұрын
I like your sweater/cardigan, and also your video
@garmr25126 жыл бұрын
Hold on here slavery isn't exclusive to capitalism communists countries. The whole world was built on slaves through out history why try to frame it as if it was one group it seems dishonest.
@libertasaeterna53657 жыл бұрын
Good one badmouse
@the500mphtortoise5 жыл бұрын
slave trading was not a profitable industry slave exploitation was. The actual people who traded slaves often made a loss, though the plantations were successful.
@dragonfly19295 жыл бұрын
WAW!!BRISTOL THE SLAVE OWNERS HOME !!
@JorgeHernandez-oh7xv5 жыл бұрын
Also why business don't want to pay more 5o workers is because they have to pay the people who invest the company (stocks) first
@stuffin8bits7 жыл бұрын
ever think of doing a video about cuba or anything related to the cuban revolution? (i know there's other ones like sandino's revolution, but just asking)
@anarcho-somethingism48397 жыл бұрын
They should've just started a business.
@badmancal2vmaxman7 жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT
@Usdi19997 жыл бұрын
Was part of this filmed by the Redgrave Theatre? I vaguely recognise it.
@ironman12337 жыл бұрын
Why is the capitalist view of property illegitimate? I'm confused
@WateverWatever047 жыл бұрын
Hey (this isn't about of the video but still) so I'm new here and all this interests me but a lot of it is going over my head, can someone point me in the direction of socialism 101? Or where I can start to learn more about the stuff talked about on this channel? Currently I vote NDP in Canada but lean further left than them, however I also don't agree with everything on this channel probably because I don't know about what BadMouse is talking about. Anything would be helpful, thanks in advance :)
@zepic31737 жыл бұрын
i learnt what i know from xexizy, he does alot of videos on the basics, and recommends other ways to learn
@hedgehog31807 жыл бұрын
The is a cite literally called socialism101 it's a decent introduction to the whole idea but doesn't go in depth.
@000Orkarnikolla0007 жыл бұрын
There are some of Badmouse's videos that are pretty socialism 101-ish. Look at his videos explaining class, private property, capitalisms death toll, and "the divided Island", and the ones about collectivism and cooperatives. There are probably more videos, but I can't remember. The videos should be easy to find, I don't have time to link them, sorry. They're really good for understanding basic socialism/anarchism. Good luck, comrade!
@oBCHANo7 жыл бұрын
Start with Alexander Solzhenitsyn's "Gulag Archipelago" and it will teach you all you need to know.
@thertsman82337 жыл бұрын
Conquest of bread my dude
@mattgilbert73477 жыл бұрын
"They were just...middle-class...ordinary folks...who happened to own slaves" Substitute "stock portfolio" or "diversified managed fund" and "neoliberalism" for "slaves" and "slavery" - and you're up-to-date. Plus ca change....
@emilyrln5 жыл бұрын
So... the American Revolution ended slavery? AMERICA SAVES THE DAY AGAIN!!! ;P It’s nice to know that it was a small nail in the coffin, though. I hadn’t put that together before. Thank you for your excellent research and engaging presentation, as always! I really appreciate the time and effort you put into your content. 😊
@Kite_sunday2 жыл бұрын
Better than Tom Scott tbh ngl.
@lamborger7 жыл бұрын
So there you go. Capitalists *do* believe in slave reparations. . . for the owners.
@trotskyeraumpicareta41787 жыл бұрын
"I don't want this to be an advocacy of violence" and you call yourself an anarchist?
@SEAL3417 жыл бұрын
BadMouseProductions Great, but disturbing video. I'm a Brit too. Question: Is it me, or does Paul Joseph Watson look like Jeane Kirkpatrick? Jeane Duane Kirkpatrick (née Jordan; November 19, 1926 - December 7, 2006) was an American diplomat and political scientist. An ardent anticommunist, she was a longtime Democrat who became a Republican in 1985. After serving as Ronald Reagan's foreign policy adviser in his 1980 campaign, she became the first woman to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations. She was known for the "Kirkpatrick Doctrine", which advocated supporting authoritarian regimes around the world if they went along with Washington's aims. She believed that they could be led into democracy by example. She wrote, "Traditional authoritarian governments are less repressive than revolutionary autocracies."
@SEAL3417 жыл бұрын
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeane_Kirkpatrick
@Killahedgehog1017 жыл бұрын
Hey im from Bristol, Badmouse lets start the Bristol Commune
@kayhoorn6 жыл бұрын
So the English got some nice buildings and the slaves where free... And the bad thing is?
@UnknownRaul7 жыл бұрын
✅
@chuckles2227 жыл бұрын
Was the Gladstone family you mention the same family as William Gladstone?