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Originally posted by pai mei
This :
Gospel of consumption
"Machines can save labor, but only if they go idle when we possess enough of what they can produce. In other words, the machinery offers us an opportunity to work less, an opportunity that as a society we have chosen not to take. Instead, we have allowed the owners of those machines to define their purpose: not reduction of labor, but “higher productivity”—and with it the imperative to consume virtually everything that the machinery can possibly produce."
Originally posted by GreenBicMan
reply to post by pai mei
I don't know man, thats pretty out there for me.
Don't you just like the sound of driving a ferrari and dominating financial markets? Thats my reality in my head, akin to the one you have in yours. I hope we both find our "happy place".
Originally posted by Alxandro
Tesla worked extremely hard to get his experiments off the ground and in a working state. He did not sit on his arse to depend on others, he depended on no one but himself.
If he were a Commie, someone else would had done the work for him.
Originally posted by pai mei
The scientist that does not care about profit, works - to help others is a "communist".
And about "work". When you do what you like, your passion, does not matter if other people see it as "work", that is not "work". It's what you like. If you would do it for free - that is not work.
Originally posted by In nothing we trust
Communism = Whats yours is ours now.
Marxist = Whats mine could be ours.
Capitalist = Whats mine is mine.
Socialist = Whats yours is mine.
No Arguments, no Intreaties, nor Tears of their Friends and Relations, could persuade many of them to leave their new Indian Friends and Acquaintance; several of them that were by the Caressings of their Relations persuaded to come Home, in a little Time grew tired of our Manner of living, and run away again to the Indians, and ended their Days with them. On the other Hand, Indian Children have been carefully educated among the English, cloathed and taught, yet, I think, there is not one Instance, that any of these, after they had Liberty to go among their own People, and were come to Age, would remain with the English, but returned to their own Nations, and became as fond of the Indian Manner of Life as those that knew nothing of a civilized Manner of Living. And, he concludes, what he says of this particular prisoner exchange “has been found true on many other Occasions.”