Cynical? Inflation continues to devalue your dollar. Overtime pay gone. They want us as slaves. They openly refer to us as cattle. Working is good, don't get me wrong, but they continue to chip away at our livelihood. The 1% do not care about us.
I agree with you about inflation and the intentions of the globalists. But I've never worked for them. Every job I've had was voluntary and I wanted to be there, and when I wanted to leave, I left. That's just not slavery. The gist of the post was that work is hell, and we are all helpless slaves. Fuck that. No, I like my job, and I like my bosses, and pretty much every day I feel like I've contributed to society.
The gist of the post was that work is hell, and we are all helpless slaves.
That's not what I thought about the post. The post is centered around time. The time investments people routinely give to "the man" versus the time investments people give towards themselves. The post is pointing to a rather large, and striking discrepancy between time given to "the man," versus time one keeps for themselves.
Consider how people spent their time prior to the industrial revolution. Now exclude the serfs, peasants, and slaves from that consideration.
How many 24/7;365 merchants you think they had in the 1700's?
Cynical? Inflation continues to devalue your dollar. Overtime pay gone. They want us as slaves. They openly refer to us as cattle. Working is good, don't get me wrong, but they continue to chip away at our livelihood. The 1% do not care about us.
I agree with you about inflation and the intentions of the globalists. But I've never worked for them. Every job I've had was voluntary and I wanted to be there, and when I wanted to leave, I left. That's just not slavery. The gist of the post was that work is hell, and we are all helpless slaves. Fuck that. No, I like my job, and I like my bosses, and pretty much every day I feel like I've contributed to society.
That's not what I thought about the post. The post is centered around time. The time investments people routinely give to "the man" versus the time investments people give towards themselves. The post is pointing to a rather large, and striking discrepancy between time given to "the man," versus time one keeps for themselves.
Consider how people spent their time prior to the industrial revolution. Now exclude the serfs, peasants, and slaves from that consideration.
How many 24/7;365 merchants you think they had in the 1700's?