Fair enough, the modern definition of slave can be softened. However, am I wrong in saying that the bible literally refers to slaves as property amd that you can beat them as long as they live for two days? Can the biblical definition of slave be softened? The answer is no. Saying 'well they were sometimes nice to their slaves' just doesnt cut it.
It's not a matter of softening the definition, it's understanding that the scope of the things that fall under the definition of slavery and servitude is much larger and more pervasive than you are letting on - including things which you find perfectly acceptable. Hence your trouble understanding that an elderly person being forced to work at McDonalds or the like is, in fact, a form of slavery. You don't see literal chains or whips - so you think that acceptable.
What makes a given version of the master-slave relationship acceptable or not is not that such a hierarchical position exists - there is really no avoiding such relationships. What matters is how the master treats his servant. What made American Slavery so evil was not the fact that they had slaves, but that the slavery was driven by hate, racism and greed. The individuals weren't seen as people, but merely 1/3 of a person. Anything could be done to them without consequence.
The scriptures say that slaves are the masters property - but qualifies that with various restrictions and rights to the slaves benefit. The master can't simply do whatever he wishes. A master could punish a slave, but not kill them or bring any serious harm to them. And, if mistreated, the slaves were free to run away. No - the OT scriptures teach to treat slaves/servants as family. This goes well beyond sometimes treating a slave nicely to a fundamentally different relationship altogether.
As for your question about conquerers in war - the local population shouldn't be taken as slaves! This is immoral, and I'm just speechless that you're having trouble grasping that.
Answer the question: what should be done with the local population? Will you kick them out and send them traveling for a new place to live - dying along the way? Will you immediately accept them as first class citizens of your nation and let them do as the please - as if they didn't hold violent grudges against your nation and would act on them when you settled there? Especially if they were the aggressors to begin with. You aren't being realistic in this matter.
A poor person who sells themselves as a slave isnt wrong. The person who buys them is.
If the person who buys them treats them like a hired hand, or even as family, then where is the harm? The poor person is better of for it - in fact, their life has been saved. And, under OT slavery, they could run away at any time if mistreated.
I don't think you can honestly refer to mcdonalds employees as slaves. Sweat shop workers, maybe, but then again we all kmow that sweat shops are immoral.
McDonalds fits the definition of slavery to a T, especially when the person in question is elderly: "a person who works in harsh conditions for low pay"
Apart from a teenager looking for their first job - everyone else working there, or any other place paying minimum wage (~60% of the US workforce) is doing hard work and not even receiving enough money to afford to rent a single-bedroom apartment. It very much is slave labor.
Why are you so defensive of slavery? You're arguing over how we can soften its definition in a historical sense when its overwhelmingly clear what it actually meant?
"Slavery isn't ideal, but its better than death." Well so is torture, false imprisonment and persecution. If that's your moral standard, I don't think you have a leg to stand on.
Did you actually just say that owning a person isn't immoral? That it was just an assertion on my part?
You didn't answer my question. Is it immoral to own another human as your legal property? Commit to an answer instead of flapping.
I'm not softening the definition of slavery, I'm correcting your faulty perspective that all forms of slavery/servitude are identical and unequivocally evil. It has always existed in a multitude of forms, and we see it all around us to this day. Some forms treat the servants as human beings, even as family, with legal protections under the law. Others treated them as mere objects that you could kill, rape, torture, etc. as you pleased and suffer no consequence. To say that you see no difference between these is simply intellectually dishonest.
A master having slaves/servants is not in of itself immoral - what matters is how those individuals are treated. If respected as fellow human beings, even loved as family, with legal protections against their mistreatment, THAT is morally OK. If they are treated as sub-human scum that you can kick around, kill, rape, etc. without a second thought - that is immoral.