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#1
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My splinter? hahaha!
Oh Please! Maybe I should just copy and paste someone else's opinion and call it my own. As you do, for example. Your MO seems to consist mainly of piggy-backing on what others are saying. This is America pal, surely you can afford your own thoughts. I've read your work too, and no offense, but I don't think I'll be worrying about your opinion anytime soon. Ironically, I agreed with many of D'Souza's points. Still, you are saying I must agree with everything he says, or risk your reprisals? Are you one of those folks who cannot even be agreed with? Well, such is life (at least, in America). Scout "jlrogers" wrote I've seen you miss the point before, but this time you missed it while simultaneously surrounding it with your ass. It must 'ave slipped 'tween your cheeks and tickled your splinter. "Scout" wrote in message ... I've heard Dinesh D'Souza speak, and I like most of what he says. However, when he speaks of plumbers and waiters and other such workers, and is in awe that they have some cash and some rights, he also needs to know that it was plumbers and waiters construction workers who fought, suffered, and often died to make America what it is today. We now live in a country where construction workers regularly pay $4 for a nonfat latte where maids drive nice cars, and where plumbers take their families on vacation to Europe. - Which is how it should be. "I really want to live in a country where the poor people are fat." - this is true no country has created a better ladder than America for people to ascend from modest circumstances to success. - this is true Work and trade are respectable in America - They deserve respect, but America still looks down on the tradespeople, big mistake. This is not true in some other places, like Germany, where the trades are honored. In America, we send our academically failing students, behavior problems, malcontents, and social misfits to the Vocational high schools to learn a trade. It is only the trade unions who are seeing through this farce, and they recruit new members not from vocational high schools, but from colleges. Trade Union members are told to not send their children to vocational high schools. How sad this is that the educational systems has *******ized an ancient and proven system of apprenticing. In the American view, there is nothing vile or degraded about serving your customers either as a CEO or as a waiter. - Unfortunately, neither is likely to get good service. Try dealing with the IRS, any insurance agency, any governmental agency, any business with more than 50 employees. Good luck. Indeed America is the only country in the world where we call the waiter "sir," as if he were a knight. - I was a waiter when I was a young college student, so I can't agree with this one. People, especially our visiting neighbors from New York, treated us like ****. Then they typically stiffed us for a tip. Meanwhile, food workers make less than minimum wage. For all his riches, Bill Gates could not approach the typical American and say, "Here's a $100 bill. I'll give it to you if you kiss my feet." Most likely the person would tell Gates to go to hell! - He should visit Times Square, people are doing a lot more than kiss feet for a lot less money. Scout |
#2
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Touché, oh sphincter breath. However, agreement, or disagreement, is moot when the point is missed. And you couldn't find a piano
in the bathroom. "Scout" wrote in message ... My splinter? hahaha! Oh Please! Maybe I should just copy and paste someone else's opinion and call it my own. As you do, for example. Your MO seems to consist mainly of piggy-backing on what others are saying. This is America pal, surely you can afford your own thoughts. I've read your work too, and no offense, but I don't think I'll be worrying about your opinion anytime soon. Ironically, I agreed with many of D'Souza's points. Still, you are saying I must agree with everything he says, or risk your reprisals? Are you one of those folks who cannot even be agreed with? Well, such is life (at least, in America). Scout "jlrogers" wrote I've seen you miss the point before, but this time you missed it while simultaneously surrounding it with your ass. It must 'ave slipped 'tween your cheeks and tickled your splinter. "Scout" wrote in message ... I've heard Dinesh D'Souza speak, and I like most of what he says. However, when he speaks of plumbers and waiters and other such workers, and is in awe that they have some cash and some rights, he also needs to know that it was plumbers and waiters construction workers who fought, suffered, and often died to make America what it is today. We now live in a country where construction workers regularly pay $4 for a nonfat latte where maids drive nice cars, and where plumbers take their families on vacation to Europe. - Which is how it should be. "I really want to live in a country where the poor people are fat." - this is true no country has created a better ladder than America for people to ascend from modest circumstances to success. - this is true Work and trade are respectable in America - They deserve respect, but America still looks down on the tradespeople, big mistake. This is not true in some other places, like Germany, where the trades are honored. In America, we send our academically failing students, behavior problems, malcontents, and social misfits to the Vocational high schools to learn a trade. It is only the trade unions who are seeing through this farce, and they recruit new members not from vocational high schools, but from colleges. Trade Union members are told to not send their children to vocational high schools. How sad this is that the educational systems has *******ized an ancient and proven system of apprenticing. In the American view, there is nothing vile or degraded about serving your customers either as a CEO or as a waiter. - Unfortunately, neither is likely to get good service. Try dealing with the IRS, any insurance agency, any governmental agency, any business with more than 50 employees. Good luck. Indeed America is the only country in the world where we call the waiter "sir," as if he were a knight. - I was a waiter when I was a young college student, so I can't agree with this one. People, especially our visiting neighbors from New York, treated us like ****. Then they typically stiffed us for a tip. Meanwhile, food workers make less than minimum wage. For all his riches, Bill Gates could not approach the typical American and say, "Here's a $100 bill. I'll give it to you if you kiss my feet." Most likely the person would tell Gates to go to hell! - He should visit Times Square, people are doing a lot more than kiss feet for a lot less money. Scout |
#3
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How would you know if I missed the point, or for that matter what the point
really is? And btw, when you throw something out there, particularly something you didn't even bother to write yourself, then just be quiet, be patient, and listen to what comes back. Ever fancy that an American might have some legitimate feelings, based on personal experiences, about what it means to labor, sacrifice, and live in America? Or do you suppose that only Indians are experts on Americans? Had you paused to cogitate, you might have considered the fact that I have heard D'Souza speak at length, and might have formulated a different take on his perspective than you gleaned from the blurb you pasted in here. And I'm not even disagreeing with his thesis for God's sake! So listen up Admiral Splinter, I think you can be saved in spite of your narrow views and rude ways, but you must read this quotation aloud, or nothing good can come of this. Ok? Ready? "From now on, the point is whatever Scout says it is!" Did you say it? Yes? Good Boy! Scout p.s. It shouldn't surprise anyone that you'd keep a piano in the bathroom, it would explain the splinters in your sphincter. A fluffy cover would make a nifty stool softener. Touché Douché "jlrogers" wrote in message . .. Touché, oh sphincter breath. However, agreement, or disagreement, is moot when the point is missed. And you couldn't find a piano in the bathroom. "Scout" wrote in message ... My splinter? hahaha! Oh Please! Maybe I should just copy and paste someone else's opinion and |
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