by The_Toecutter » Fri 06 Jul 2007, 19:16:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you don't figure out how to work the system then the system will figure out how to work you.
Which is precisely why the best solution is to work outside the system. Not everyone has the assets needed to work the system. Vast swathes of the population are left behind with little prospects of molding their own reality due to factors outside of their control. A lucky few with these assets parrot how well the system works, because it's working for them even if to the obvious expense of everyone else.
Our founding fathers understood this all to well and it is a tragedy to bear witness to these problems having gotten exponentially worse since their time. They didn't want an over-populated surveillance state where rule of law is disproportionately applied. Our founding fathers didn't want a society where money buys all the freedom and privacy a person could afford. These attributes of our society actually run contrary to the laissez-faire society envisioned by the likes of Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, Benjamin Franklin, and their kind. Freedom is supposed to be intrinsic. If the system doesn't want to change, stop trying to change it. This tactic has been tried for decades and doesn't work when the system doesn't want change. It needs to be torn down altogether by any means possible. Our founders got the hint.
I celebrated my 4th of July the way I wanted. Never harmed anyone or anything, but a few men in suits and badges with guns would have loved locking me up for daring to assert the freedoms that are intrinsic and of which no written law should ever be able to deny. Freedom: assert it or lose it.
The unnecessary felling of a tree, perhaps the old growth of centuries, seems to me a crime little short of murder. ~Thomas Jefferson