by jdmartin » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 03:25:37
Pops, as usual, has one of the best replies on this thread.
It's amusing to me to read about all the people who are going to save their income and not be gluttonous pigs so as to survive the coming shitstorm, and revel in the disgust that is their friends, neighbors, and colleagues.
To that, I say: what do you do for a living?
All of us are interconnected. It is only the continued spending of your fellow greedy pigs that allows you to even have a job that provides an income that you can squirrel away. Otherwise, boiled down to the lowest common denominator, we're all out there scrounging for roots and berries and maybe swapping out some labor in order to stay alive. In other words, there's no economy. Without people buying all the useless shit everyone loves to rail against, there's no economy.
Now, that's not to say that the things we buy to keep the economy running couldn't be better - whether that means quality, humanity, etc. For example: I buy (almost) 100% of my food from organic growers or organic companies. Aside from the fact that I consider it safer for me, and better quality, it supports the type of people that I want to support. However, irrespective of what I'm spending my money on, if I didn't spend it than someone else wouldn't have it. We can't all disengage from the economy. You can take almost any job, remove the economic system around it, and it will pay nothing.
Yes, the middle class is disappearing. Yes, some of it is their fault. But get real. Every generation loves to spout off how "my grandfather's generation were hard working, saving, didn't buy anything they didn't need". It's bullshit. That fuzzy-eared black and white tv that sounds so disadvantaged today was the Ipod of the 50's. Same thing goes for vacuum cleaners, dishwashers, toasters, etc. - things that we would consider necessities today, but that were absolute luxuries then. ANY car was a luxury in the 50's, because most places had acceptable public transportation and most people lived within distance of it.
You can look around, point your fingers in disgust and proclaim how piggish everyone else is all you want. The fact of the matter is that they and their brethren allow you to continue to work for currency that you can use to buy your bunkers, self sufficient land, or products that you're going to use to stave off disaster.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.