Examining how desperation coerces choices that appear free while actually violating autonomy and rational agency.
Yacob's experience with slavery clarified that coercion need not be obvious to be real. Offering someone a choice between starvation and exploitation appears to respect freedom while actually eliminating it. Modern wage-labor systems contain this structure: workers appear free to choose employment, but desperation makes refusal impossible. UBI examined through the lens of coercion-freedom reveals current systems as less free than assumed. Universal Basic Income provides what Yacob's tradition identifies as the precondition for genuine choice: security sufficient that alternatives exist. A worker with UBI can refuse exploitative wages, negotiate better conditions, invest in education, or pursue non-commercial meaning. Without UBI, workers face pseudo-choice: take the offered wage or suffer deprivation. This is not freedom; it is managed desperation. Yacob would recognize that true liberty requires material as well as formal conditions. Philosophical freedom without economic security is merely the freedom to choose one's form of servitude. UBI becomes the foundation of actual autonomy: it removes the immediate coercion of survival desperation and enables people to deliberate rationally about work, contribution, and life direction. This reframes UBI not as charity reducing freedom but as the requirement fulfilling it.
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