And I'm just saying Taco is right and there's no excuses a person can make to himself that make it stop being immoral to take advantage of people to pad his pockets. Could he be doing something worse? Of course. Does that make it okay? Absolutely not.
Oh sure... if someone is being exploited it has to be by a man.... That's sexist Al'
I would like to point out that money ignores a few principal concepts of our reality.
First, that
matter and energy can neither be created nor destroyed whereas money can be easily created(1) and easily destroyed(2).
(1)Nations can print money with little or no impacts on their economy; Counterfeiters can create money which if of proper quality still works as an economic medium to impel economic momentum; Countries like the US can continue to spend recklessly while being trillions of dollars in debt.
(2)The economy can not track money in small quantities, thus if you were to burn a $20 bill at no point would the economy be able to be tallied and show that $20 now being absent from the system
Second, all things seek a state of equilibrium whereas money only works when pooled into larger concentrations; hence the old adage it takes money to make money.
Third, all tangible things can be measured relative to other things. With money it has no relative value, as such an item can be worth anywhere from $0 (free) to $inf - 0.1x10
-inf and it's only worth is the imagined worth of this non-relative medium.
So the system of paper currency does not work and I think the results of using this unbalanced system should be quite clear as under this system we have now made our ability to survive on this world questionable, a feat never before accomplished.
As for your argument towlie, I think you need to go a little more in-depth into the history of the time and the economics of today. In the British empire this reduced standard of living (as we see it today) was the cutting edge of the world at the time. Dangerous, dirty factory jobs were not so much an option as they were the best that the technology of the time was able to create. Workers were able to seek improvements by refusing to work, and by petitioning the government. Due to the challenges of circumnavigating the globe the factories could not simply uproot and move to another part of the world, they needed the workers and the factories where they were already established and thus had to yield. This is no longer true as companies can and do uproot should the workers lot improve too much, as such they are kept to a minimum standard of living to allow them to be easily exploited. Without the ability to hold the company to account the standards will not improve, if you review the history you'll see that most every improvement to worker quality of life was opposed by the companies of which this improvements were demanded. Today the burden of responsibility to hold these companies to account for their exploitation of our fellow humans and of our world falls to all of us, and by defending them with illogical arguments which glaze over the history involved you allow this cycle to continue.
I don't have the answer as to which system should replace this one (yet) although as you might have realised I've been putting some thought into it. The first thing we need to do is balance want and need within this world. Reject pointless consumption and learn to make/do things for yourself. Question, learn, grow.
Fight the good fight my brothers and sisters!