C
cynic
Guest
:banghead: so yes then
No, I’m saying that lazy people clamor for someone else to pay the freight, and never look to themselves to earn and pay more.:banghead: so yes then
Housecleaning: one hour per month. We now have vacuum cleaners that run on electricity.How about clean the house, do the laundry, shop for groceries, enjoy a little tv or radio, sleep during the night? It is not sloth to work a 40 hour week. It should be all that is necessary. One can burn out easily putting in more time than 5 eight hour days.
so does: Reading history. Gardening. Home improvementsTelevision rots the mind.
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I already explained it over and over – we have a lot of couch potatos who cheer for the team or government program of their choice – but do nothing to move the ball themselves. They’re quick to say someone else should pay, but I have yet to have one say, “I should work harder, so*** I*** can pay more.”Earn and pay *more *implies that those working 40 hours are lazy by your definition, since they could earn and pay more but don’t. But of course, repeating some inane line is more important to you than clearly explaing it’s meaning, or how it applies.
I’ m sorry but you are still wrong. It is not slothful to work a 40 hour week. One can work quite hard in 40 hours and need the rest of the time to relax and unwind. Yours is a judgement and a false one at that.Housecleaning: one hour per month. We now have vacuum cleaners that run on electricity.
Laundry: one hour per month. We now have machines to do that.
Television rots the mind.
Sleep = 5 hours per night. Too much sleep rots the mind.
If I work more than 40hours a week I end up getting so sick and agitating my illnesses so much I lose money and cause society to lose money because I have to file for bankruptcy on the medical bills for the health care I need but cannot affordNo, I’m saying that lazy people clamor for someone else to pay the freight, and never look to themselves to earn and pay more.
Housecleaning: I have severe severe allergies. If I do not clean, spray down and vacuum every inch of every floor/carpet. Wash every sheet, every piece of cloth in the apartment once a week I will inevitably develop bronchitis if not pneumonia.Housecleaning: one hour per month. We now have vacuum cleaners that run on electricity.
Laundry: one hour per month. We now have machines to do that.
Television rots the mind.
Sleep = 5 hours per night. Too much sleep rots the mind.
I reckon he’s tawkin about ME! LOLWe’re being preached at to do nothing but work by retired people who garden, ride motorcycles, play with guns and post on the internet. Priceless.
I worked nonstop from age 17 to age 62. Rarely worked 40 hour weeks … usually anywhere from 50 to 100 hours per week [100 hour weeks definitely lead to burnout … but the work had to be done … I felt an obligation to the men who were dying … ] … and for the first 20 years had to travel extensively for business … often once a week … slept on the planes … lived in 6 countries. Travelled to or transited 20 others. Was in 5 wars; 150 of my cohorts were killed. It’s a series of miracles I wasn’t killed.so does: Reading history. Gardening. Home improvements
We’re being preached at to do nothing but work by retired people who garden, ride motorcycles, play with guns and post on the internet. Priceless.
And I commend you but it is still wrong to call everyone who doesn’t do this lazy or slothful.I worked nonstop from age 17 to age 62. Rarely worked 40 hour weeks … usually anywhere from 50 to 100 hours per week [100 hour weeks definitely lead to burnout … but the work had to be done … I felt an obligation to the men who were dying … ] … and for the first 20 years had to travel extensively for business … often once a week … slept on the planes … lived in 6 countries. Travelled to or transited 20 others. Was in 5 wars; 150 of my cohorts were killed. It’s a series of miracles I wasn’t killed.
Yes but the extreme end of your ( and verns, al masetti’s) ideology is that you shouldn’t stop working just because you can. I’m not judging you, it’s you who are really. If the standard work week was 60 hours, you could argue that to not work more than this is lazy, and since it’s possible to save enough for some of those things you mention by working 40 hours - depeding on what you do of course - I don’t think that was ever the point. According to you guys, work is supposed to be an end in itself, not a means to something else.The cynic put this out-
I reckon he’s tawkin about ME! LOL
Well the reason we can do those things is; ahem- WE WORKED MORE THEN 40 HOURS A WEEK. Now I dunno about some of y’all on here, but retiring sorta young was nice, so I can ride motorcycles, read the paper, hang out on the internet, attend weekday morning Mass at 9am (my parish is a 10 min walk) bicycle, run, and when sumptin goods playin I like the movie matinee at half price.
I was also able to care for my elderly mother in her last days, and because the Lord has Blessed so much I know I need to give time back family and friends. I spend much of my day on the phone witht them or riding across the state just to eat lunch with a Uncle or cousin not seen in a long time.
Heck, I just might take a notion to stop and eat lunch with Vern on my next trip through the Ozarks. You know the best BBQ place in Eureka Springs bro? My treat.
Now I can’t do ANY of that if I hadn’t worked overtime, or odd jobs all those yeas ago to pay off my mortgage so I* could* retire, early. I do know it was worth every effort.
It wasn’t an end in itself.Yes but the extreme end of your ( and verns, al masetti’s) ideology is that you shouldn’t stop working just because you can. I’m not judging you, it’s you who are really. If the standard work week was 60 hours, you could just as much argue that to just work this is lazy, and since it’s possible to save enough for some of those things you mention by working 40 hours - depeding on what you do of course - I don’t think that was ever the point. According to you guys, work is supposed to be an end in itself, not a means to something else.
There is a body of thought that suggests that at our last judgment we will be asked one question: “Who did you help?”And I commend you but it is still wrong to call everyone who doesn’t do this lazy or slothful.
Humbug!What about those working in offices, factories, labs. I work in a place where familiarity between people is considered innapropriate, where you can’t talk in the breaks or lunchbreak. Havn’t had a conversation where I could talk freely with anyone, (outside of immediate family) going on 2 years. Where do you find the time to meet friends or a potential marriage partner when there’s no time to socialize? What are we working *for *if all anyone should idealy do is work. Sometimes I like to walk in a park, observe some blue sky for a change, get some fresh air. It’s called variation, most humans need it. I realize there are bigger things in life, things worth sacrificing spare time for, but what are you helping people for if all they should be doing (once helped) is one thing, over and over again?