Maybe Bri and others could live in a place where something as basic as a roll of Charmin is scarce. I choose free enterprise. It even gives me choices.
"It''s not dark yet--but it's getting there". -- Bob Dylan
Carbon Dating, the number one dating app for senior citizens.
"Blessed be the Lord my strength, which teaches my hands to the war, and my fingers to fight."
Wolfman wrote:Maybe Bri and others could live in a place where something as basic as a roll of Charmin is scarce. I choose free enterprise. It even gives me choices.
It is odd that you used that example Wolfie. A very long long time ago I made a short film where a thief was going through several trials to steal an incredibly valuable object, only to have the reveal be a single roll of toilet tissue. Your premise is not so far off, given the topic.
Bread, milk, paper...how we take these basic staples for granted.
Wolfman wrote:Maybe Bri and others could live in a place where something as basic as a roll of Charmin is scarce. I choose free enterprise. It even gives me choices.
It is odd that you used that example Wolfie.
"You don't necessarily need a choice of 23 underarm spray deodorants or of 18 different pairs of sneakers when children are hungry in this country. I don't think the media appreciates the kind of stress that ordinary Americans are working on."
--Bernie Sanders
I, for one, am certainly relieved that Bernie Sanders is here to tell me what I do not need. I can hardly wait to find out which other things I might not need.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Jay in Phoenix wrote:
Have you even read Orwell Marty?
Have you?
Do you even know what Animal Farm is about?
Do you know anything about Orwell's backstory? His politics? His affiliations?
Yes, of course I have read Orwell. I could care less about his history or backstory, I am only referring to his book and the message within. Are you telling me you embrace the socialistic warnings that the story is about?
I know the message of the book, I am just wondering if YOU do?
No offense dude, but theoretical history is on the horizon.
Jay in Phoenix wrote:
Yes, of course I have read Orwell. I could care less about his history or backstory, I am only referring to his book and the message within. Are you telling me you embrace the socialistic warnings that the story is about?
I know the message of the book, I am just wondering if YOU do?
It's important to know Orwell's background to know that he wasn't a socialist. He might have thought he was for a short period of time, but he soon discovered that he didn't have the bottle for it and didn't understand it. There are socialist warnings in the book from an early, failed militant hippy, not from a socialist.
Dr_Phibes wrote:It's important to know Orwell's background to know that he wasn't a socialist. He might have thought he was for a short period of time, but he soon discovered that he didn't have the bottle for it and didn't understand it. There are socialist warnings in the book from an early, failed militant hippy, not from a socialist.
Ah yes, of course, the "No True Scotsman" fallacy. We certainly haven't seen that feeble gambit employed before in the defense of "real" socialism. Oh, wait...
Run along, junior.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Dr_Phibes wrote:
It's important to know Orwell's background to know that he wasn't a socialist. He might have thought he was for a short period of time, but he soon discovered that he didn't have the bottle for it and didn't understand it. There are socialist warnings in the book from an early, failed militant hippy, not from a socialist.
Oh, come on...
He was a comrade...but you're painting him as a Pussy Riot, gonzo activist...
rock rock to the planet rock ... don't stop
Felix wrote:you've become very bitter since you became jewish......
Kierland drop-kicking Wolftard wrote:
Aren’t you part of the silent generation?
Why don’t you just STFU.
No fallacy. Middle-class wannabe Rambo played soldier, got shot in the neck and discovered the real thing wasn't much fun. Ratted out his friends and went on to attack real, existing socialism for the rest of his days using allegory. He was not a socialist and said nothing concrete to refute. I'm simply doing what he did.
Jay in Phoenix wrote:Wolfman kind of hit a solid point here, as the "Animal Farm" analogy is pretty right on.
Great book by Orwell and a lesson through analogy, that seems to have been forgotten, or ignored, over the years.
Especially in this country and this administration and the drones who buy into what they're selling.
I'm not shocked that Wolfie doesn't get Animal Farm. I am surprised you missed the point. Animal Farm is no more a critique of the Democratic Socialism than it is a an expose of 1980's WWF Superstars. Now had you said Stalinism, you would have been spot on.
"Once upon a time, dinosaurs didn't have families. They lived in the woods and ate their children. It was a golden age."
—Earl Sinclair
"I do have respect for authority even though I throw jelly dicks at them.
Shlomart Ben Yisrael wrote:
If you equate organised labour and free education with Stalinism, you have a screw loose.
How is that organized labor working out for the longshoremen in Portland? We demand X, Y and Z. Since we aren't getting it we will slow down or not work. Wait, uhhh...what do you mean no more ships are coming to Portland...ummm...we are ready to work now. We have bills and mortgages and need food. Wait, you are really serious that we no longer have jobs. Ohh crap.
Moving Sale wrote:I really are a fucking POS.
Softball Bat wrote:
I am the dumbest motherfucker ever to post on the board.