Embedded Suffering: The Long Arc of American Exploitation from Columbus to Bezos

Pierz Newton-John
11 min readJun 23, 2024
Image: Midjourney, author generated

The world as we know it is on the brink of collapse. The indications of this — massive species extinction, climate disaster, epidemic mental illness, spiralling political and economic instability — are hardly subtle. The causes of this “polycrisis”, as it has come to be termed, are multiple and complex, but ultimately can be traced back to centuries of exploitation of the natural and human worlds. Exploitation — the act of using someone or something unfairly or harmfully for one’s own benefit — is the defining characteristic of our civilization. It is inescapable and ubiquitous, so normalised as to be invisible. To take a trivial, random example, yesterday, for the grand sum of $30, I bought a small wicker table for my balcony. The box stated that the wicker was hand woven. I was struck by this. Given transport costs, retail markup, and the profit made by the manufacturer, I wondered, what could the workers who wove the wicker for that table possibly have been paid? What was the embedded suffering of my new acquisition?

The fact is I am addicted to products built on the suffering of others and the destruction of the natural world. My affluent western lifestyle depends on it, as does yours, dear reader. Slavery — that most egregious and obviously exploitative of American institutions — may have been outlawed…

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Pierz Newton-John

Writer, software developer, former psychotherapist, founding member of The School Of Life Melbourne. Essayist for Dumbo Feather magazine, author of Fault Lines.