Jookeyman wrote:
Thanks for the input!
What is really sad is that it doesn't have to be this way. But your comments are spot on in my opinion.
My intent when starting this thread was to expose the fallacy of the Globalist agenda. Many did not catch this slant.
The Authoritarian mindset contradicts basic human nature and the gift of free will. W/o this freedom to make choices, we are hindered from being what we can be. Sad that some make the wrong choice and enslave others for their own benefit. But all is not lost.
This is a very cool conversation, it makes you wonder how really unobtainable true perfection is.

The movie: "A Beautiful Mind" got me interested in game theory. So if governing dynamics is for real, the banking industry is destroying their own economy, the overpaid corporate executives are doing the same to their consumer base.
Don't get me wrong I'm a capitalists, at the same time "trickle down" is a falsehood. A billionaire doesn't buy ten thousand pairs of pants, three hundred cars, or a hundred TVs. That same money locked up right now in Scrooge McDuck's vault, dispersed among normal consumers would lead to a booming economy. Greed is wrecking the source of their water, from the presumed endless well.
Henry Ford insisted on paying his workers well enough so that they too could afford one of his cars, which put him at odds with Carnegie. J. P. Morgan convinced the top bankers of the country to contribute their money towards keeping our economy afloat. These are the notorious cutthroat captains of industry, who in reality were far more respectful of their economic environment back then, which they knew they were dependent upon to survive.
Today I guess we'll just have to wait until the Monopoly game is over. No fiat currency in history has ever survived and neither will ours. After the ensuing chaos when it breaks, perhaps there will be more wisdom towards the actual worth of life? Comparing time and the quality of life versus the pursuit of material goods, would be a foolish endeavor. Everything we own would be sacrificed for just one more day alive on this planet. If we were to pile it all upon a person's grave it's true value becomes evident.
That pursuit has everyone regarding their fellow humans as mere obstacles towards owning stuff, or getting that promotion, so they can own more stuff and in the end at the cost of the only resource we actually have, which is time. Their misery is highly contagious wreaking havoc within their own social landscape. Cooperation would be necessary in a utopia, which doesn't bode well with our current religion of consumerism.

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