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Generation Right (Wing)
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chakapingFull Member
teamhurtmore – I must say I think there’s a big gap between the way you’d like to perceive yourself and the actual impression you create on this site.
It’s a shame to see potentially engaging topics such as this always marred by closed-minded bores.
somewhatslightlydazedFree MemberMalvern Rider has a point.
Whats so ****ing laudable about HAVING to work hard for a living?
I wish moderrn technology could be used to give us all more quality free time instead of making us more “productive”.
The true business of people should be to go back to school and think about whatever it was they were thinking about before somebody came along and told them they had to earn a living.’
Sounds like a good ambition to me.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberChill out – it’s a cycling forum and a space for some banter. There are other forums for serious debate on these issues.
Perspective, gentlemen please!
Chapaking, pls feel free to review page 2 to see exactly where the respectful comments changed in nature to less respectful versions. Funny where that started, but if people want to start that kind of stuff, they need to be able to live with the response.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberWhats so ****ing laudable about HAVING to work hard for a living?
Generally better for you than having it handed on a plate.
FrodoFull MemberWhats so ****ing laudable about HAVING to work hard for a living?
The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money!
As I’ve said before we don’t live in a communist country. You can choose to be dosser and surf bum all your life if you really want to. You just need to be able to fund the lifestyle that you want.
If you want a nice house, bike, car …sorry but your going to have to earn it. Struggling to see the problem with this?
ernie_lynchFree MemberThe problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money!
So whose money did the banks ran out of, causing the worst global economic crises since the 1930s ?
Or are you saying banks are a socialist concept ?
FrodoFull MemberOr are you saying banks are a socialist concept ?
well…errr yes.
Really they should have been allowed to fail but for the greater good they were saved. In future with the new banking arrangements i’d like to think they would be alllowed to fail.
yunkiFree MemberThe ‘work hard to purchase utterly facile and frankly demeaning status symbols’ ethic is a myth constructed by the wealthy and perpetuated by the moronic..
Is it laudable to prioritise your ridiculous over stated little job over your children’s social development?
Is it laudable to waste your life grafting to line some fat greedy bastards pockets whilst you scrape by..?In an age of such technological advancement why are we all working more hours than ever for less money?
When you say that you want to work really hard to better yourself you have to maybe take a moment to wonder what ‘bettering yourself’ actually means..I’m aware that the system prevents us from escaping this trap, with house prices and the cost of living etc.. and that the alternatives would present a quantum shift in our way of thinking that many people are too indoctrinated to contemplate, but that in no way makes the system right and correct and I find it almost impossible to respect anyone who defends it
somewhatslightlydazedFree MemberGenerally better for you than having it handed on a plate.
Why? What if it frees you up to write that symphony you’ve always wanted to write, or pursue that interesting line of research that might transform society?
Or even just give you time to appreciate the beauty of the world around you?
The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money!
As I’ve said before we don’t live in a communist country.
Why do you associate not having to work hard for a living with socialism? Look at the worlds most sucessfull communist state. Do you think all they do in China is practice Tai Chi all day?
Its nowt to do with outdated left wing v. right wing politics.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberBanks as a socialist concept? Interesting question – how many industries put the interests of their employers so far above the interests of their clients and their shareholders. You should always work for a bank rather than own one – that’s how the odds are stacked.
binnersFull MemberWhats so ****ing laudable about HAVING to work hard for a living?
Generally better for you than having it handed on a plate.Lets ask someone who’d know, shall we……
5thElefantFree MemberI wish moderrn technology could be used to give us all more quality free time instead of making us more “productive”.
It has. Do you really think your grandparents had time to fanny about with bicycles in the woods at the weekend? They had stuff to do.
yunkiFree Membernot quite right 5Elefant – my granda was a sales rep for the co-op and him and my nan would regularly ride their bikes to the seaside on the weekend..
lemonysamFree MemberIt has. Do you really think your grandparents had time to fanny about with bicycles in the woods at the weekend? They had stuff to do.
I have a box of slides somewhere of my grandparents fannying about on bikes, I can’t remember if they were in the woods though.
FrodoFull MemberThe ‘work hard to purchase utterly facile and frankly demeaning status symbols’ ethic is a myth constructed by the wealthy and perpetuated by the moronic..
Some people want fast cars others want exotic holidays …or just a nice bike. Who are YOU to decide what people spend their money on?
Is it laudable to prioritise your ridiculous over stated little job over your children’s social development?
Or provide for your familey?
Is it laudable to waste your life grafting to line some fat greedy bastards pockets whilst you scrape by..?
The get a different job or better become your own boss, that is just childish whinging.
In an age of such technological advancement why are we all working more hours than ever for less money?
Depends on your job. I work long hours but it is challenging, fun and rewarding. Some days I would rather go home early – some I do others I have to get through. Its called responsibility. The more you have the more you are likely to be rewarded (note reward is not just monetary).
When you say that you want to work really hard to better yourself you have to maybe take a moment to wonder what ‘bettering yourself’ actually means..
Depends what and who you are and what you want out of life? Again who are YOU to decide …you can either choose to work hard and accept responsibility or not to. No one makes you but there are consequences.
I’m aware that the system prevents us from escaping this trap, with house prices and the cost of living etc.. and that the alternatives would present such a quantum shift in our way of thinking that many people are too indoctrinated to contemplate, but that in no way makes the system right and correct and I find it almost impossible to respect anyone who defends it
You are clearly a childish intolerant cave man.
yunkiFree Memberbut I love you… and that’s the main thing you grumpy little halfwit (seeing as we’re name-calling now) 😀
somewhatslightlydazedFree MemberIt has. Do you really think your grandparents had time to fanny about with bicycles in the woods at the weekend? They had stuff to do.
Well one set of grandparents spent their summers in their second home in Cornwall. The other set was forced to subsistence farm somewhere in Siberia.
If given the choice, I think the ones in Siberia might have preferred to live a life of luxury in a technological utopia .
There’s no nobility to HAVING to work HARD for a living if all you get is grinding poverty and an early death.
ernie_lynchFree MemberOr are you saying banks are a socialist concept ?
well…errr yes.
So the greedy banks which eventually ran out of other people’s money, causing the worst global economic crisis since the 1930s, were publicly/government owned ?
That’s why they eventually ran out of other people’s money, and we ended up with the worst global economic crisis since the 1930s ?
Had they not been publicly/government owned they would not have eventually ran out of other people’s money, and we would not have had the worst global economic crisis since the 1930s ?
Interesting, but I’m not convinced that you fully understand the problem.
chakapingFull MemberIt has. Do you really think your grandparents had time to fanny about with bicycles in the woods at the weekend? They had stuff to do.
I work six or seven days a week. My grandparents did five.
Did you mean great-great grandparents?
binnersFull MemberReally they should have been allowed to fail but for the greater good they were saved. In future with the new banking arrangements i’d like to think they would be alllowed to fail.
Could you just run through how the problem of the banks being ‘too big to fail’ has been addresse,d to prevent it happening again? Its just that I was under the impression that the banks took all our money, and are now lending it all out again as suicidally overstretched mortgages, and inflating another massive housing bubble in the South East.
So they’re recreating perfectly, exactly the conditions that caused the last crash, and we as taxpayers are still acting as guarantors. In fact, more so, as its our money thats been directly pump priming the bubble with Help to Buy, Funding for Lending, and round after round of QA
Still… capitalist cheerleader, and sage that you are,myou’ll be about to explain to me why I’m wrong, and this isn’t the case at all.
Go…..
5thElefantFree MemberThere’s no nobility to HAVING to work HARD for a living if all you get is grinding poverty and an early death.
Very true. We now live in an age of unprecedented wealth for all.
Unfortunately expectations are at an even higher level.
Did you mean great-great grandparents?
In my case, no. Maybe I’m of more humble origins.
somewhatslightlydazedFree MemberActually, I know a few people who through talent, hard work and quite a bit of luck are in the situation where they don’t need to work a full week in order to maintain a (to them) acceptable material lifestyle.
They use the free time to purse other things which don’t give any monetary reward.
Are they happy and fulfilled even though they dont have to work hard for a living? I think so, but I’m just jealous.
dazhFull MemberInteresting all this talk about the work ethic, how much we should work etc. There’s a superb book about just this subject written by a guy called Peter Kropotkin (one of the world’s forgotten heroes). Can’t remember the details but from what I remember the gist of it was that if we were to cut out all the capitalist ‘non-work’ from society and organise ourselves in a more collaborative and collectivist manor then we could all work about half the time without massively impacting our material way of life.
It’s here if anyone wants to read it (you should): The Conquest of Bread – Peter Kropotkin
brooessFree MemberInteresting all this talk about the work ethic, how much we should work etc. There’s a superb book about just this subject written by a guy called Peter Kropotkin (one of the world’s forgotten heroes). Can’t remember the details but from what I remember the gist of it was that if we were to cut out all the capitalist ‘non-work’ from society and organise ourselves in a more collaborative and collectivist manor then we could all work about half the time without massively impacting our material way of life.
I heard this expressed once as:
“We work long hours to get the money together to buy things which we think will make us happy to make up for the fact that working long hours is making us unhappy”
Which I can see. But on the other hand, every society which experiences subsistence farming (where all your work goes directly into providing the basics of survival) seems to want to escape that existence as soon as they can e.g. Western World in previous centuries, China over the last 20 years…
FrodoFull MemberActually, I know a few people who through talent, hard work and quite a bit of luck are in the situation where they don’t need to work a full week in order to maintain a (to them) acceptable material lifestyle.
Yep sounds goo to me.
all work about half the time without massively impacting our material way of life.
Yep your probably right but there would also be consequences, many of these unforseen…would we be the same technologically advanced society that we are today without driven people to be leaders for whom their job is their life. I think not.
We need society but also individualism. Not all people are the same, want the same or deserve the same.
dazhFull Memberwould we be the same technologically advanced society that we are today without driven people to be leaders for whom their job is their life. I think not.
That’s a huge assumption. I think it’s a myth that technological/scientific advancement and capitalism go hand in hand. Just about every scientist, researcher, inventor, engineer etc I’ve ever met do it because they have a love for their work, and not for the money. Yes they expect to earn a comfortable living, but they could all make much more doing other less useful things. Yes capitalism often accelerates some technological advances, but it also hinders others. Climate change and green energy is a perfect example.
We need society but also individualism. Not all people are the same, want the same or deserve the same.
You should read that book I posted a link to. It addresses this point directly. It could be possible to have both.
lungeFull MemberIt’s interesting that, as I see it at least, “discussions” like the ones above are the very things that are making people lose faith in modern politics and perhaps pushing people to be more self-sufficient.
Politicians need to stop pushing ideals, stop gearing policy to older voters and engage the younger populous. They also need to stop referencing figures from the past that have little or no relevance to modern voters. Give people opportunity and choice, let them be successful through there own work and not be stifled by a system. Let them not be constantly told they can’t achieve because they can achieve, though some will choose not to, accept that to be the case.
ninfanFree MemberCould you just run through how the problem of the banks being ‘too big to fail’ has been addresse,d to prevent it happening again? Its just that I was under the impression that the banks took all our money, and are now lending it all out again as suicidally overstretched mortgages, and inflating another massive housing bubble in the South East.
So they’re recreating perfectly, exactly the conditions that caused the last crash, and we as taxpayers are still acting as guarantors. In fact, more so, as its our money thats been directly pump priming the bubble with Help to Buy, Funding for Lending, and round after round of QA
Still… capitalist cheerleader, and sage that you are,myou’ll be about to explain to me why I’m wrong, and this isn’t the case at all.
Can you explain to me where bailing out failing banks fit into the capitalist or free market ethos?
Lets make the evil free market and capitalist cheerleaders position perfectly clear:
*the banks should have been allowed to fail, and everyone who invested in them should have lost their money because they lent to people who could not pay it back*
simples
Now, why did the government that you voted for not let that happen? Is it because the government were in the pockets of a small number of very rich people, or is it because the government was afraid of the ramifications for themselves of millions of voters losing their savings on their watch?
JunkyardFree MemberA capitalist society requires workers within it/ society who do the shitty jobs for limited rewards [ generate the wealth] whilst the rich [ owners of the capital] enjoy in the fruits of their labour. In this system what I would want is for them to think that a work ethic was noble , something to aim for , aspire to and be admired.
JunkyardFree Memberninfan decent points and you are one of the few capitalists who would accept the consequences of capitalism.
I dont disagree and, like you, I would have sat back and watched them burn, but, for very different reasons 😉You are a man of principles …just not good one 😛
teamhurtmoreFree MemberWeird definitions here.
There are factors of production eg land, labour, capital, entrepreneurship etc from which we earn factor incomes such as rent, dividends, wages etc. They all fit together in the circular flow of income within an economy and via Exports and Imports outside the domestic economy. There is not pre-determined formula that states that certain factor incomes will exceed others, that depends on lots of other issues eg, the scarcity of that particular factor.
In the case of banks that are often (incorrectly IMO) perceived as being core to/defined synonymously with a capitalist model, the factor returns are skewed very heavily towards the suppliers of labour ie, the staff. The providers of capital get measly returns in contrast.
So which is it? Do we define banks as being synonymous with capitalism or something different? And if we do the former, can we therefore reject the idea that capitalism (as defined here) is synonymous with workers being shafted while owners of capital get rewarded? We cannot do both.
Politicians have no idea of how to engage with Gen Y – how do you win the support of a generation that will have their aspirations generally unfulfilled thanks to profligate excess consumption of the generations that preceded them? They will pay for our previous follies and we (the older generations) will become increasingly unpopular as a result. The contempt with which they hold us and our elected representatives will be well deserved.
We gorged, they pay……
ninfanFree MemberCheers Junkyard
prime example this week
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/jun/16/greenpeace-loses-3m-pounds-currency-speculation
Whose fault? who was responsible for this? the banks, or their own greed?
teamhurtmoreFree MemberIndeed the are. The crisis was not caused by the banks (at least not in isolation). It was caused by massive accumulation of debt by governments, companies, banks and individuals. By definition, debt allows you to bring consumption forward while delaying payment until a further date. And boy, didn’t we all love that formula. Now, the balance has to be struck, or should I say re-balancing. The payment has to be bought forward and consumption delayed.
Of course, not even those capitalist (yea, right ) Tories are prepared to do or even admit this. Why would they? Going cold turkey is not a pleasant experience however necessary it may be in the long run.
Generation Cold Turkey – there’s a new one!
somewhatslightlydazedFree MemberYep sounds goo to me.
You missed the bit about needing good luck.
Its a myth that you can achieve anything you want through just throuhg hard work. And its this myth that is sold to generation right wing every since they were in nursery school.
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