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November 20, 2009 at 4:44 PM #485753November 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM #484917peterbParticipant
In the 1960’s students protested the Vietnam war and civil rights violations. In 2009, they protest not getting a their part of the largesse pie. My how priorities have changed.
November 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM #485082peterbParticipantIn the 1960’s students protested the Vietnam war and civil rights violations. In 2009, they protest not getting a their part of the largesse pie. My how priorities have changed.
November 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM #485457peterbParticipantIn the 1960’s students protested the Vietnam war and civil rights violations. In 2009, they protest not getting a their part of the largesse pie. My how priorities have changed.
November 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM #485542peterbParticipantIn the 1960’s students protested the Vietnam war and civil rights violations. In 2009, they protest not getting a their part of the largesse pie. My how priorities have changed.
November 20, 2009 at 4:58 PM #485772peterbParticipantIn the 1960’s students protested the Vietnam war and civil rights violations. In 2009, they protest not getting a their part of the largesse pie. My how priorities have changed.
November 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM #484922NotCrankyParticipant[quote=Arraya]A manifesto from the students protesting the UC system.
WE LIVE AS A DEAD CIVILIZATION. We can no longer imagine the good life except as a series of spectacles preselected for our bemusement: a shimmering menu of illusions. Both the full-filled life and our own imaginations have been systematically replaced by a set of images more lavish and inhumane than anything we ourselves would conceive, and equally beyond reach. No one believes in such outcomes anymore.
The truth of life after the university is mean and petty competition for resources with our friends and strangers: the hustle for a lower-management position that will last (with luck) for a couple years rifted with anxiety, fear, and increasing exploitation—until the firm crumbles and we mutter about “plan B.” But this is an exact description of university life today; that mean and petty life has already arrived.
Just to survive, we are compelled to adopt various attitudes toward this fissure between bankrupt promises and the actuality on offer. Some take a naïve romantic stance toward education for its own sake, telling themselves they expect nothing further. Some proceed with iron cynicism and scorn, racing through the ludicrous charade toward the last wad of cash in the airless vault of the future. And some remain committed to the antique faith that their ascendingly hard labor will surely be rewarded some day if they just act as one who believes, just show up, take on more degrees and more debt, work harder.
Time, the actual material of our being, disappears: the hours of our daily life. The future is seized from us in advance, given over to the servicing of debt and to beggaring our neighbors. Maybe we will earn the rent on our boredom, more likely not. There will be no 77 virgins, not even a plasma monitor on which to watch the death throes of the United States as a global power. Capitalism has finally become a true religion,wherein the riches of heaven are everywhere promised and nowhere delivered. The only difference is that every manner of crassness and cruelty is actively encouraged in the unending meantime. We live as a dead civilization, the last residents of Pompeii.
The kids get it. Wake up and smell the doom. Instead of clinging to a pathological state of denial.[/quote]
Why are these guys not a bunch of self-entitled “good life” expecting crybabies? That’s my first reaction. So they have to find meaning in their lives if they can. What’s new? Billions have had it worse than this bunch ever will, including many of their contemporaries in this country and on the planet. What seems to be missing is the good kind of pride.I don’t actually blame them for not having it …who would have given it to them?
November 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM #485087NotCrankyParticipant[quote=Arraya]A manifesto from the students protesting the UC system.
WE LIVE AS A DEAD CIVILIZATION. We can no longer imagine the good life except as a series of spectacles preselected for our bemusement: a shimmering menu of illusions. Both the full-filled life and our own imaginations have been systematically replaced by a set of images more lavish and inhumane than anything we ourselves would conceive, and equally beyond reach. No one believes in such outcomes anymore.
The truth of life after the university is mean and petty competition for resources with our friends and strangers: the hustle for a lower-management position that will last (with luck) for a couple years rifted with anxiety, fear, and increasing exploitation—until the firm crumbles and we mutter about “plan B.” But this is an exact description of university life today; that mean and petty life has already arrived.
Just to survive, we are compelled to adopt various attitudes toward this fissure between bankrupt promises and the actuality on offer. Some take a naïve romantic stance toward education for its own sake, telling themselves they expect nothing further. Some proceed with iron cynicism and scorn, racing through the ludicrous charade toward the last wad of cash in the airless vault of the future. And some remain committed to the antique faith that their ascendingly hard labor will surely be rewarded some day if they just act as one who believes, just show up, take on more degrees and more debt, work harder.
Time, the actual material of our being, disappears: the hours of our daily life. The future is seized from us in advance, given over to the servicing of debt and to beggaring our neighbors. Maybe we will earn the rent on our boredom, more likely not. There will be no 77 virgins, not even a plasma monitor on which to watch the death throes of the United States as a global power. Capitalism has finally become a true religion,wherein the riches of heaven are everywhere promised and nowhere delivered. The only difference is that every manner of crassness and cruelty is actively encouraged in the unending meantime. We live as a dead civilization, the last residents of Pompeii.
The kids get it. Wake up and smell the doom. Instead of clinging to a pathological state of denial.[/quote]
Why are these guys not a bunch of self-entitled “good life” expecting crybabies? That’s my first reaction. So they have to find meaning in their lives if they can. What’s new? Billions have had it worse than this bunch ever will, including many of their contemporaries in this country and on the planet. What seems to be missing is the good kind of pride.I don’t actually blame them for not having it …who would have given it to them?
November 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM #485462NotCrankyParticipant[quote=Arraya]A manifesto from the students protesting the UC system.
WE LIVE AS A DEAD CIVILIZATION. We can no longer imagine the good life except as a series of spectacles preselected for our bemusement: a shimmering menu of illusions. Both the full-filled life and our own imaginations have been systematically replaced by a set of images more lavish and inhumane than anything we ourselves would conceive, and equally beyond reach. No one believes in such outcomes anymore.
The truth of life after the university is mean and petty competition for resources with our friends and strangers: the hustle for a lower-management position that will last (with luck) for a couple years rifted with anxiety, fear, and increasing exploitation—until the firm crumbles and we mutter about “plan B.” But this is an exact description of university life today; that mean and petty life has already arrived.
Just to survive, we are compelled to adopt various attitudes toward this fissure between bankrupt promises and the actuality on offer. Some take a naïve romantic stance toward education for its own sake, telling themselves they expect nothing further. Some proceed with iron cynicism and scorn, racing through the ludicrous charade toward the last wad of cash in the airless vault of the future. And some remain committed to the antique faith that their ascendingly hard labor will surely be rewarded some day if they just act as one who believes, just show up, take on more degrees and more debt, work harder.
Time, the actual material of our being, disappears: the hours of our daily life. The future is seized from us in advance, given over to the servicing of debt and to beggaring our neighbors. Maybe we will earn the rent on our boredom, more likely not. There will be no 77 virgins, not even a plasma monitor on which to watch the death throes of the United States as a global power. Capitalism has finally become a true religion,wherein the riches of heaven are everywhere promised and nowhere delivered. The only difference is that every manner of crassness and cruelty is actively encouraged in the unending meantime. We live as a dead civilization, the last residents of Pompeii.
The kids get it. Wake up and smell the doom. Instead of clinging to a pathological state of denial.[/quote]
Why are these guys not a bunch of self-entitled “good life” expecting crybabies? That’s my first reaction. So they have to find meaning in their lives if they can. What’s new? Billions have had it worse than this bunch ever will, including many of their contemporaries in this country and on the planet. What seems to be missing is the good kind of pride.I don’t actually blame them for not having it …who would have given it to them?
November 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM #485547NotCrankyParticipant[quote=Arraya]A manifesto from the students protesting the UC system.
WE LIVE AS A DEAD CIVILIZATION. We can no longer imagine the good life except as a series of spectacles preselected for our bemusement: a shimmering menu of illusions. Both the full-filled life and our own imaginations have been systematically replaced by a set of images more lavish and inhumane than anything we ourselves would conceive, and equally beyond reach. No one believes in such outcomes anymore.
The truth of life after the university is mean and petty competition for resources with our friends and strangers: the hustle for a lower-management position that will last (with luck) for a couple years rifted with anxiety, fear, and increasing exploitation—until the firm crumbles and we mutter about “plan B.” But this is an exact description of university life today; that mean and petty life has already arrived.
Just to survive, we are compelled to adopt various attitudes toward this fissure between bankrupt promises and the actuality on offer. Some take a naïve romantic stance toward education for its own sake, telling themselves they expect nothing further. Some proceed with iron cynicism and scorn, racing through the ludicrous charade toward the last wad of cash in the airless vault of the future. And some remain committed to the antique faith that their ascendingly hard labor will surely be rewarded some day if they just act as one who believes, just show up, take on more degrees and more debt, work harder.
Time, the actual material of our being, disappears: the hours of our daily life. The future is seized from us in advance, given over to the servicing of debt and to beggaring our neighbors. Maybe we will earn the rent on our boredom, more likely not. There will be no 77 virgins, not even a plasma monitor on which to watch the death throes of the United States as a global power. Capitalism has finally become a true religion,wherein the riches of heaven are everywhere promised and nowhere delivered. The only difference is that every manner of crassness and cruelty is actively encouraged in the unending meantime. We live as a dead civilization, the last residents of Pompeii.
The kids get it. Wake up and smell the doom. Instead of clinging to a pathological state of denial.[/quote]
Why are these guys not a bunch of self-entitled “good life” expecting crybabies? That’s my first reaction. So they have to find meaning in their lives if they can. What’s new? Billions have had it worse than this bunch ever will, including many of their contemporaries in this country and on the planet. What seems to be missing is the good kind of pride.I don’t actually blame them for not having it …who would have given it to them?
November 20, 2009 at 5:00 PM #485776NotCrankyParticipant[quote=Arraya]A manifesto from the students protesting the UC system.
WE LIVE AS A DEAD CIVILIZATION. We can no longer imagine the good life except as a series of spectacles preselected for our bemusement: a shimmering menu of illusions. Both the full-filled life and our own imaginations have been systematically replaced by a set of images more lavish and inhumane than anything we ourselves would conceive, and equally beyond reach. No one believes in such outcomes anymore.
The truth of life after the university is mean and petty competition for resources with our friends and strangers: the hustle for a lower-management position that will last (with luck) for a couple years rifted with anxiety, fear, and increasing exploitation—until the firm crumbles and we mutter about “plan B.” But this is an exact description of university life today; that mean and petty life has already arrived.
Just to survive, we are compelled to adopt various attitudes toward this fissure between bankrupt promises and the actuality on offer. Some take a naïve romantic stance toward education for its own sake, telling themselves they expect nothing further. Some proceed with iron cynicism and scorn, racing through the ludicrous charade toward the last wad of cash in the airless vault of the future. And some remain committed to the antique faith that their ascendingly hard labor will surely be rewarded some day if they just act as one who believes, just show up, take on more degrees and more debt, work harder.
Time, the actual material of our being, disappears: the hours of our daily life. The future is seized from us in advance, given over to the servicing of debt and to beggaring our neighbors. Maybe we will earn the rent on our boredom, more likely not. There will be no 77 virgins, not even a plasma monitor on which to watch the death throes of the United States as a global power. Capitalism has finally become a true religion,wherein the riches of heaven are everywhere promised and nowhere delivered. The only difference is that every manner of crassness and cruelty is actively encouraged in the unending meantime. We live as a dead civilization, the last residents of Pompeii.
The kids get it. Wake up and smell the doom. Instead of clinging to a pathological state of denial.[/quote]
Why are these guys not a bunch of self-entitled “good life” expecting crybabies? That’s my first reaction. So they have to find meaning in their lives if they can. What’s new? Billions have had it worse than this bunch ever will, including many of their contemporaries in this country and on the planet. What seems to be missing is the good kind of pride.I don’t actually blame them for not having it …who would have given it to them?
November 20, 2009 at 7:31 PM #484952sobmazParticipantYou’re right!!!!!
What would 13% inflation for 10 years do for our Government?
Compounded it would reduce the REAL debt owed by around 70%!!
It would push millions of Americans into higher tax brackets (inflation equals higher wages, eventually) sending hundreds of billions of extra money to Washington.
It would cause investment earnings to sky rocket (but when inflation is taken into account, no REAL earnings) taking hundreds of billions out of the taxpayers pockets sending it to Washington.
It would cause Real Estate to rise bailing out the incompetent up and down the economic spectrum.
Anyone who thinks Gold is in a bubble is the perfect fool Washington depends upon.
http://www.usagold.com/gildedopinion/greenspan.htmlThere is only a few ways to protect ones self.
Gold may be ahead of itself at the moment but with the U.S. Government so far in debt it has but one way out.November 20, 2009 at 7:31 PM #485118sobmazParticipantYou’re right!!!!!
What would 13% inflation for 10 years do for our Government?
Compounded it would reduce the REAL debt owed by around 70%!!
It would push millions of Americans into higher tax brackets (inflation equals higher wages, eventually) sending hundreds of billions of extra money to Washington.
It would cause investment earnings to sky rocket (but when inflation is taken into account, no REAL earnings) taking hundreds of billions out of the taxpayers pockets sending it to Washington.
It would cause Real Estate to rise bailing out the incompetent up and down the economic spectrum.
Anyone who thinks Gold is in a bubble is the perfect fool Washington depends upon.
http://www.usagold.com/gildedopinion/greenspan.htmlThere is only a few ways to protect ones self.
Gold may be ahead of itself at the moment but with the U.S. Government so far in debt it has but one way out.November 20, 2009 at 7:31 PM #485492sobmazParticipantYou’re right!!!!!
What would 13% inflation for 10 years do for our Government?
Compounded it would reduce the REAL debt owed by around 70%!!
It would push millions of Americans into higher tax brackets (inflation equals higher wages, eventually) sending hundreds of billions of extra money to Washington.
It would cause investment earnings to sky rocket (but when inflation is taken into account, no REAL earnings) taking hundreds of billions out of the taxpayers pockets sending it to Washington.
It would cause Real Estate to rise bailing out the incompetent up and down the economic spectrum.
Anyone who thinks Gold is in a bubble is the perfect fool Washington depends upon.
http://www.usagold.com/gildedopinion/greenspan.htmlThere is only a few ways to protect ones self.
Gold may be ahead of itself at the moment but with the U.S. Government so far in debt it has but one way out.November 20, 2009 at 7:31 PM #485577sobmazParticipantYou’re right!!!!!
What would 13% inflation for 10 years do for our Government?
Compounded it would reduce the REAL debt owed by around 70%!!
It would push millions of Americans into higher tax brackets (inflation equals higher wages, eventually) sending hundreds of billions of extra money to Washington.
It would cause investment earnings to sky rocket (but when inflation is taken into account, no REAL earnings) taking hundreds of billions out of the taxpayers pockets sending it to Washington.
It would cause Real Estate to rise bailing out the incompetent up and down the economic spectrum.
Anyone who thinks Gold is in a bubble is the perfect fool Washington depends upon.
http://www.usagold.com/gildedopinion/greenspan.htmlThere is only a few ways to protect ones self.
Gold may be ahead of itself at the moment but with the U.S. Government so far in debt it has but one way out. -
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