the auction block

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Jul 21, 2004
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#1
The prerequisite in becoming an American: After working for 80 years, in cleaning up after other people shit, feeding other people kids, being put down by “bosses”, dealing with corporate pricing regarding health and your family’s lives at the same times creating a civilized family to be apart of a “society” then will the American dream be near your grasp, but you’ll need to also pay for another spine and maybe a death or two in the family and don’t forget someone has to go to jail or prison and the ultimate prerequisite is you must die without giving a shit to what you went through so you can say “as long as my family is still alive” will you be a real true American. It’s not about contributing to the dream it’s about sustaining the new and improve white slave owner auctions. Not only are you told not to think and want, you live in a shack far greater than a cardboard box but less than another person (politician/CEO) opinion.

So how much are you worth on the auction block?
 
Jul 21, 2004
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#2
I apologize. I went too far with my thoughts, but if you ask anyone at works what they think about their job, the majority can’t stand waking up or actually go to work 5day straight from 8-5 in 365days. Where did this rule come from and why? Sounds totalitarian to me.

We want to do whatever we want to do, that is the ultimate dream. Why are we restrained to getting up early, deal with traffic, and deal with the same people that don’t care about who you are or what you want to do? The amount of people not doing what they want, is disgustingly wrong. For being a good person you might have to starve. For wanting to help people you’d be considered honorable but you can’t have a home. Its sad to think just being nice could only get you a free candy bar instead of a society happy to keep you alive and well. Our lives are only worth by the possessions we have, even though a human life intermingles with the outcome of other people. Humans are able to make other people feel emotions never felt before, see the most intense visual creations, touch the most gigantic structures, smell the most delicious aromas, and create anything s/he sets his mind to. When a person put themselves down for the work they do at a company they can’t stand, it saddening they don’t see how involved their life makes for another person story. Sometimes when I miss car accident or be late to an appointment the world shift to a different outcome changing a situation outside my realm of involvement. That’s scary but every human’s action contribution to the world shifting that profoundly. For example, when you change direction while leaving a game, you will change another person’s directions causing accidental collisions or a delay from another situation in the future.

That’s how important humans are, they make up our world without a title to our name. I don’t like being told what to do….especially when the people I work with, who tell me what to do, don’t want to do what they have to do….doesn’t make much sense, but I’m really starting to get tired of role playing in an organized routine.
 
Sep 28, 2004
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#3
Gotta do what you gotta do. There's a small percentage of rich people in the world who didn't need to do too much. But I am not one of them. I just do what I am told at work, and smile for my paychecks so I can afford food and housing. After taxes, gas, food, rent, electric, internet and other expenses.. I maybe have a few bucks to put away just in case I need to get my car fixed sometime soon.

I will spend many years doing this. Unless I get lucky. So much time is spent working, that I am too tired to look elsewhere for another line of work. So I just plug at it. For now.