About the Serfs being sent home, yeah I figure it would be extremely hard, since the Space Marines themselves are always being used to fight in the numerous battles and wars that are happening throughout the Galaxy itself, so it would be extremely hard and impractical to just dedicate some time to just send them home, when they could just used that time to fight the battles and saved the people
The serf job really depends on the astartes chapter you get. The salamanders ultramarines and blood angels are pretty chill with their serfs and let them even have families and stuff. I know in one blood angels book the dad and mom were happy to show their kid to the marine they serve because he passed the technology tests and stuff and that blood angel was really nice to the kid and family. But I’m sure the salamanders serfs have it best lol…but in any traitor legion you are gonna get messed up if not by the evil astartes then the demons that hang around the ship
Personally I don’t mind pausing making the video longer, gives me more chances to say stuff in the comments you may have misunderstood or agree with opinions lol but the tempestus doesn’t seem so bad compared to the other jobs…lmao the word indentured lol just say dentures like fake teeth but add in- denture-d
54:38 This is needlessly expensive. It is cheaper and more efficient to use regular machine-assisted loading for that. It is very expensive to feed all those slaves just for them to die during the 1st load. It would be better to turn all those prisoners to servitors. Combat servitors are very efficient.
If you find these cruel and inhumane, check out luetin's video on the "Daemonculaba". Its a "sweet" lil story about my iron warrior chaos boys :D But be warned, the Iron Warriors are disgustingly baaaaaaaad people :D
Bear through the boring basic economics lecture for a moment. Trust me, I'm going somewhere with this. Money in general is inherently worthless, beyond the worth of whatever it's made out of. Case in point? A penny is made out of an amount of copper and other metals whose total value is less than $0.01 USD, therefore a singular penny would be considered actually worthless in terms of raw materials, whereas 2 or 3 pennies would at least have an actual tangible, if extremely low, value. The value of currency is backed by something, usually a precious resource like gold. So when you say you have X amount of money, what you're really saying is that you own X amount of shares to that resource; i.e. you own X amount of gold by virtue of the cheap piece of scrap or worthless cotton-paper you're holding. In that sense, the Imperium isn't radically different from our own world in that their currency is representative of something, but individual systems and planets understandably place different values on different items and services. To use other settings as reference, the Fallout universe uses bottle caps as a common currency, because those caps can be used to seal bottles of water, which is incredibly valuable in a post-apocalyotic nuclear wasteland. Therefore, one bottle cap equals X bottles of water at your local moisture farm, thus all things in Fallout are based on the going rate of water. Conversely, in the Metro series, ammo is used as currency, so the rarer and more sought after the ammo type, the more valuable it is on the market. Compare this to your average Hive World where the capital backing their currency is usually much more common. On an Agri-World, food may be their chief export, but it's also ludicrously common planetside, so the value of food and therefore the value of labor for producing it is low, whereas on a Forge World, producing actual food is a luxury and therefore the value of food and the associated labor goes up, although something like ration bars or corpse starch since it barely fulfills the need for basic sustenance and tastes awful compared to, say, a fresh salad out of some nobles garden. On a Hive World, the value of basic labor is damn near worthless, because the job market is so saturated with people willing to work 25 hours shifts in horribly dangerous conditions just to get enough food and water to keep themselves and their family alive. And on worlds where the only real thing of value is people to be sent off to the Imperial Guard, that means everything is based on the value of a human life, which in the Imperium is generally considered less than a single bullet because the bullet is easier and cheaper to produce and kill a human, and there's only so much lead in the galaxy, whereas you can always find or make more humans, either the old-fashioned way or via artificial wombs and vats where the child is grown through donor sperm and eggs, or you can just go the extra mile and clone someone to get a human. To that point, most Imperial citizens aren't slaves, at least on a technical level. They aren't considered property and they technically have human rights, as murder IS a punishable offense in most Imperial cultures, but the problem is that your average Imperial citizen is also ludicrously poor, to the point where their value as a human being with human rights is often negligible, although on some worlds they do value human life like we would in real life. Moreover, as an Imperial citizen, you do have SOME degree of freedom. As in you can usually opt in to try and join the Planetary Defense Force and the Imperial Guard, or you can potentially find employment elsewhere if job opportunities are available to you or you are recognized as having some kind of useful skill or talent, but this is of course not a guarantee. Much like real life... You can also opt to try and strike out in the wilds or in the Underhive, even join a gang or a bandit group, but this is obviously not necessarily a desirable lifestyle choice. Hell, on some worlds joining a gang is essentially required to achieve any reasonable standard of living, and some worlds like Horus's homeworld of Cthonia were explicitly run by gangs, whereas on other worlds like Necromunda or Nostramo, the gangs are influential, but on paper the nobility is still in charge and the gangs are still criminals and outlaws. The point being, just because you're poorer than dirt doesn't mean you're a slave, even if you are treated like one by your 'betters'. Now with actual slaves, the pretense is completely gone. You are a literal human resource; you are property, you have no rights, and your free will and suffering can and will be ignored. Mainly because slaves are generally expected to have done something to earn that status, even if that something is a basic as being born so poor that it's considered a 'crime' worthy of indentured servitude or having your few Emperor-given rights taken away, but the topic of corruption is another matter. The point remains though that, even as a slave, you are still recognized as a human, and can potentially be freed from slavery and go on to become someone of power, wealth and influence; it's obscenely rare, but it does happen on occasion. Now if you're a clone? Yeah, you're considered a biological form of Abominable Intelligence, you literally have no soul(that's actually a thing in 40k and everyone in-universe knows it), and you're not just considered sub-human, your existence is also officially banned in the Imperium, although technically the Mechanicus isn't bound by Imperial law so they kind of just ignore this whenever they need to farm organs and mass produce Servitors. So yeah. The distinction of what constitutes an actual slave is still important to consider.
13:52 they don't use AI. AI nearly destroyed the galaxy. The golden age of technology, or the Dark age of technology. The age of strife. They only use humans for the AI.;)
I'll just unsubscribed if you don't want to watch to more tau videos like the weshammer video about them and then oneMindsyndicate and majorkill videos about tau factions
Lutin was where I started my learning of warhammer. Great channel. And yess sllaves as you say.
About the Serfs being sent home, yeah I figure it would be extremely hard, since the Space Marines themselves are always being used to fight in the numerous battles and wars that are happening throughout the Galaxy itself, so it would be extremely hard and impractical to just dedicate some time to just send them home, when they could just used that time to fight the battles and saved the people
Day 2 of asking to cover ciaphas cain glorious hero of the imperium or Gregor eisenhorn a cool inquisitor
You wanna put the video name or nah
The serf job really depends on the astartes chapter you get. The salamanders ultramarines and blood angels are pretty chill with their serfs and let them even have families and stuff. I know in one blood angels book the dad and mom were happy to show their kid to the marine they serve because he passed the technology tests and stuff and that blood angel was really nice to the kid and family. But I’m sure the salamanders serfs have it best lol…but in any traitor legion you are gonna get messed up if not by the evil astartes then the demons that hang around the ship
Personally I don’t mind pausing making the video longer, gives me more chances to say stuff in the comments you may have misunderstood or agree with opinions lol but the tempestus doesn’t seem so bad compared to the other jobs…lmao the word indentured lol just say dentures like fake teeth but add in- denture-d
I again recommend the Lion vs Angron by Sandman of Terra (it’s also called why the emperor needs both Guiliman and the Lion btw)
don't worry, Luetin09 also made "The Imperium's Best Jobs" Videos. You can be happy again. FOR THE EMPEROR.
You should check out Dr. Chris Raynor on Space Marine biology/implants.
On that grind 💪
Asking for you to watch the Gotrek and Felix video by PancreasNoWork again the greatest duo in all of Warhammer
54:38 This is needlessly expensive. It is cheaper and more efficient to use regular machine-assisted loading for that. It is very expensive to feed all those slaves just for them to die during the 1st load. It would be better to turn all those prisoners to servitors. Combat servitors are very efficient.
13:46 i mean you need to open the door
If you find these cruel and inhumane, check out luetin's video on the "Daemonculaba". Its a "sweet" lil story about my iron warrior chaos boys :D But be warned, the Iron Warriors are disgustingly baaaaaaaad people :D
Please watch the Trayzn the infinite video by pancreas no work.
Bear through the boring basic economics lecture for a moment. Trust me, I'm going somewhere with this.
Money in general is inherently worthless, beyond the worth of whatever it's made out of. Case in point? A penny is made out of an amount of copper and other metals whose total value is less than $0.01 USD, therefore a singular penny would be considered actually worthless in terms of raw materials, whereas 2 or 3 pennies would at least have an actual tangible, if extremely low, value. The value of currency is backed by something, usually a precious resource like gold. So when you say you have X amount of money, what you're really saying is that you own X amount of shares to that resource; i.e. you own X amount of gold by virtue of the cheap piece of scrap or worthless cotton-paper you're holding.
In that sense, the Imperium isn't radically different from our own world in that their currency is representative of something, but individual systems and planets understandably place different values on different items and services.
To use other settings as reference, the Fallout universe uses bottle caps as a common currency, because those caps can be used to seal bottles of water, which is incredibly valuable in a post-apocalyotic nuclear wasteland. Therefore, one bottle cap equals X bottles of water at your local moisture farm, thus all things in Fallout are based on the going rate of water.
Conversely, in the Metro series, ammo is used as currency, so the rarer and more sought after the ammo type, the more valuable it is on the market.
Compare this to your average Hive World where the capital backing their currency is usually much more common.
On an Agri-World, food may be their chief export, but it's also ludicrously common planetside, so the value of food and therefore the value of labor for producing it is low, whereas on a Forge World, producing actual food is a luxury and therefore the value of food and the associated labor goes up, although something like ration bars or corpse starch since it barely fulfills the need for basic sustenance and tastes awful compared to, say, a fresh salad out of some nobles garden.
On a Hive World, the value of basic labor is damn near worthless, because the job market is so saturated with people willing to work 25 hours shifts in horribly dangerous conditions just to get enough food and water to keep themselves and their family alive. And on worlds where the only real thing of value is people to be sent off to the Imperial Guard, that means everything is based on the value of a human life, which in the Imperium is generally considered less than a single bullet because the bullet is easier and cheaper to produce and kill a human, and there's only so much lead in the galaxy, whereas you can always find or make more humans, either the old-fashioned way or via artificial wombs and vats where the child is grown through donor sperm and eggs, or you can just go the extra mile and clone someone to get a human.
To that point, most Imperial citizens aren't slaves, at least on a technical level. They aren't considered property and they technically have human rights, as murder IS a punishable offense in most Imperial cultures, but the problem is that your average Imperial citizen is also ludicrously poor, to the point where their value as a human being with human rights is often negligible, although on some worlds they do value human life like we would in real life. Moreover, as an Imperial citizen, you do have SOME degree of freedom. As in you can usually opt in to try and join the Planetary Defense Force and the Imperial Guard, or you can potentially find employment elsewhere if job opportunities are available to you or you are recognized as having some kind of useful skill or talent, but this is of course not a guarantee. Much like real life... You can also opt to try and strike out in the wilds or in the Underhive, even join a gang or a bandit group, but this is obviously not necessarily a desirable lifestyle choice. Hell, on some worlds joining a gang is essentially required to achieve any reasonable standard of living, and some worlds like Horus's homeworld of Cthonia were explicitly run by gangs, whereas on other worlds like Necromunda or Nostramo, the gangs are influential, but on paper the nobility is still in charge and the gangs are still criminals and outlaws. The point being, just because you're poorer than dirt doesn't mean you're a slave, even if you are treated like one by your 'betters'.
Now with actual slaves, the pretense is completely gone. You are a literal human resource; you are property, you have no rights, and your free will and suffering can and will be ignored. Mainly because slaves are generally expected to have done something to earn that status, even if that something is a basic as being born so poor that it's considered a 'crime' worthy of indentured servitude or having your few Emperor-given rights taken away, but the topic of corruption is another matter. The point remains though that, even as a slave, you are still recognized as a human, and can potentially be freed from slavery and go on to become someone of power, wealth and influence; it's obscenely rare, but it does happen on occasion.
Now if you're a clone? Yeah, you're considered a biological form of Abominable Intelligence, you literally have no soul(that's actually a thing in 40k and everyone in-universe knows it), and you're not just considered sub-human, your existence is also officially banned in the Imperium, although technically the Mechanicus isn't bound by Imperial law so they kind of just ignore this whenever they need to farm organs and mass produce Servitors.
So yeah. The distinction of what constitutes an actual slave is still important to consider.
13:52 they don't use AI. AI nearly destroyed the galaxy. The golden age of technology, or the Dark age of technology. The age of strife. They only use humans for the AI.;)
Bro request reaction mortal kombat x all fatality gamingninja
I'll just unsubscribed if you don't want to watch to more tau videos like the weshammer video about them and then oneMindsyndicate and majorkill videos about tau factions