Professional Soldiers ®

Professional Soldiers ® (http://www.professionalsoldiers.com/forums/index.php)
-   The Early Bird (http://www.professionalsoldiers.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=45)
-   -   Socialism is winning. (http://www.professionalsoldiers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=36583)

Team Sergeant 01-23-2012 09:09

Socialism is winning.
 
I rarely post youtube videos but this one is worth a watch. When the "gimmie generation" takes power all will be lost. It was a good couple of hundred years....




Will Generation 'Gimme' Work for the American Dream? Eye-opening

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxHfY...ature=youtu.be

JJ_BPK 01-23-2012 09:19

Thanks TS,, I will share this..

DevilSide 01-23-2012 11:38

This was actually on the news a few months ago when I seen it, really glad someone put this on youtube.

akv 01-23-2012 12:17

My $.02
 
Thanks TS,

Not having kids yet that was very revealing, how can kids get to college without exposure to the principles of Locke, Adam Smith etc? The optimist might say well these college kids will clue in later in life than they should have, once they enter the work force and start supporting themselves. A pessimist would say this generation of coddled entitlement in an increasingly volatile geopolitical environment, will naively stumble into great adversity , gaining the work ethic their great grandparents did in the great depression and WW2. Professor Chambless is doing good work here. A POTUS stirring divisive entitlement certainly doesn't help.

The question I'm left with here is this domestic socialistic cultural environment cyclical or systemic? Anyone who can read a book, or turns on the TV can see the endgame for communism/socialism has been failure, look at the USSR for the former, and western Europe right now for the latter. My $.02, The Eurozone financial crisis or solution is not cyclical, this is a systemic cultural characteristic, and they are in crisis because of Socialism mixed with greed.


On the other hand the concept of sheepish masses reliant on the government, " Bread and Circuses" wasn't new to the Roman empire either.

The thing that bothers me the most here is villifying success, or the notion the American Dream doesn't have to be earned with skill, hard work, and a bit of luck...

Tweeder11 01-23-2012 16:49

Why we can be optimisitic
 
While there are many in generation gimme that want life handed to them, I do not believe that these people are our future leaders. In fact, I don't think the majority of the kids that voted , well pretty much in favor of a socialistic American Dream, will even finish college... at least without a swift kick in the behind and a harsh welcome to reality; lazy as they are, they probably won't even show up to the poles on real election day.

The future leaders of America are these people http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...089337,00.html

These people are TRULY people who stand for something, people who are slowly but surely coming into leadership positions in our country. People who make a change, not by chanting "we are the 99%" but finding work, serving their country, & constantly striving to improve themselves for God, Country, and Family.

With all earned respect given to the previous posters, I'm not saying that the people of my generation don't have a problem, but the good ones are still at work and not out there protesting.

Humbly and graciously yours,
Tweeder

DevilSide 01-23-2012 21:09

Quote:

Originally Posted by akv (Post 432159)
Thanks TS,

Not having kids yet that was very revealing, how can kids get to college without exposure to the principles of Locke, Adam Smith etc? The optimist might say well these college kids will clue in later in life than they should have, once they enter the work force and start supporting themselves. A pessimist would say this generation of coddled entitlement in an increasingly volatile geopolitical environment, will naively stumble into great adversity , gaining the work ethic their great grandparents did in the great depression and WW2. Professor Chambless is doing good work here. A POTUS stirring divisive entitlement certainly doesn't help.

The question I'm left with here is this domestic socialistic cultural environment cyclical or systemic? Anyone who can read a book, or turns on the TV can see the endgame for communism/socialism has been failure, look at the USSR for the former, and western Europe right now for the latter. My $.02, The Eurozone financial crisis or solution is not cyclical, this is a systemic cultural characteristic, and they are in crisis because of Socialism mixed with greed.


On the other hand the concept of sheepish masses reliant on the government, " Bread and Circuses" wasn't new to the Roman empire either.

The thing that bothers me the most here is villifying success, or the notion the American Dream doesn't have to be earned with skill, hard work, and a bit of luck...


On your comment about John Locke and Adam Smith, I don't ever recall them being mentioned when I was in school, I read about them on my own. I think when/if I have kids I'm going to do home schooling, wasn't a big fan of public school anyway.

Solar 01-23-2012 21:41

Professor Chambless is my economics professor. On my first day in his class, we were told to answer this question: "Should the federal government abolish property rights and install a progressive tax system?" 30% said yes, 40% no and the rest didn't answer out of 180 students.

Awesome class by the way, it really taxes your mind.

plato 01-23-2012 22:06

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tweeder11 (Post 432175)

The future leaders of America are these people http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...089337,00.html

Tweeder

"Their first project was to build an extension and wheelchair ramp for a Vietnam veteran named Kevin Smith."

Those who never served will never know the joy of having thousands of brothers who, when passed in a local store, parking lot, or on the street, say more with a simple nod than a pure civilian could say in a hundred page essay.

John_Chrichton 01-23-2012 22:22

I suspect that my generation will learn in a very tragic way, that a government powerful enough to give everything is powerful enough to take it all away.

Maytime 01-24-2012 01:04

GratefulCitizen originally linked Adam Carolla's take on the entitlement mess here, but I feel it is worth listening again. And again.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJD8pZiRIzs

Warning: naughty language.

To be honest I am ashamed of my generation; a generation full of 6th place trophy winners and people who were told they were special WAY too much.

Team Sergeant 01-24-2012 08:56

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tweeder11 (Post 432175)
While there are many in generation gimme that want life handed to them, I do not believe that these people are our future leaders. In fact, I don't think the majority of the kids that voted , well pretty much in favor of a socialistic American Dream, will even finish college... at least without a swift kick in the behind and a harsh welcome to reality; lazy as they are, they probably won't even show up to the poles on real election day.

The future leaders of America are these people http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...089337,00.html

These people are TRULY people who stand for something, people who are slowly but surely coming into leadership positions in our country. People who make a change, not by chanting "we are the 99%" but finding work, serving their country, & constantly striving to improve themselves for God, Country, and Family.

With all earned respect given to the previous posters, I'm not saying that the people of my generation don't have a problem, but the good ones are still at work and not out there protesting.

Humbly and graciously yours,
Tweeder

LOL, you slay me........ have you not realized who is currently in office?

Tweeder11 01-24-2012 09:07

Quote:

Originally Posted by Team Sergeant (Post 432232)
LOL, you slay me........ have you not realized who is currently in office?

... TOUCHÉ Team Sergeant... TOUCHÉ

be well,
Tweeder

greenberetTFS 01-24-2012 11:19

Quote:

Originally Posted by plato (Post 432201)
"Their first project was to build an extension and wheelchair ramp for a Vietnam veteran named Kevin Smith."

Those who never served will never know the joy of having thousands of brothers who, when passed in a local store, parking lot, or on the street, say more with a simple nod than a pure civilian could say in a hundred page essay.



Bravo!!!.............;) :D :)

Big Teddy :munchin

glebo 01-24-2012 18:05

Here's another doozy
 
http://revolutionarypolitics.tv/vide...video_id=15915

Compliments of Judge Judy....OMG

Ret10Echo 01-24-2012 18:32

Agree wholeheartedly:

From Zero

Quote:

"Keeping the American dream alive has become "the defining issue of our time," President Barack Obama says. He's using Tuesday night's State of the Union address to draw a stark election-year line with Republicans over how to keep the United States from eroding further into a nation of haves and have-nots."

First: A "Dream" is not real. (I kid not, it isn't real)...

Second: A "Dream" provides motivation for action.

Third: Without "Haves" there is nothing to "Dream" about

Fourth: Without a "Dream" you have no "Motivation" to act

Fifth: Without "Motivation" you have a lazy, apathetic society with it's hand out and no reason to "Dream".

Quote:

From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs.
Karl Marx


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:33.


Copyright 2004-2022 by Professional Soldiers ®