jerrycan dan
autistic retard
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- Joined
- Jul 22, 2018
- Posts
- 8,948
Lately I have considered writing essays online for stupid little fortnite players in middle school and making money off it. I would consider myself a pretty good writer as far as writing in the English language goes, people on this site who have seen my effortposts would hopefully agree. My one weakness, as far as I am aware, is being too lazy to read over my work properly after it's finished and edit it, but if I'm getting paid (even if it's not very much) I have extra incentive to do that
My mum wants me to get a job so I brought up the possibility of it with her. She didn't tell me to not do it per se, but she certainly voiced her displeasure. She told me that there are surely other ways I could focus my creative energies, and that she was worried about me getting in trouble. I went and googled it, came back to her, and told her that it would only be misconduct in the eyes of the educational institution I was writing papers for a student of, so they couldn't touch me. She still didn't like the idea because it was "cheating" and "not the right thing to do".
I didn't understand why she cared that much about "the right thing to do". The vast majority of CEOs, successful entrepreneurs and billionaires all made it to where they are today after walking over thousands of people, cheating every single one of them out of something as they went. I brought up Mark Zuckerberg, whose creation was something that tens of thousands of other people could have done at the time with ease, and which was partly stolen from other people. My mother then brought up the fact that he has been sued for doing that, to which I brought up the fact that Zuckerberg was still rich af and his life had massively improved from cheating in a much more morally reprehensible way than writing essays for people who are essentially forced into education ever could be. She still wouldn't have it. I asked her why we are supposed to uphold "the right thing" when we live under a system which not only implicitly condones, but at the end of the day is also built around, cheating, and she just gave me "it's not the right thing to do" like a brick wall. I briefly tried to pull the moral relativism card on her but backed down when it felt too spergy.
I am not even mad at her, to an extent I can understand her having a salt of the Earth working-class moralfag point of view on cheating and gaming the system.
What I do not understand is how she can so thoroughly believe in upholding that point of view when the system she lives and works under is built around cheating people, including her. On this I am dumbfounded. The government and the upper tier members of the company she works for a franchise store of are guaranteed to be pieces of shit who became successful and keep their success afloat by milking those below them and using all sorts of underhanded tricks. How can somebody be so perfectly okay with living under a system rife with cheating and dishonesty, but at the same time be so dead-set on honest work for themselves and their family members?
It's a cucked as fuck mindset, you're essentially willing to let people screw you over in a million different barely-legal ways while you put in honest back-breaking work for them your entire life. How do you look at a situation like that and still think honest work is a must? Slave-tier morality. When I graduated from high school a few years ago, one of the last things our school principal told our cohort was to spend our lives doing honest work. Working honestly isn't more rewarding materially OR spiritually in this day and age under this system at all, so what value does it have? If it has no value, why do so many normies cling to it? I don't get how they are so tied to it.
Also normies are anything but honest in social situations.
My mum wants me to get a job so I brought up the possibility of it with her. She didn't tell me to not do it per se, but she certainly voiced her displeasure. She told me that there are surely other ways I could focus my creative energies, and that she was worried about me getting in trouble. I went and googled it, came back to her, and told her that it would only be misconduct in the eyes of the educational institution I was writing papers for a student of, so they couldn't touch me. She still didn't like the idea because it was "cheating" and "not the right thing to do".
I didn't understand why she cared that much about "the right thing to do". The vast majority of CEOs, successful entrepreneurs and billionaires all made it to where they are today after walking over thousands of people, cheating every single one of them out of something as they went. I brought up Mark Zuckerberg, whose creation was something that tens of thousands of other people could have done at the time with ease, and which was partly stolen from other people. My mother then brought up the fact that he has been sued for doing that, to which I brought up the fact that Zuckerberg was still rich af and his life had massively improved from cheating in a much more morally reprehensible way than writing essays for people who are essentially forced into education ever could be. She still wouldn't have it. I asked her why we are supposed to uphold "the right thing" when we live under a system which not only implicitly condones, but at the end of the day is also built around, cheating, and she just gave me "it's not the right thing to do" like a brick wall. I briefly tried to pull the moral relativism card on her but backed down when it felt too spergy.
I am not even mad at her, to an extent I can understand her having a salt of the Earth working-class moralfag point of view on cheating and gaming the system.
What I do not understand is how she can so thoroughly believe in upholding that point of view when the system she lives and works under is built around cheating people, including her. On this I am dumbfounded. The government and the upper tier members of the company she works for a franchise store of are guaranteed to be pieces of shit who became successful and keep their success afloat by milking those below them and using all sorts of underhanded tricks. How can somebody be so perfectly okay with living under a system rife with cheating and dishonesty, but at the same time be so dead-set on honest work for themselves and their family members?
It's a cucked as fuck mindset, you're essentially willing to let people screw you over in a million different barely-legal ways while you put in honest back-breaking work for them your entire life. How do you look at a situation like that and still think honest work is a must? Slave-tier morality. When I graduated from high school a few years ago, one of the last things our school principal told our cohort was to spend our lives doing honest work. Working honestly isn't more rewarding materially OR spiritually in this day and age under this system at all, so what value does it have? If it has no value, why do so many normies cling to it? I don't get how they are so tied to it.
Also normies are anything but honest in social situations.
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