Except that just because someone else farms doesn't mean that the impoverished person doesn't have to do something to acquire food.Surlethe wrote:In the modern US, less than 0.7% of the economy is devoted to farming, i.e., production of subsistence. That is, agriculture makes up less than $350 per person, every year. Even at minimum wage, that amounts to just a little more than 45 minutes per week. It's even less at median or average incomes. So we spend maybe half an hour, maybe fifteen minutes a week on the equivalent of subsistence living.
Impoverished people in the US, for instance (ie, those making $10k-14k a year) spend nearly $5,000 a year on food, which, if one is making minimum wage ($7.25/hr for federal min. wage) and assuming roughly 10% taken off the top for FICA and other assorted payroll taxes, would take ~765 hours to make, which breaks down to 14.71 hours a week merely to afford food.
However, the hunter-gatherer was often in a superior position, as they eat/ate much healthier food than the impoverished people in the US, and didn't have to spend as much time for ancillary tools for food (ie, they don't have to work so they can get to work, whereas a lot of impoverished people in the US need to spend money on a car note, gas, car repairs, or public transportation {which, if their job is 40 miles away, might necessitate spending 4-6 hours commuting daily, meaning an additional 20-30 hours a week of simple travel to get earn their food; why shouldn't THAT count towards the grand total used to sustain themselves via food?}).
Hunter-gatherers also had it better because, seemingly for most of them, work WAS play, not the soul-destroying labor that modern minimum wage work (and so much more work) is.
Plus, you seem to be forgetting that the world is more than the United States. Even if those Chinese slaves workers at Foxconn don't have to work as long to earn their food and board as a hunter-gatherer, I'm pretty sure they'd rather be living with Australian Aborigines or Papuan tribesmen rather than washing iPhone screens with xylene.
Whereas hunter-gatherers got that sort of thing through what was, essentially a lot of awesome playtime.What do we do with the rest of our time? Seek sex, seek status, and seek personal fulfillment. How do we get sex or status, or much of personal fulfillment? We have to buy things to get those, and to buy things we need money, and to make money, we need to create things that other people value, i.e., that other people want to get sex, status, or personal fulfillment.
Man, we sure made the right decision as a species. :v