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RageFuel A Brief Word About "Entitlement"

Eremetic

Eremetic

Neo Luddite • Unknown
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Joined
Oct 25, 2023
Posts
3,780
When people think of the word "entitled" or "entitlement", they usually think of a spoiled brat who is needy. However, entitlement is something we're all endowed with, think of food, a roof over your head, transportation, oxygen, right to life. We should not go as far as saying we're not allowed to have those things, especially in a post-capitalist society. Many people go homeless every year because some "landlord" thinks they're not entitled to shelter. Many people go hungry every year because someone thought they shouldn't be entitled to nourishment. Women will abort their kids because the whore thinks the kid isn't "entitled" to life. These harsh realities reflect how words like "entitlement" affect our everyday perception of the haves and have nots. Would you like it if someone said "hey stop breathing, you're not entitled to oxygen" or "hey you need to be killed, you're not entitled to live". Pretty disgusting right? Even then now the elites are thinking of taxing the air we breath because they think we leave too large of a carbon footprint, that we're not "entitled" to the earth's resources because we came, we conquered and won the race to the top of the food chain. Just foul. On the other hand the very idea that someone is not entitled to "lovemaking" or "sex" is ludicrous considering its the very essential element to life, something that brings new life to the fore and replaces those deceased. One person is born, another dies. So why deny a man's natural reproductive access? Because women can be vindictive creatures. They hate the idea of helping out their fellow men. Nowadays so many women are lesbians its amazing they have any use for men. The right to life coincides with the right to sex. Entitlement isn't just fair and equal (like most egalitarians will take a big game about) its necessary for people to live comfortably and not fear whether they starve, lose their residence, or die. these are basic rights, and since sex coincides with life, those should also be part of the equation as well. Now something such as sex-for-pleasure is an example of "non-productive labor", certain things are necessities that transcend any value market-wise, I think that the concept of "entitlement" is a concept that needs criticized heavily for its implications on society. Things such as food, water, housing, transportation exceed the "profit-motive", so does sex, and before anyone says it, sex is why you're here, so there's no need to put a "price" on it, whether legal or economical. In one of my debates, someone mentioned broadway plays and things such as making movies, videogames, writing fiction novels. Well, these things have "end products" that come out of a creative drive. Doing something that is supposed to have a "creative drive" that doesn't produce "end-products" or "productive labor" is an exercise in futility, as its just hedonism. To bring it all together, sex should only be a legal right, but something that creates an "end-product". Sex for the sake of sex is something that produces nothing but momentary pleasure, that is not something that is useful to society at large, such as art, children, a service, or something useful like a lawnmower or an automobile or something like a road or school. a "creative act" must produce something of value.
 
> a brief word

> ''When people think of the word "entitled" or "entitlement", they usually think of a spoiled brat who is needy. However, entitlement is something we're all endowed with, think of food, a roof over your head, transportation, oxygen, right to life. We should not go as far as saying we're not allowed to have those things, especially in a post-capitalist society. Many people go homeless every year because some "landlord" thinks they're not entitled to shelter. Many people go hungry every year because someone thought they shouldn't be entitled to nourishment. Women will abort their kids because the whore thinks the kid isn't "entitled" to life. These harsh realities reflect how words like "entitlement" affect our everyday perception of the haves and have nots. Would you like it if someone said "hey stop breathing, you're not entitled to oxygen" or "hey you need to be killed, you're not entitled to live". Pretty disgusting right? Even then now the elites are thinking of taxing the air we breath because they think we leave too large of a carbon footprint, that we're not "entitled" to the earth's resources because we came, we conquered and won the race to the top of the food chain. Just foul. On the other hand the very idea that someone is not entitled to "lovemaking" or "sex" is ludicrous considering its the very essential element to life, something that brings new life to the fore and replaces those deceased. One person is born, another dies. So why deny a man's natural reproductive access? Because women can be vindictive creatures. They hate the idea of helping out their fellow men. Nowadays so many women are lesbians its amazing they have any use for men. The right to life coincides with the right to sex. Entitlement isn't just fair and equal (like most egalitarians will take a big game about) its necessary for people to live comfortably and not fear whether they starve, lose their residence, or die. these are basic rights, and since sex coincides with life, those should also be part of the equation as well. Now something such as sex-for-pleasure is an example of "non-productive labor", certain things are necessities that transcend any value market-wise, I think that the concept of "entitlement" is a concept that needs criticized heavily for its implications on society. Things such as food, water, housing, transportation exceed the "profit-motive", so does sex, and before anyone says it, sex is why you're here, so there's no need to put a "price" on it, whether legal or economical. In one of my debates, someone mentioned broadway plays and things such as making movies, videogames, writing fiction novels. Well, these things have "end products" that come out of a creative drive. Doing something that is supposed to have a "creative drive" that doesn't produce "end-products" or "productive labor" is an exercise in futility, as its just hedonism. To bring it all together, sex should only be a legal right, but something that creates an "end-product". Sex for the sake of sex is something that produces nothing but momentary pleasure, that is not something that is useful to society at large, such as art, children, a service, or something useful like a lawnmower or an automobile or something like a road or school. a "creative act" must produce something of value.''
 
> a brief word

> ''When people think of the word "entitled" or "entitlement", they usually think of a spoiled brat who is needy. However, entitlement is something we're all endowed with, think of food, a roof over your head, transportation, oxygen, right to life. We should not go as far as saying we're not allowed to have those things, especially in a post-capitalist society. Many people go homeless every year because some "landlord" thinks they're not entitled to shelter. Many people go hungry every year because someone thought they shouldn't be entitled to nourishment. Women will abort their kids because the whore thinks the kid isn't "entitled" to life. These harsh realities reflect how words like "entitlement" affect our everyday perception of the haves and have nots. Would you like it if someone said "hey stop breathing, you're not entitled to oxygen" or "hey you need to be killed, you're not entitled to live". Pretty disgusting right? Even then now the elites are thinking of taxing the air we breath because they think we leave too large of a carbon footprint, that we're not "entitled" to the earth's resources because we came, we conquered and won the race to the top of the food chain. Just foul. On the other hand the very idea that someone is not entitled to "lovemaking" or "sex" is ludicrous considering its the very essential element to life, something that brings new life to the fore and replaces those deceased. One person is born, another dies. So why deny a man's natural reproductive access? Because women can be vindictive creatures. They hate the idea of helping out their fellow men. Nowadays so many women are lesbians its amazing they have any use for men. The right to life coincides with the right to sex. Entitlement isn't just fair and equal (like most egalitarians will take a big game about) its necessary for people to live comfortably and not fear whether they starve, lose their residence, or die. these are basic rights, and since sex coincides with life, those should also be part of the equation as well. Now something such as sex-for-pleasure is an example of "non-productive labor", certain things are necessities that transcend any value market-wise, I think that the concept of "entitlement" is a concept that needs criticized heavily for its implications on society. Things such as food, water, housing, transportation exceed the "profit-motive", so does sex, and before anyone says it, sex is why you're here, so there's no need to put a "price" on it, whether legal or economical. In one of my debates, someone mentioned broadway plays and things such as making movies, videogames, writing fiction novels. Well, these things have "end products" that come out of a creative drive. Doing something that is supposed to have a "creative drive" that doesn't produce "end-products" or "productive labor" is an exercise in futility, as its just hedonism. To bring it all together, sex should only be a legal right, but something that creates an "end-product". Sex for the sake of sex is something that produces nothing but momentary pleasure, that is not something that is useful to society at large, such as art, children, a service, or something useful like a lawnmower or an automobile or something like a road or school. a "creative act" must produce something of value.''
:hax:
 
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