Moderator: Dictators in Training
brinstar wrote:kill your apathy, switch on your brain. i know it works when you let it. shit man, if not for you then for the bun cooking in your GF's oven~
fifteen years from now when s/he comes to you with starry eyes and says "dad, we learned about #occupy in school today. is it really true that rich people used to own the government? did you help change that?" i sincerely fucking hope you have a better answer than "meh, i thought the whole thing was dumb so i just sat around playing battlefield 3 and listening to metalcore"
Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
araby wrote:Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
this part I actually agree with!
HyPhY GhEtTo MaMi wrote:GeT ofF mAh OvaRiEz
Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
brinstar wrote:Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
obv not gonna change your mind about the rest, which is sad
but this part is just straight-up wrong
you're not living on an island dude
Trielelvan wrote:I hope you can both be singing the same tune when, in 10-20+ years after you've done everything you thought was right, your world gets ripped out from underneath you, and you learn just how expendable you are.
Then again, I understand most people don't care that everyone isn't just like them - perfect.
So glad to see everything I speculated about this board regarding OWS was spot on. Sadness.
leah wrote:i am forever grateful to my gym teacher for drilling that skill into me during drivers' ed
leah wrote:isn't the only difference the length? i feel like it would take too long to smoke something that long, ha.
brinstar wrote:Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
obv not gonna change your mind about the rest, which is sad
but this part is just straight-up wrong
you're not living on an island dude
1 Timothy 6:10 (KJV) wrote:For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
brinstar wrote:3. zanchief: it's sad to me that you're so dismissive of something you should be behind, at least in theory. criticize us for misdirected tactics, fine, or suggest more relevant goals - but calling us loud fools is just phoning it in. besides, plenty of people in power are taking us quite seriously >_>
Zanchief wrote:brinstar wrote:3. zanchief: it's sad to me that you're so dismissive of something you should be behind, at least in theory. criticize us for misdirected tactics, fine, or suggest more relevant goals - but calling us loud fools is just phoning it in. besides, plenty of people in power are taking us quite seriously >_>
You know, I gave this very question a lot of thought a few days ago as I was read FB comments by a number of my friends about OCW. These are people that, in most circumstances, I find myself in complete agreement with. So what specifically is at the root of my dissent in this instance? It can’t simply be that they are directionless. Hell, almost all the liberals I’ve aligned myself over the years are, at best, directionless. So why do I have such a hard time getting behind this movement?
I have narrowed it down to two reasons. One I think is rational, and one is irrational. I’ll start with the irrational. I don’t see this movement being fought by the right people. If this outcry was from single mothers trying to raise their children on a paltry income, unable to break the cycle of poverty imposed by the widening divide in classes, or families in inner city slums who’ve been the victim of systemic issues that have negatively contributed to their quality of life, I’d be right there with you. I’d wager you are fighting for these people, Brin, but that’s not what I see when I see the majority of these protesters. I see children of upper middle class families who have had every opportunity to succeed and they are taking the success that so many have never had and wasting it by playing campout with their friends. I see them on TV and read about them in the newspapers and these are not people I can bring myself to support. They’re losers. And they only have themselves to blame.
Rational. I think the claims are highly exaggerated. I know you Brin, and I know you educate yourself the best you can, but you can get caught up in the rhetoric just like everyone else. You want to believe so much in the conspiracy of the big business man controlling everything, with Washington full of corrupt politicians taking any kind of hand out. This I do not believe. There may be some like this, but most politicians do the best they can under the system they have. You look for news that affirms your world view so you can feed that fire in your belly. You want to justify the things that you do, but the world isn’t always as bleak as you make it out to be. Well not from my point of view at least.
The first reason is why I make snide comments about hashtags and iPods and what not, the second is why it’s just not for me.
HyPhY GhEtTo MaMi wrote:GeT ofF mAh OvaRiEz
Trielelvan wrote:*sigh*
Let me try to put this into the proper perspective for a moment:
Jay, you say that Harri, you, and most people most likely, are too busy with work, family, lives, etc to go and occupy.
Correct. Most people are very busy. If we didn't stay that way, our lives, as we know it now, would start to become unstable.
No one is expecting you or anyone to go out and make time to go and occupy anywhere. It'd be really great if you could, but it goes without saying that most people are not going to be able to do this.
But enough can and do.
Why does it matter if they do?
To say that this country is drowning in apathy and passive/aggressive frustration is an enormous understatement.
So why then has no one done anything about it? There are some who do, obviously, but not the majority of Americans.
Why?
When it's so painfully obvious that change is needed, why do people do nothing?
Hope.
This country has no sense of itself.
We have become apathetic as a nation, secure in the bubble of a very uncomfortable comfort-zone that the very idea of doing anything at all to make any kind of change seems not only impossible, but completely improbable.
How can hope thrive when the obstacles are so overwhelming as to be crippling?
The people of this country - of this world - have forgotten that they have a voice; A RIGHT to speak out against atrocity.
Trielelvan wrote:The idea of breaking the silence is so frightening for some that they'd rather just continue living in poverty, living paycheck to paycheck, living without healthcare, living without knowing what will happen when they become too old to work anymore...
"Let things be the way they are and don't rock the boat."
"It's not worth it."
"Anyone who tries is a fool."
The Women's Suffrage and Civil Rights movements prove those ideas to be dead wrong.
The occupiers are important because they are the visual representation of this movement for people everywhere to see that they are not alone in their anger and suffering; their hopelessness and frustration.
That's why it matters that they DO occupy.
If you really don't believe that the politicians of our nation are bought and paid for (on BOTH sides - Obama is just as much a corporate puppet as was Bush, et al), you haven't been doing your homework.
If you truly think that the vast majority of the people out there occupying are nothing more than dirty hippies looking for a free handout, you haven't actually met any of them.
Trielelvan wrote:The movement is for us.
For you.
For the people.
For every person who feels that their voice counts for nothing anymore, this is for them.
For every citizen of this country who feels their votes are a waste, this is for them.
The only way the big changes will ever happen is if all the people of this country come together to change it.
It has to start somewhere.
That is what this movement is. That is what OWS is for and why it exists.
People have to know that others will stand with them.
Some are too scared.
Some simply have no idea what is really going on.
That is where OWS comes in: to teach, to inform, to help, to encourage.... to empower.
Confucius said, "The journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step."
OWS is the first step.
This is only the beginning of the beginning.
... and with that, I'm done on this subject here. Willful ignorance is around every corner, and my ability to continue to stomach it has been stretched too thin.
I hope something I said helps someone see how important this is.
If so, awesome.
If not *shrug* that's fine too.
You're going to believe what you want. I get that.
leah wrote:i am forever grateful to my gym teacher for drilling that skill into me during drivers' ed
leah wrote:isn't the only difference the length? i feel like it would take too long to smoke something that long, ha.
Jay wrote:You win some, you lose some, but guess what? You know what else is stifling our local business practice? Occupy. Occupy is halting our businesses, delaying day to day operations with no regard to the local businesses it interrupts with both traffic congestion, population density and the intense use of law enforcement and public resources that the rallies demand from the city. Local businesses have lost money from mid September till now due to the protests. Sections of our county and community are left in worse shape because the public sector is lending their efforts to neighboring communities cleaning up messes left by Occupy
Trielelvan wrote:araby wrote:Harrison wrote:it's me and my actions that affect my life
this part I actually agree with!
I hope you can both be singing the same tune when, in 10-20+ years after you've done everything you thought was right, your world gets ripped out from underneath you, and you learn just how expendable you are.
Then again, I understand most people don't care that everyone isn't just like them - perfect.
So glad to see everything I speculated about this board regarding OWS was spot on. Sadness.
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