Then your mother should be ashamed of herself.Maybe she [your mother] would like to have a torrid romance with the guy next door, for instance. Having an adult son in the next room cramps one's style. — Bitter Crank
I endorse this advice fully. All my experience is congruent with this. (Y)My advice (as someone in an MA program in a related field in the humanities who has applied to PhD programs but is seriously thinking about dropping out of academia completely, even if he is accepted somewhere): you don't need a degree to be a philosopher. Find something tolerable to pay the bills, if possible, and pursue philosophy on your own time. — Thorongil
I myself may consider to move to the USA in the future -- I have never been there. — Emptyheady
Oh yeah, and guess what, Hanover means by "paternalism" and "fatherhood" promiscuity and the like. He certainly didn't tell Question to go and get married. He told him to move out. To do what? Presumably to fuck around, as he vigorously recommends, publicly and without shame whenever he gets the chance, is that right? :-} That's what makes one a "real man" according to this :-x .We live in a world where fatherhood and paternalism are shunned, as in how dare I tell a young man to dust off and get back in there. — Hanover
Yeah very succesful, I have no doubt, with a father like you, I can only imagine >:O >:OOh please. Save the psychoanalysis. I have two well adjusted kids, both succesful. — Hanover
Give me a break... just give me a break. Nobody beats their own wings. To beat their own wings would mean they aren't already chained by society. The fact that they have a job and pay their bills in NO SENSE means that they are independent. No, they are slaves, the worst part is that they probably aren't even aware of it. Having a job is the farthest thing from freedom, whether you're working as the CEO of Microsoft, or as your local grocery boy.The path to independence is not paved with constant hand holding. You have no comprehension of the infinite compassion a parent has for their child and the simultaneous suffering that occurs with their every struggle all with the understanding that the baby bird must flap his own wings in order to fly. — Hanover
I realised that Hanover simply has no shame - this guy is unbelievable.......Trumpish. Funny insult. — Hanover
Hah hah! I forgot to laugh. Securing a challenging job - let me tell you, even if someone made me CEO of Microsoft tomorrow I'd refuse.And I'd expect you'd even admit to the real benefit of getting out of the rut of dependency and directionlessness when you secured a challenging job. — Hanover
Immigration process would be tough for me... — Emptyheady
Hah hah! I forgot to laugh. Securing a challenging job - let me tell you, even if someone made me CEO of Microsoft tomorrow I'd refuse.
Unbelievable that there's actually people who have a brain and actually believes there's something admirable about securing a challenging job......... — Agustino
Yeah, I actually admire those. But the point is there's nothing great about simply having a job. It's about your creativity, learning skills that are valuable to others, developing your character. That's what matters. If someone develops their creativity and knowledge, learns valuable skills, and develops their character I don't care at all if they have a job or not.Let's not forget that there are self made people with self made jobs that only they could do. — Question
Yeah, I actually admire those. — Agustino
No I haven't said I admire the CEOs at all. I said I admireReally? What's with the aura around these charlatans? What's so great about Microsoft or Apple? As if the CEO of GE or Lockheed came up with all their own patents? — Question
People who make their own jobs - who contribute with their own value. This may very well not be the CEO (in fact it probably isn't - CEOs are typically dumb people) - it may be a nerd closed in his office who never goes out of there, and who has no other task except to come up with creative ideas in his own time. No one ever disturbs him or knows about him.Let's not forget that there are self made people with self made jobs that only they could do — Question
I haven't said I rank individuals I meet on that table by virtue of them holding a certain position. I merely stated that most CEOs aren't terribly smart at all.Yeah, you need to stop doing that. Ranking people based on your table of who is smart or not. It distorts your view of reality. — Question
I haven't said I rank individuals I meet on that table by virtue of them holding a certain position. I merely stated that most CEOs aren't terribly smart at all. — Agustino
Managing people in a company that already works, and has a built hirearchy and a lot of resources isn't difficult at all. Even a monkey could do it. It's building that company in the first place that is actually the hard thing. CEOs typically are people who manage bureaucracies - who have been good and obedient slaves for a long time, and who are placed there precisely because they're not dangerous - they're too dumb to be dangerous. And the structure of the company governs itself - the CEO doesn't actually make it work at all. The person who founded and started the company - or the persons - they made it work, theirs is the merit, not the CEO's.What makes you say they aren't smart? I mean technically, the most psychopathic CEO is usually the most efficient one, does that make him the smartest? — Question
That's not exactly true. CEOs typically are politically manipulative - but they're only capable within an already existent structure. They're not capable of creating something themselves.I mean technically, the most psychopathic CEO is usually the most efficient one, does that make him the smartest? — Question
The person who founded and started the company - or the persons - they made it work, theirs is the merit, not the CEO's. — Agustino
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