Aeolus451 said:
You explained my point for me. Using money as the qualifier for determining who is poor or improvershed is fluffing the results to make it look more like modern times are living richer lives when that's probably not the case. A country who lives off the land could very well be better off as people compared to a country that has lots of money. Of course, It's situational. That data is skewed because how they're measuring poverty. It's a too convenient "truth". |
Can your provide an example of societies that rely on subsinence farming having empirically healthier and happier populations? What are the life expectancies, famine rates, and disease rates of modern agrarian societies? It is obvious that the lives of substinence farmers are harder by these measures. If you want to argue that they live more fullfilling lives in other ways, do so, but the majority of people likely would not agree. Myself having family who are (modern) farmers I know how hard the lifestyle is, and I could only imagine what life would've been like when two thirds of your children died upon birth and your whole family could die because of a bad winter or a disease in your crops. When there was no alternative to how you occupied your days besides working laborious work from dawn to dusk. When there was no leisure time at all. Sorry, that is not a 'rich' lifestyle for me or most people in the modern world. Nor probably was it for people in the industrialized xountries which provided better options. The only people who probably loved farming were plantation owners who had slaves do the hard work for them.







