the awkward moment where everyone is dumb enough to misinterpret this.
Obama 7.13.2012: If you've got a business -- you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen. - YouTube!
sigh.
Let me play the devil's advocate and ask you folks a serious question...
Suppose a person believes your success is due, in large part, to him or her and the rest of "society." In other words, because you could not have become successful without other people, you owe your success - and by extension, much of your wealth - to them.
How would you persuade that person that such reasoning is misguided? How would you convince that person that your success and wealth should be yours and yours alone?
Here is the reason I ask:
The greater the disparity between the haves and have-nots, and the more desperate the latter group becomes, the more easily the state can compel them to support state-sponsored expropriation of your property. It is becoming increasingly important that you are able to state your position in as compelling a manner as possible. Given this, how would you combat this movement through persuasion? What would be your first, and most persuasive, argument?
Were the relationships earlier in that persons life that led to his/her success, set up on a mutual agreement that they're to give away a portion of their money? Was a contract ever written and agreed to by both parties?
If not, it's not a voluntary relationship and instead it's theft.
Let me play the devil's advocate and ask you folks a serious question...
Suppose a person believes your success is due, in large part, to him or her and the rest of "society." In other words, because you could not have become successful without other people, you owe your success - and by extension, much of your wealth - to them.
How would you persuade that person that such reasoning is misguided? How would you convince that person that your success and wealth should be yours and yours alone?
Here is the reason I ask:
The greater the disparity between the haves and have-nots, and the more desperate the latter group becomes, the more easily the state can compel them to support state-sponsored expropriation of your property. It is becoming increasingly important that you are able to state your position in as compelling a manner as possible. Given this, how would you combat this movement through persuasion? What would be your first, and most persuasive, argument?
The US government doesn't let you withdraw from those "contracts" and it is impractical to assume that I even had a choice until I was 18.You seem to have given implicit consent. If you disagree with the "social contract", are you doing anything to withdraw / cease to cooperate with its institutions, therefore denying implicit consent?
If you notice, I pointed this out early in the thread, however, it only makes his statement marginally less disgusting, and it still remains a very fucked up thing to say.Fox & Friends Deceptively Edits Obama's Comments On Small Business | Blog | Media Matters for America
this thread was a success to prove peoples ignorance.
and LOL at people using Fox as a viable news source
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Fox & Friends Deceptively Edits Obama's Comments On Small Business | Blog | Media Matters for America
this thread was a success to prove peoples ignorance.
and LOL at people using Fox as a viable news source
Sure they edited it down to make him sound more ignorant. But it wasn't taken out of context. He is arguing a collectivist approach to society, one I think a lot of people disagree with, particularly here.
Now you know how I have felt for years.That speech scares the ever living fuck out of me... and even more so... the crowd applause. Fuck man, I really feel like I know exactly where I'm standing in this specific timeline of history and it's surreal, scary, and invigorating all at the same time.
His re-election is a slam dunk. Romney is going to get destroyed.Re-election is doubtful.
You can't. Ayn Rand wrote about this. The masses only understand when it becomes an obvious failure. As long as people hold any belief in the status quo or the way they have been educated, it is impossible to break that belief without a crisis that touches them and everyone around them in a really profound manner.Given this, how would you combat this movement through persuasion? What would be your first, and most persuasive, argument?
Contracts don't work that way. You should really think this stuff through before you post it. It's obviously fallacious and dangerous.You seem to have given implicit consent. If you disagree with the "social contract", are you doing anything to withdraw / cease to cooperate with its institutions, therefore denying implicit consent?
Indeed, this is the root of the issue. People have been educated to believe that government produces something.The government is forcing you to enter a transaction (tax money in return for those "public services") and then taking credit for everything you ever do with what you "purchased" from them.
Even the 18 year old limit is something arbitrary and which you had no say in.The US government doesn't let you withdraw from those "contracts" and it is impractical to assume that I even had a choice until I was 18.