Answer:
It depends, if the one that does hard labor had a chance to get educated then yes, it is fair. If he never got the chance to get an education, then no. Why? Because if he did get the chance to get educated and didn't, then he basically chose to do hard labor. If he never got the chance to get educated, then that is unfair because his brother did have the chance.
Honestly idk if that helped, but that's how I see it.
Innovations during the Gilded Age. The following inventions pushed Industrialization to great heights during the Gilded Age: the telephone, light bulb, and the Kodak camera are just a few of main ones. Others include the first record player, motor, motion picture, phonograph, and cigarette roller
The last one food growth and preparation
An indentured servant comes to work for a landowner by choice, and signs a contract for a certain number of years of labor in exchange for passage to the Americas, they do not serve for life like a slave. There was also a racial component to indentured servitude less often.
Slavery began as landowners were looking for a cheap source of labor, and slavery had upfront cost, but after that they were practically free, and could even be sold to recoup some money back. Also, Nathaniel Bacon, an indentured servant, led a rebellion in Virginia, so a source of labor that would remain docile was needed. Finally, they worked for life rather than being replaced every few years.
The Treaty of Thapathali was a treaty signed between the Tibetan government of Ganden Phodrang and the Kingdom of Nepal in Thapathali Durbar in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, following the Nepalese–Tibetan War. In January 1856, a representative group of Tibet came to Kathmandu for discussion of the treaty