by Derek Hunter
It’s 2016, right? I hope so because that’s the year I put on my check when I paid my taxes.
That’s means we’re at around 6,000 years or so of recorded human
history, right? Add to that that thousands of years unrecorded before
that, and you realize people have been around here for a while. Yet, in
the year 2016, we find ourselves in a heated debate over what is or
isn’t a man or a woman.
We are out of problems.
Seriously, human beings have our issues, but we are out of
substantial problems. Especially in the civilized world, particularly
the United States.
Since we are out of problems – we have food, shelter, medicine, etc. –
we’ve decided not to celebrate but rather to create problems out of
thin air.
Making up problems is a luxury afforded us only by our success. The
poor in the United States are some of the richest people to ever live.
To distract from this fact, brought to us by capitalism, our progressive
friends focus on the differences between what some possess compared to
others.
The implication of the left’s obsession with “income inequality” is
someone has less because someone else got more. Unless you’ve been
physically robbed, this is a childish claim. That so many believe it and
fixate on it is a testament to just how good we have it.
Mark Zuckerberg is not worth $35 billion because you aren’t, or
because anyone else isn’t. He didn’t take $35 from a billion people. His
wealth was created, not taken. Earned – a concept we used to understand
and celebrate, but now go out of our way to scorn.
Many of our nation’s poor are fat, lazy and satisfied. They have flat
screen TVs and cable, microwaves and Internet, and all the food they
need. Even our homeless have cellphones. Because we don’t have to wake
every day to forage for food and hope some simple scrape won’t lead to
an infection that kills us, we’re afforded the luxury of feeling cheated
by someone having more.
Rather than have that difference serve as motivation or aspiration,
it’s a wedge – a manufactured problem allowing people to obtain
society’s most coveted status: victim.
Success has been shunned; victim is the new hero. It’s a sham and a game, and even the most powerful among us play along.
In Hillary Clinton’s campaign speeches she spouts off on how “we are
going to keep our families safe and our country strong, and we’re going
to defend our rights—civil rights, voting rights, workers’ rights,
women’s rights, LGBT rights, and rights for people with disabilities.”
Read the rest:
We’re Out Of Problems | John Hawkins' Right Wing News
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