• @Semjaza
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    62 months ago

    Only when not looked at on a global scale (such as 1% owns 99% being assumed to be about the USA rather than global wealth). Mormengil’s opening response is very feels over facts (also the claim that there was no state support for the poor can be technically true, but churches and local elite as well as royal dictat were often involved in poor relief and charity in the Middle Ages), the later response are better detailed.

    And in the 1200s, global wealth inequality and access to food was for much of the world better or comparable to where it is now.

    But global wealth inequality and access to food got worse after colonisation rearranged American and then African economies for European, and then USAian, benefit.

    AI is already filled with implicit bias towards the current status quo. It can be very tricky to get AI chatbots to give anything other than platitudes about inequality, and they’re often very quick to try to shut down or redirect talk of system change. To think that they’ll not reflect continued post colonial and extractivist systems of power seems, to me, shortsighted.