I live across the river from Washington and I have a friend that lives over there in the mountains. When I drive to her spot, it's nothing but hard MAGA country for miles. This does not surprise me at all. One of her dogs got loose and ran into the neighbor's yard a while back and, one of her children went to get the dog. The neighbor ran out with a gun and threatened the child at gunpoint because she was on his property. A fucking 14 year old kid.
It's everything I've ever wanted.
I get that the point you’re trying to make is something about unity, but it’s weird to say that. That’s a weird thing to say.
It shouldn't be. It should be the rallying cry of the last 50 years. It's like you are saying that water tastes funny.
This is my exact argument against billionaires. They are acting alone, making these sweeping decisions by themselves.
Yeah, I know, but telling them to stop when they do something good isn't going to stop them from doing something bad. We have to make the best out of a bad situation until we can make the bad situation better.
Disagree. It’s never too late to get the money back, you just need politicians that are willing to take the initiative to go after it. Currently I don’t see any, so I continue to say things that I hope will help focus people and bring attention to continue advocating for these policies.
I'm all for updating policies and making sure the future is brighter than the past, but there is a statute of limitations. We can't just reach back as far as we want in time and start prosecuting based on what we hope will be future regulations. The money is gone. Don't worry, they keep printing more of it, though.
Charity is not something you do for praise. I’m sorry the billionaires are so thin-skinned my insults would hurt them.
Billionaires and celebrities almost all have some form of narcism. They love the attention. Again, we have to make the best of a bad situation. Stroke their ego for doing good, and maybe they'll do more of it. If every time a billionaire did something shitty we just kept it out of the papers and lets the courts handle it, but then flooded the papers when a billionaire did something positive, I bet we'd see a change. Granted, I think thats a terrible idea, and the public should be made aware of the issues when they are relevant, but I also think we go a bit too far in over-publicizing the bad and under-publicizing the good.
If I meet you on the street and beat you up and steal your wallet, then donate it to a local homeless shelter, are you gonna be mad at me? It was a good cause, bro, why you mad?
If you beat me up and took my wallet 30 years ago, and then I saw you in Africa doing humanitarian work, yeah, I wouldn't be mad. I'd say, "damn, it looks like they got it together. Good work." I might even go over and make an act of forgiveness. I have a very hard time believing people can change, so when I see it, I do try to acknowledge it.
That's a whole other hydra head to deal with...
"Ahhh shit, they opened the XOR gate! Quick, someone check the blood sacrifice box and find out if the cat is dead or alive!"
It's a harsh quote, but it gets the point across: "Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that." Carlin was right, and it applies here. Sure, half of us may be able to adequately identify what we should and shouldn't eat, but there is another half that can't. With proper education we can change that, but right now corporations educate better through commercials than schools do through lectures. We have to maintain oversight because the evil of capitalism will choose profit over people every time.
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It matters because we are no longer alone. We are not some small collective of 50 people in a rural town with no access to the outside world. We must act as one. Pretending like one person can go off and do whatever they want and it won't effect the whole is how we get people like Trump. We must all act for the greater benefit of humanity, and if you aren't praising efforts that help achieve that goal, I have to wonder why.
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You aren't wrong, but it doesn't matter now, does it? Work on tax codes if that is your passion, but maligning the mistakes of previous generations and hindering current efforts doesn't help anyone. The money is gone. It isn't coming back. It may as well go to a good cause while we try to find a way to make sure it doesn't continue to happen.
Hating someone because they are a billionaire is the same as loving one for being a billionaire. It doesn't matter how much money a person has or doesn't have. What matters is their actions. I'll be the first to put an oligarch against the wall, but I don't need it to be a billionaire. I just need them to be harming the world. I will concede that there are very few (read: nearly none) with that much money that do anything proper with it. Its pretty much all bad. But, in this case, we have on that is giving a portion away that can truly make a beneficial difference, and we should praise efforts like that so that they might continue. What's the next billionaire gonna do when they try to give their money away and see that "All Gates got was vitriol and death wishes." We don't have to praise the billionaire directly, but I think we should agree that the money finally leaving the 1% to help the remaining 99% is a good step.
Doesn't matter, Bill Gates is guilty of every bad thing that Microsoft ever did and I even heard he modelled clippy after Jeffrey Epstein.
It doesn't matter how much good he does, some people will never forgive Windows 8.
Happy, Pride Month?
I played dominoes with a bunch of Cubans that didn't speak English, and I spoke very little Spanish. By the 3rd bottle of rum we all understood each other perfectly.
chemical_cutthroat
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America was founded as a whites-only ethnostate. We had some pretty big fights about that.