Update
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I hate peasants

Lazy peasants claiming benefits
badminton · 61-69, MVIP
Yeah, those tax-evading corporations, Wall Street swindlers and corrupt defense-industry contractors getting bail-outs and subsides from the tax-payers. A bunch of no good lazy bums!

Congress should cut out the corporate welfare and direct that money toward things the country needs like affordable healthcare, good quality education, good public transit, affordable housing and public safety.
Elessar · 26-30, M
So do I, lazy ass conservative socialists who hide behind empty promises of free market capitalism and end up electing people who print $2T out of their a$$ and gift them to their companies
Thevy29 · 41-45, M
The monkey on the top branch may look down and see nothing but smiling faces. But its the monkeys on the bottom branch who look up and see nothing but @ssholes
Spotpot · 41-45, M
You mean like farm subsidies and corporate welfare.
Crazywaterspring · 61-69, M
@Spotpot Big business doesn't do anything without a financial nudge from the government.
Adamski24 · 41-45, M
I also hate the general public
Graylight · 51-55, F
One of the major factors that caused the Laziness Lie to spread throughout the United States was the arrival of the Puritans. The Puritans had long believed that if a person was a hard worker, it was a sign that God had chosen them for salvation. Hard work was believed to improve who you were as a person. Conversely, if a person couldn’t focus on the task at hand or couldn’t self-motivate, that was a sign that they had already been damned.

This meant, of course, that there was no need to feel sympathy for people who struggled or failed to meet their responsibilities. By lacking the drive to succeed, they were displaying to the world that God hadn’t chosen them for Heaven.

When the Puritans came to colonial America, their ideas caught on and spread to other, less pious colonists. For many reasons, a belief system that judged and punished the “lazy” was about to become very popular—and politically useful.
https://lithub.com/on-the-insidious-laziness-lie-at-the-heart-of-the-american-myth/
pride49 · 31-35, M

 
Post Comment