Thread:Uskok/@comment-27295021-20180325125431/@comment-27295021-20180326180634

So it would make sense for him to eventually join the EITC. At some point, he would have been fed up and resolved to content himself with making an honest living. As an employee of the company, he hoped to at least command his own vessel one day, and he was allowed to sail the seas and made a decent pay doing it, so he never had any reason to complain. Until Beckett ordered him to transport slaves. And Jack, being wise beyond his years and of a moral awarness that was vastly ahead of its time, does not condone slavery. When he sets them free, and was branded a pirate for it, obviously this would put things in some perspective. Shred some new light on what it meant to be a pirate. Rather than resenting it because of the merciless plundering and pillaging of other pirates, he made the "pirate's life" his own, embracing it as the label that allowed the right to do what he percieved to be just and fair without the bonds of bureaucracy weighing him down and dictating what sort of people deserved to be treated with respect, which Jack as a general rule believed people fom every corner of the world was entitled to.