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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 10, 2023

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Oh, no doubt agricultural work is very difficult, and I would much prefer my current lifestyle to that of a tenant farmer. But I am saying that the Industrial Revolution was uniquely bad for workers. I’m pretty sure I would drop dead doing factory work of a hundred to two hundred years past, but I’ve seen farm-work done before in rural China with limited modern equipment and amenities, for instance — it is hard work, but it is doable.

The risk of famine is well taken, though.


My understanding of why peasants flooded the cities was because of changing economic incentives — unemployment in farms due to industrialization and different crop preferences lead to massive unemployment amongst farmers, who migrated to cities to look for work.

My impression is that conditions varied greatly with population density, and that Industrial Revolution era Europe was unusually bad for Malthusian reasons. Pre-revolution China also sounded terribly grinding for similar reasons.

So I don't disagree that early 20th Century coal miners (and American cotton plantation workers, and men mining guano, and rice farmers) had it worse than men in a variety of other times and places.