Apartheid (countable and uncountable, plural apartheids)
- (historical) The discriminatory policy of racial separation used by South Africa from 1948 to 1990.
- (by extension) Any similar policy of racial separation/segregation and discrimination.
- (by extension) A policy or situation of segregation based on some specified attribute.
In the last meaning (which is one by
analogy), there is usually specified under which kind of grounds, instead of racial ones, the segregation takes place. Like 'sexual apartheid' or 'religious apartheid'. I don't think that reserving the best food for tourists is really a ground on which to call a state an 'apartheid state', else every nation with a free market economy would be an 'apartheid state', because only the rich people can afford the best food. Also, I don't think that just the distribution of food is the important factor here: Much more important is whether people of the different groups are allowed to interact with one another (cuban citizens are allowed to interact with tourists) and whether certain groups have curtailed rights and especially their rights to associate and form movements, which champion their political interests. <,<
(Cuba might be a police state, but I think there are no valid reasons to call it an 'apartheid state'. The two are very much different things, though it might be much easier to realize the latter through the former.)
If there is something like an apartheid (by extension!) system in Amarr, then it is a 'class apartheid'. This, though, is kind of a pleonasm, as class already implies some amount of segregation between the classes. Now, it gets entirely tautological, if one would suggest 'state-of-freedom apartheid'. This would kind of amount to saying that Amarr segregate/discriminate people on grounds of segregating/discriminating them.
Also, a classical apartheid system would be opposed to any process that would injure the apart-hood of races. Thus, it would be opposed to release of slaves (which would be held for racial grounds) as freedmen and similarly to enslaveing Amarr for crimes: Both of which evidently happens in Amarr.
This is the way I picture Amarrian society. On one side of the (metaphorical) fence, you have the free Amarrian citizens who have better conditions, food, privileges, etc. On the other side of the fence, the slave population are kept under tight control with visible deterrents and harsh(er) penalties.
That can hardly be true, as PF explicitly states that some free people in the Empire live in worse conditions than slaves! It's explicitly stated that there are slaves which have positions of power and social acumen, not unlike the ministeriales already pointed at by Lou.
Also, that is hardly
the fence in Amarrian society, bifurcating it into the (lucky) free citizens and the (unlucky) slaves. There are many such fences in Amarr society and many of arguably similar, if not more importance, like the most prominently the division between nobility and non-nobility, but also divisions between royal families and non-royal families, titled and non-titled nobility, rich and poor (commoners as well as nobility)...
As to:
Many of the slaves would be content to live within the system, having known nothing else. Sheep and cattle do not resist or try to escape, where would they go?
It#s not like that isn't true of most people, slaves or none. In general, most people rather choose to stay where they are, because they are familiar with their sourroundings. In fact, that is true for most people I know, be it here in the EU or in the US. There are loads of people who decide to emigrate, just to come back after a few years or so, having failed to build a new existence.
I highly doubt, therefore, that the 'returner effect' is something one can blame on a certain political system so simply. It might play a role, sure, but it's not really the deciding factor here.
Also, the Minmater are actually the group under Amarr slavery that did and does least accept it.
(Btw. did you notice that Stalinist states had those gigantic Stalin statues? Or that the US has those gigantic statues of their 'founding fathers'? - Lincoln Monument, Mount Rushmore?)