
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
In this episode of American Socrates, I take on the question of who really owns our labor and what it means to be free in a system that rents out our lives by the hour. Drawing from Locke, Marx, and the reality of working-class struggle, we unpack alienation, wage slavery, and the dream of reclaiming ownership of ourselves. I don’t want this to be an academic debate, but instead a bold call for working people to question the systems that make them feel hopeless and isolated, to help them imagine a life beyond debt and dead-end jobs, and to demand true freedom. If you’ve ever felt drained by work and wondered if there’s more to life than the next paycheck, this episode is for you.
Photo by Stockcake
Support the show
By Charles M. RupertSend us a text
In this episode of American Socrates, I take on the question of who really owns our labor and what it means to be free in a system that rents out our lives by the hour. Drawing from Locke, Marx, and the reality of working-class struggle, we unpack alienation, wage slavery, and the dream of reclaiming ownership of ourselves. I don’t want this to be an academic debate, but instead a bold call for working people to question the systems that make them feel hopeless and isolated, to help them imagine a life beyond debt and dead-end jobs, and to demand true freedom. If you’ve ever felt drained by work and wondered if there’s more to life than the next paycheck, this episode is for you.
Photo by Stockcake
Support the show