Recognition that artificial limitations on resource access—through hoarding, monopoly, or restriction—are forms of economic oppression requiring rational challenge.
Yacob lived in times and places where scarcity was real; his Ethiopian context faced genuine resource constraints. Yet he would recognize that much modern scarcity is manufactured—created by those controlling resources to maintain power and profit. Monopolies restrict supply to keep prices high. Intellectual property regimes prevent life-saving medicines from reaching the poor. Land hoarding keeps housing scarce and expensive. These manufactured scarcities serve concentrated power while harming the many. Applying reason to this reveals that present deprivation is often unnecessary and maintained through force, law, and social acquiescence. Yacob's insistence on questioning authority extends to questioning the justifications for artificial scarcity. If resources exist but are withheld, if technology could solve problems but is restricted, if abundance is possible but prevented—these become moral failures. This concept empowers people to distinguish real constraints from constructed ones and to challenge systems that create suffering not from necessity but from greed and control. Economic justice requires dismantling tyrannies of manufactured scarcity.
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