Wanted—Someone Who's Not One of Us

Posted by straightlinelogic 12 years ago to Politics
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This is an excerpt. The full commentary can be accessed on straightlinelogic.com or hitting the link above.

There are two easy ways to be liked: lie, and spend someone else’s money. Since Roosevelt, government has been an exercise in both. (Obamacare is the latest, and perhaps the most pathetic, example.) Any politician, Hollywood star, businessperson, intellectual, artist, or Pope who aspires to being liked has to champion spending other people’s money, and has to lie that nobody need pick up the tab. These transparently self-serving formulations do not even rise to the level of principles. Then again, those who dish them out are no longer required to have any principles. All is tolerated as long as more is promised. In today’s ethical swindle, those promises are not just bids for popularity, but demonstrations of compassion and moral worth—buying the stairway to heaven on someone else’s dime. Intolerance is reserved for those who denounce the fraud.


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  • Posted by Robbie53024 12 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Value is in the eye of the receiver. That's why two people can make an exchange of goods, the total sum of which does not change, merely the owners, and total wealth increases. Both believe that they made a "fair trade" and got more in return than they gave up. That is the fundamental basis for trade - I give you something of value for something that I value more than what I am trading, and you provide to me something of value in exchange for something that you value more.
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  • Posted by overmanwarrior 12 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Jim Taggert wanted to be liked and he would do anything to fill that need. Wanting to be liked means something is required from someone else to achieve fulfillment. An equal value of exchange is often not the intention of wanting to be liked. A person who desires such things is seeking something of more value than they have to give.

    Looting
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  • Posted by overmanwarrior 12 years ago
    That is very nice. Being liked is a form of looting, and creates a terrible strategic posistion. A person who cares more for being liked than finding what's right is a very dangerous person.
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