B
balto
Guest
Agreed, especially about the part with society’s loss of reasoning ability. We ditched reasoning a long time ago in favor of “feeling good.” Modern law only seems to be interested in promoting people’s fantastical lifestyles, whatever they may be, instead of promoting what is objectively good for society. Here’s something for everybody on this thread to consider:While I pretty much agree with what you say here, I don’t think that the recognition of marriage as between man and woman was a product of religion. It was recognized simply as a result of how men and women are built. They are made to be sexually complementary. Whatever religion one might profess, that basic biological fact has been pretty much recognized as a matter of nature—at least until the most recent societal loss of reason.
There’s a lot of people in our country nowadays that don’t really like going to work all that much. They like staying at home and doing nothing productive all day long. That’s okay, because we wouldn’t want anyone to feel bad about their lifestyles. I think that we should revisit the definition of a “business” so that business contracts can be given to these people too. We wouldn’t want to discriminate, because a professional lifestyle is equal in every way to a lazy lifestyle. Look, they stay at home and play with those fake cash registers and fake merchandise like what your 5 year-old would play with and they use Monopoly money for transactions. It has all the same basic elements of a so-called “real” business and they feel like what they’re doing is the same as what real professionals do. How does it harm your business if we expand it to these arrangements?
The proponents of traditional business would argue “Why would we let people who stay at home all day doing nothing productive have a business? A business is when two or more people come together to produce something for society and sell it, thereby growing the economy and increasing the common good.” Not all businesses are productive though; a lot them go bankrupt and never turn a profit. So business obviously has nothing to do with success, productivity, and certainly not the common good. It’s really just a legal agreement between two people to have common ownership over various pieces of property.
But that’s not enough. It’s not that people involved in non-traditional business are bad with money, they just can’t make it naturally. So let’s start letting them receive money from the state so that they can have the last component of a so-called “real” business. Only a bigot would argue that although these people are not necessarily bad with money, a productive business environment is more conducive for responsibility with money. Look at all the corrupt businesses that rip people off and then end up dissolved with the leaders sent to prison! This is proof that we should redefine businesses and then subsidize modern business!
Why do you want to ban modern businesses? Should we outlaw staying at home and not working? Should the state break down the doors of every kindergarten and arrest anyone who’s playing with the fake cash registers? Your view of a traditional business is jaded by your nostalgia to the past and never actually existed in reality. If you want to have a traditional business you can still have it.
Where do you think the economy would be with logic like this? Well it’s already bad so why not redefine it even more?