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the definition of a perfect lie is something that is inherently untrue but is indistinguishable from the truth.
Now suspend your disbelief for a moment and consider god to be fake.
Saying god is real has no actual impact on the world as the concept of god is so separated from reality that it has no impact intentionally.
If i say god is real the world stays the same, if i say god is fake the world stays the same.
In my personal opinion a perfect lie is one that allows faith through non-contradiction.
all a perfect lie needs to do is not be provable wrong, by staying ambiguous it has achieved the desired goal and now has equivalent value as the truth itself.
its honestly INCREDIBLY refreshing to see something like this done so well.
woman of the people
In colonies such as Jamaica, the enslaved population often declined naturally throughout the 18th century. For example, Jamaica's enslaved population was sustained largely through continued imports rather than births exceeding deaths.
Historians estimate that in some Caribbean sugar colonies, annual mortality rates among enslaved people ranged from roughly 3–6% or higher, often exceeding birth rates. By contrast, the enslaved population in the United States grew naturally after the late 18th century.
The historian Richard S. Dunn found that on some Jamaican sugar estates, approximately one-third of newly imported Africans died within their first three years of plantation labor due to disease, malnutrition, and harsh working conditions.
On several Caribbean islands, life expectancy at birth for enslaved people was extraordinarily low. In some periods of the 18th century, many enslaved children died before reaching adulthood, contributing to chronic population decline.
Comparing enslaved labor to free labor ignores the coercive realities of slavery. Enslaved people commonly worked from sunrise to sunset under harsh conditions, particularly in rice and sugar production, while facing strict quotas and punishment. These demands increased vulnerability to disease and exhaustion. Records from plantations and testimonies from formerly enslaved people show that some owners minimized food and other provisions to reduce costs, prioritizing profits over long-term health.
Basic shelter and access to water did not eliminate these harms. Overcrowded housing, contaminated water, poor sanitation, and inadequate medical care often worsened the effects of malnutrition. When owners restricted access to gardens or markets, or when plantations experienced economic difficulties, severe food shortages and wasting could result.
Many plantation deaths were multifactorial. Diseases such as dysentery, malaria, and respiratory infections were frequently recorded as causes of death, but malnutrition and overwork often made these illnesses far more deadly by weakening immune function and slowing recovery. Mortality records often listed disease as the immediate cause while overlooking the underlying effects of chronic hunger and exhaustion.
Overwork also contributed directly to deaths. Dangerous labor, workplace injuries, and inadequate medical treatment meant that untreated wounds and physical breakdowns could become fatal. On some plantations, especially in sugar and rice regions, extreme workloads produced periods of collapse and sharply elevated mortality.
Infant and child mortality was particularly high. Maternal malnutrition, poor living conditions, and overcrowded quarters increased the risks of disease and early death. Burial records and archaeological evidence consistently show elevated child mortality rates on many plantations.
Finally, the economics of slavery often encouraged replacement over prevention. In many cases, owners found it cheaper to purchase new enslaved people than to improve diets, housing, or medical care. This system normalized preventable deaths from starvation, exhaustion, and disease, making human suffering an accepted cost of maintaining plantation labor.
think before you talk.