I get to push things a little every day.MachineGhost wrote:Ouch. Pee on my parade, why don't you? The implication you seem to be implying is that we're all helpless in one giant orgy and we should just go ahead and incestously snack and feed on each other, no matter what the collective end result, because we have no individual power. And that does seem to be the direction America has been going for a while. I have a problem with that line of thinking. I'm not a standoffish libertarian anymore.moda0306 wrote: We all try to do what we can to live within the system but game it what little bit we can. Sometimes, there's enough wiggle room, that lawyers, accountants, or financial advisors can actually be hired, and worth it, to help us through the process. Individually, none of them can affect the tax code or legal system, all they can do is help people play the game. All any of us can do is play the game. We can pontificate and debate about how things should all be run, but individually we are left with very little influence on the system.
I do hate pontificating over and over about what could or should be, but at the same time if we didn't have these nit-picky discussions, how would we push the envelope for society to reform and improve in the future? I'm just as invested in the system as everyone else, but I'm not content to sit on my damn ass and accept things as they are. Oh jeeze, now I sound like I'm pulling a doodle...
I don't feel powerless at all.
If anything, I feel like I am on the front lines of a worthwhile effort to improve society (both personally and professionally).
IMHO, the challenges in changing the world are basically twofold: First, you have to be able to wake people up. Second, once people are awake, you have to be able to answer the question "Why did you wake me up?"
I think that a lot of would-be world changers succeed in waking up a few people, but struggle to offer a coherent answer to the question they ask upon being awakened, apart from something along the lines of "Well, I was sick of looking at all these people sleeping and didn't want to be awake by myself."