Menu
Home
Forum Rules
Store
Donate
Meltdown Mayhem Hacks ⚔︎
What's new
New posts
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
Log in
Register
What's new
Menu
Log in
Register
Home
Sweatshop - Pure Drama
Meltdown
Dovey is an ecclesiastical ecdysiast.
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Flynn" data-source="post: 630083" data-attributes="member: 537"><p>Normally, there are people who are smart that haven't stepped on foot in a University, you are not one of those people. You, yourself act like an uneducated piece of shit because that's exactly what you are, so if the shoe fits then you should gladly wear it. You cannot fake intelligence and I see you out here day in and day out trying to "fake it." Case in point:</p><p></p><p>"<strong><em>If you didn't, you are an uneducated piece of shit who shouldn't have a voice in how the country is ran or how your life should go. That all gets decided by our betters and we all need to know our place.</em></strong>"</p><p></p><p>No one said you didn't deserve a voice, which is what voting was set up for. And yes, people with Degrees in certain Academic fields such as law and political science have a better grasp than you on how this country should be run because they went to a University and studied and worked their asses off to get into that position. You think you should be having a voice because you think you know better than college educated business owners and lawyers. You have no experience at politics, you haven't even served for your local caucus and you think you should have more say besides voting than someone who is far more educated and stable than you? Here's another barometer of your ignorance:</p><p></p><p>"<strong><em>Of the 535 members of the 88th Congress, no less than 315 are lawyers. Sixty‐six of the 100 Senators have had legal training, as have 57 per cent, or 249, of those in the House. The second most popular profession in the Congress is that broad category called “businessman,” and it is less than half the size of the legal contingent. It may well be that the Congress has too many lawyers for its own—and the nation's—good. Moreover, the preponderance of lawyers on Capitol Hill reveals some discomforting facts about the supply of people who are available for political careers.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em></em></strong></p><p><strong><em>To be sure, lawyers have always played a dominant role in American politics. “The government of democracy is favorable to the political power of lawyers,” Alexis de Tocqueville wrote more than a century ago, and the early history of our nation confirmed his observations. Of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence, 25 were lawyers, as were 31 of the 55 men who served in the Continental Congress.</em></strong>"</p><p></p><p>This article was written in 1964. Even then an education was a huge thing. If You're going to rant about something rant about how you could have been a part of a group to run this country if you had not been a dead beat drug addict. People like you think you're entitled to a voice when you haven't even put forth the work in.</p><p></p><p>As far as "how your life should go" when you talk about how others know better. You collecting welfare is an indication that you're willing to let the state take care of you while collecting food stamps and monetary benefits. Don't all those things come with rules you have to abide by? See? You talk about others knowing what's best for you, yet you are a prime example of living that lifestyle but now you want to complain about it.</p><p></p><p>If you were better educated, we wouldn't be having this one sided conversation. There's a difference between being owed for your work you put in and you thinking that you're entitled without having any kind of redeeming qualifications.</p><p></p><p>Keep on showing your ignorance Dove.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Flynn, post: 630083, member: 537"] Normally, there are people who are smart that haven't stepped on foot in a University, you are not one of those people. You, yourself act like an uneducated piece of shit because that's exactly what you are, so if the shoe fits then you should gladly wear it. You cannot fake intelligence and I see you out here day in and day out trying to "fake it." Case in point: "[B][I]If you didn't, you are an uneducated piece of shit who shouldn't have a voice in how the country is ran or how your life should go. That all gets decided by our betters and we all need to know our place.[/I][/B]" No one said you didn't deserve a voice, which is what voting was set up for. And yes, people with Degrees in certain Academic fields such as law and political science have a better grasp than you on how this country should be run because they went to a University and studied and worked their asses off to get into that position. You think you should be having a voice because you think you know better than college educated business owners and lawyers. You have no experience at politics, you haven't even served for your local caucus and you think you should have more say besides voting than someone who is far more educated and stable than you? Here's another barometer of your ignorance: "[B][I]Of the 535 members of the 88th Congress, no less than 315 are lawyers. Sixty‐six of the 100 Senators have had legal training, as have 57 per cent, or 249, of those in the House. The second most popular profession in the Congress is that broad category called “businessman,” and it is less than half the size of the legal contingent. It may well be that the Congress has too many lawyers for its own—and the nation's—good. Moreover, the preponderance of lawyers on Capitol Hill reveals some discomforting facts about the supply of people who are available for political careers. To be sure, lawyers have always played a dominant role in American politics. “The government of democracy is favorable to the political power of lawyers,” Alexis de Tocqueville wrote more than a century ago, and the early history of our nation confirmed his observations. Of the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence, 25 were lawyers, as were 31 of the 55 men who served in the Continental Congress.[/I][/B]" This article was written in 1964. Even then an education was a huge thing. If You're going to rant about something rant about how you could have been a part of a group to run this country if you had not been a dead beat drug addict. People like you think you're entitled to a voice when you haven't even put forth the work in. As far as "how your life should go" when you talk about how others know better. You collecting welfare is an indication that you're willing to let the state take care of you while collecting food stamps and monetary benefits. Don't all those things come with rules you have to abide by? See? You talk about others knowing what's best for you, yet you are a prime example of living that lifestyle but now you want to complain about it. If you were better educated, we wouldn't be having this one sided conversation. There's a difference between being owed for your work you put in and you thinking that you're entitled without having any kind of redeeming qualifications. Keep on showing your ignorance Dove. [/QUOTE]
Name
Verification
Post reply
Home
Sweatshop - Pure Drama
Meltdown
Dovey is an ecclesiastical ecdysiast.