So an example would be marriage. Some days I’m a crummy husband. But everyday I get another chance. If I screw up enough I could lead to divorce sure but even then I still have another chance each day to do the best I can at being the best husband (or ex-husband) or father I can be.
Being a good ex-husband might just involve not bothering my ex-wife, but even then that’s right action in that case. Make the best of each day. — MysticMonist
Mm, not nearly the same. — XanderTheGrey
Not nearly the same as in marriage isn’t like the rest of life? Or marriage isn’t like video games? — MysticMonist
I was raised in an era of movies, video, games, and the internet. I had a decent dose of all of them growing up. I noticed that I suffer from this delusion that if I destroy my life, and sabotage everything, I will be able to start over in a healthy robust state. — XanderTheGrey
Maybe it's not about making or doing everything the right way, whatever that might be, maybe it's about how we deal with these problems as we grow and gain more knowledge. — Sam26
I noticed that I suffer from this delusion that if I destroy my life, and sabotage everything, I will be able to start over in a healthy robust state. — XanderTheGrey
But if gods forbid you run over a kid in the street because you looked down at your phone when the kid ran out in front of you, no amount of growth and making better decisions will bring that kid back. You can tell yourself whatever you want, but not having a reset button sucks big time for some things. — Marchesk
From working class to bourgeoisie :-OYou can start over in life to the extent that other people don't prevent you from doing so. People who commit felonies and spend a few years in prison, for example, have a really terribly hard time starting over in life without the disability of their felony conviction preventing them from working and living a normal life.. People won't let them do that. Only if they find a slot where people accept their situation and hire them anyway, can they resume normal life -- and that isn't very common. — Bitter Crank
I know it sounds a bit crazy — Sam26
What's wrong with that now? :s So long as the people are adequately taken care of, I see nothing wrong with it. I've thought for a long time about a business where you negotiate with old people who don't have any family anymore, you take care of them (and all their costs) until they die, in exchange for them leaving you their property after their death. That way, so long as you can withstand the costs until they die, you will be left with a lot of properties. You provide something of value, that would help many people in society. Nothing wrong with that - that's what everyone should be doing. Finding ways to solve the world's problems. And guess what? You need money to do that. Profit is good. Profit is what enables you to expand and deliver your services at greater quality and more availability.Adorable story, Agustino, but sorry, I can't endorse his glorious entrepreneurship, especially with building for-profit care homes. — Bitter Crank
I doubt you've studied business as much as me, I have more examples to give you. Probably at least another 10 if I really try to think about it for 10 minutes. Bill Bartmann comes immediately to mind from the US. Vance Miller also comes to mind.Besides which, 1 big success story doesn't invalidate the observation the those with criminal records generally are unable to reinvent themselves — Bitter Crank
:-} Pff, what a joke. That must make you feel "above" this world no? As if you didn't need what money can get right? That's no different than one claiming that he is "above" eating, and doesn't care about feeling hungry.And more besides which, you are probably flummoxed by the fact that becoming rich is not a universally recognized worthy ideal. — Bitter Crank
Yeah yeah yeah, time to paint him like such a bad guy :-} . How silly. Why is he a bad guy, because he worked super hard, took smart decisions, and never gave up? I don't think you understand the sheer pain and suffering one has endured to succeed in doing something like he did, especially starting from where he started, which was literarily nothing, not even a good education. That's something to be respected, not mocked.There is one element in the story that seems entirely consistent: a man who is ready to throw his commanding officer over board is probably ready to do anything. — Bitter Crank
I doubt you've studied business as much as me — Agustino
God - family - money - brute force. That's the order of importance of things in this world. — Agustino
'for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.'
'Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these, you did it to me.' — Matthew 25:31-46
what a joke. That must make you feel "above" this world no? — Agustino
In a capitalist society, you need money regardless of what you want to do in the world. — Agustino
Almost everything good in this world is founded on money. — Agustino
One of the worst things, I believe, is people who mock those people who have worked with their whole body, mind and soul to get something productive going, a business, and they get mocked for being rich and having made a lot of money. — Agustino
In Europe, it tends to be the exact opposite. Healthcare tends to be much better in the private sector, but it's more expensive. For example, my grandfather is in his 90s and he had a stroke a few months ago so I have quite a lot of recent experience with these things as of late. Private care homes look great, and the facilities are very nice. Public ones are despicable, and rely a lot on the family supporting the patient anyways.This has been true for decades. 30 years ago, Scientific America analyzed the difference between non-profit and for-profit hospitals, and found that costs, meeting community needs, and care outcomes were better in non-profit facilities--not universally, but there was a very strong relationship. — Bitter Crank
Right, but it seems to me you don't understand the mechanisms through which things work in this world. If I want to - say - start a successful communist organisation, start a new political party, build churches, make schools, hospitals, etc. etc. - the most important resource is money. Without money, I cannot do anything in society. And I'm not talking about doing something for myself in the sense of get an expensive car, yacht, etc. I'm not talking about doing personal stuff for myself with that money. I'm talking about being any sort of agent for change in my society. That requires power, and power in capitalism means money. Back 500 years ago, power mainly meant being the guy who ordered the army around.Look, I was not a red diaper baby. I obtained my moral system from Christianity, (which you also claim). — Bitter Crank
Yes, based on Biblical principles, and my own understanding of how the world materially works.You got that out of the Bible? — Bitter Crank
That's not true. The point there is simply that God comes first, before money. If I can make $1 million killing an elderly woman, for example, I won't. Why not? Cause God (and morality) comes first. If I can make $1 million being a pimp, I won't - why not? Cause morality comes first.if you want to claim Jesus as your first guide, then forget about money and brute force. — Bitter Crank
On your morality and faith in God, but morality includes the duty to do as much as possible for your society, and that takes power.What is the judgement of our earthly performance based on? — Bitter Crank
Right, but I'm not interested in clothing 1-2 people, I'd rather think of how I can clothe 1-2 million people.Nothing else, Agustino: for the good of your soul, remember that a highly successful entrepreneur can get into heaven more easily than a camel can climb gracefully into a BMW Mini. — Bitter Crank
No, because again, the money has no value for oneself. It's just the power to be an agent of change that it confers that is important and matters. If you could move things like 500 years ago by controlling the army, then that would be of interest. But, unless you live somewhere like North Korea, that's not the case today.Of course. But there is a big difference between having "enough" and having as much as you can get. — Bitter Crank
I don't understand why you think that society doesn't need intelligent management to work, including the intelligent management of money. If you don't have money, you cannot feed the poor, you cannot give alms, you cannot be of much use to your society in today's age. I'm not talking of Ancient Judea or Ancient Greece, etc. - I'm talking in today's world. In Ancient Judea if you had a lot of money you couldn't do much with it. You were pretty much identical to the common person, except you had access to better clothing and food. So money was pretty much useless apart from these basic necessities. It took political power to move things.Tell that to Jesus the next time you run into him. — Bitter Crank
I don't see myself as highly successful (I'm just at the start of my journey in terms of entrepreneurship that is), but having your efforts mocked isn't nice. The fact though is that I realise that success is to a certain degree in my control (not fully), and there's no point crying like many other people, what about this, what about that. You have to sort things out yourself. Nobody's gonna sort them out for you. If I sit here and stop working you think anyone is going to complete the projects that I have at the moment :s - no, of course not, they'll sit there uncompleted until I get down to work and get them done. And not only that, but I will also disappoint my clients, which ain't good. Reputation is most important in business.But I would think, just in psychological terms, that a highly successful entrepreneur, like yourself, would have thicker skin than to worry about being mocked. — Bitter Crank
Although having said this, I should specify that NHS has been degrading over time, since initially I remember it used to be good. There were even many walk-in centres the first year I got to UK, where you just walked in and saw a doctor straight away without having to schedule yourself. But many of those got closed due to lack of money - see, it's always lack of money that causes problems... :’(In the UK, it was pretty much the same, but private healthcare is waaaay too expensive there. I haven't personally tried it - couldn't afford to pay 100s of £s. But I've heard services are much better. NHS waiting times and procedures are horrible - if you have a serious condition it takes you ages to get to the doctor. You call your GP saying it's an emergency problem and they say, "Oh sorry, I can only schedule you in 3 weeks. If you don't like it, go to emergency room" :-} — Agustino
Right, and I agree with that. That's why I posted that I've also seen public services work:This is a truism. The question is, what are the various ways resources can best be marshaled to accomplish social goals? Most of the US economy has been privately, entrepreneurially run. But, the Federal Government has executed many extremely large projects by marshaling public resources. — Bitter Crank
Although having said this, I should specify that NHS has been degrading over time, since initially I remember it used to be good. There were even many walk-in centres the first year I got to UK, where you just walked in and saw a doctor straight away without having to schedule yourself. But many of those got closed due to lack of money - see, it's always lack of money that causes problems... :’( — Agustino
But many of those got closed due to lack of money - see, it's always lack of money that causes problems... — Agustino
But the UK problems are mostly a result of neocon policies, not actual national poverty. — Bitter Crank
Right, I agree (I've never really been on the Conservative side in terms of UK politics), but it's ultimately still a lack of money. And an individual can only change this by gaining power and influence themselves, and that mostly is also through money.But conservative policies have dried up public resources for the NHS. Publicly financed housing in the UK is another example of bad policy under conservative ideology. — Bitter Crank
That requires power and influence, which pretty much means money today. I don't see how that is avoidable, it's simply how the structure of this capitalistic world works. — Agustino
an individual can only change this by gaining power and influence themselves, and that mostly is also through money — Agustino
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