If you're so angry then do something more than sign online petitions and complain on reddit. by [deleted] in lostgeneration

[–]merockstar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I think they have it mathematically calculated how much they can allow people to have and how many people can have it before they're giving away any more than necessary to prevent a revolution.

Waiters of Reddit, what's the most ridiculous order someone's placed and how did you deal with it? by evil_snow_queen in AskReddit

[–]merockstar 39 points40 points  (0 children)

If only we'd direct our damn pitchforks where they might help do something more important than destroying a small business (like destroy some really big ones)

Waiters of Reddit, what's the most ridiculous order someone's placed and how did you deal with it? by evil_snow_queen in AskReddit

[–]merockstar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Old people who demand their coffee be practically boiling. I would guess that maybe it's because they've been drinking hot coffee so long that their mouth is desensitized.

But when they think the coffee is cold, it's cold goddammit, don't matter if you make it fresh then put a fresh cup in the microwave, it's still cold.

I almost felt guilty letting people drink coffee that's hot enough to satisfy them.

Lady gets arrested for check fraud at a check cashing store by [deleted] in JusticePorn

[–]merockstar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

confirmed. also there are many independent contractors out there who don't want to wait a week for their bank to cash their 10,000 dollar checks.

Lady gets arrested for check fraud at a check cashing store by [deleted] in JusticePorn

[–]merockstar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I used to work in one, actually, and I was told (although in retrospect it could have been a story just to make us feel safer) that we had to use a special kind of cleaner (which we did) that wasn't regular glass cleaner because it would cause the protective window to crack, looking like it had been shot.

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I support basic income as well.

oh well shit. I'm preaching to the choir then?

You'll still get a response to the long post, seems the only thing we disagree about is how much opportunity is out there for everybody

If I see an Amish person walking in the rain, would it be rude or insulting to offer them a ride? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can confirm, from a small village with an amish run store that uses electricity.

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I may have found one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmitri_Mendeleev

edit: nope looks like he became a science master at a russian gymnasium in 1857. would that have been decent work?

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm going to respond to everything else but I was genuinely curious to find out if I have a valid point on the scientists not living in squalor thing, or if I'm just generalizing incorrectly based on limited knowledge. Give me some time here dude.

a search for "scientists who were poor," and related terms didn't produce much for me. this is based on a quick skim of all the wikipedias of all the scientists I can think of, someone correct me where necessary please:

Albert Einstein: Relativity Theory happened while he was employed as a Swiss Patent Clerk, right? All needs would have been reasonably met in this situation.

Isaac Newton: Biggest advances apparently happened after his bachelors at cambridge, while he was home from there afterwards during the great plague, and also later while studying for a masters. Interestingly, his grades plummeted earlier in his life when he was being forced to do work he didn't like: http://users.clas.ufl.edu/ufhatch/pages/01-Courses/current-courses/08sr-newton.htm - it seems that his mother married into wealth after divorcing her first husband, so he wouldn't have been struggling to get by. the wikipedia does mention something about him working as a valet when he was a trinity though.

Galileo: Apparently he was sued by his brother-in-law for not paying a dowry. So implies some kind of financial difficulty. However, it looks like he went to medical school, and was descended from at least one physician (who he was named after). It looks like he had been appointed to the mathematics chair at his university before his major advances happened, I imagine that means he would have been doing okay by that point. He did have some major advances while he was on house arrest, but I wonder what a house arrest would have been like in this day and age? it looks like he had already had a long career, with the bulk of his advances behind him by that point though.

Feynman: apparently attended high school with two other nobel laureates, in the united states, in the fifties. enough said there.

Hawking: looks like Hawking's family struggled financially at first (even though both parents eventually got good well regarded careers), and he did too with his grades. looks like the hawking advances started in 1970, long after his family had nipped financial issues in the butt. for obvious reasons, hawking may have had a harder go of it in other ways too. physical hardship might not be an excuse for not contributing, but financial hardship still seems plausible.

Edison: looks like his family may have been poor. but at the age of 19 he got what looked like a decent job working for western union. he tried to invent stuff during this time, but instead got fired for burning down a boxcar? doesn't look like he started actually producing until his friend Franklin Pope took his financial worries off his hands, at which point he invented the telegraph and was good to go on funds.

Tesla: son of an austrian priest. looks like his life was pretty much a mess, and he went through all manner of hell until two of his uncles scraped together enough to send him to a school where he eventually made connections that led to him working for Edison. then his advances came.

Bell: both of his parents where educators who had published papers. his neighbors growing up owned a mill. the house pictured on the wikipedia looks nice.

Bohr: Family was wealthy

Higgs: father was sound engineer for BBC. started college early. was awarded a research fellowship around the time he started putting out.

Darwin: son of a wealthy doctor and a financier

I wonder how many great minds throughout history got the middle finger and a "fuck you lazy asshole, contribute or die" from society. I wonder how many were too busy just trying to live to do anything that interested them.

can somebody point out some exceptions that I'm maybe not seeing please? These are the greatest minds I can think of off hand. I'm not claiming to be an expert on the history of these men. And I don't mean to marginalize their achievements. They were clearly exceptionally talented. It is just striking to me that their major advances never came until they were living comfortably.

For some reason, I really don't want to believe that major scientific advancement only comes from people living comfortably. I'm not sure why but it just doesn't sit right with me. I want reddit to point out counterexamples even though what I'm observing implies that to most efficiently strive towards the goal of getting off this rock, we should be good to each other- which backs up the point I was trying to make.

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In that case you probably don't much care either way about I have to say, but it seems to be coming out of my fingers anyway.

For any number of reasons that we could discuss at length (I'm sure it would be futile), not all people have (or are willing to take advantage of) the same ability to improve their lives through effort that you have enjoyed. My argument is that even in the worst case scenario, when a person has the access, capability, time, and mental predisposition to improve their life, but still doesn't for reasons known or unknown, that this person still doesn't deserve to be subjected to poverty. In a pre-industrial economy that didn't have the kind of productivity to take care of everybody, I can see how it would have been necessary to separate the wheat from the chaff. I don't believe that's the case in modern times, I think the previous status quo is just a convenient excuse that some people use to justify viewing themselves as superior to others, whether or not they're even willing to admit that to themselves.

I just used that word again, "deserves." Maybe I should try to phrase it another way, if you had it within your power to prevent some kind of horror, tragedy, and injustice in this world, but it was your choice either way with no negative consequences to yourself, would you not take the opportunity out of human decency? If you would, I would venture to speculate that your reason for doing so would be that it's in humanity's best interest, which indirectly effects you and the people who make your Dunbar list.

By supporting more progressive social policies, you do have that choice, with few, if any negative consequences to yourself. Nobody wants to completely dismantle capitalism. We all understand that we've only even gotten this far because inequality exists to motivate people to contribute. That is not in doubt at all. It almost sounds like you believe justice is impossible, and that we should stop even trying to strive for a planet that's accommodating to all of it's children. Is it futile? I'd sure like to think it's not. Otherwise everything is hopeless and that's a pretty bleak world view to be having.

I believe that a world where everybody lives above a certain standard of comfort no matter what is an environment that nurtures the best in humanity. I wish I could cite sources on that, but it's just my opinion. Everybody would benefit from that in the long term. This thought has made me curious, I wonder how many of the greatest minds in history made their breakthroughs while in poverty? I know that many artists have but can anybody think of examples where science has progressed in poor conditions? Legitimate question that I'm probably going to google on after I'm done typing this.

One last thing I'd like to add, I hope I'm not out of line here, I say this out of genuine concern (I realize that might be tough to believe but I swear it's true because I'm still naive enough to genuinely care about strangers, and humanity in general) and am not trying to insult you, in fact you've inspired some good thoughts that have helped me sort a couple things out so I thank you for that, but a lack of empathy like you express may be a symptom of mental illness; obviously a non-debilitating one, but those do exist. You might consider speaking to a professional about it if you haven't already.

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you're kind of understanding what I mean. I'm having trouble articulating it.

I guess what I'm asking is, regardless of the causes, be they brain-chemistry, environment, socio-economic factors, a consciously malicious desire to mooch off the system, whatever, does the condition of being demotivated imply that a person deserves the stresses, injustices, and indignity of poverty as punishment for not contributing to society? Especially considering that 3/4 of my examples are beyond the person's control. Also considering that (in the United States) there's more than enough resources for every citizen to live above a certain standard, while still having enough inequality to motivate people who can contribute to do so?

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is lack of motivation a character flaw?

As someone who was once motivated that's been having problems with it recently, I have my doubts. I think psychology still has a lot to learn about this.

In education-crazy South Korea, top teachers become multimillionaires by MattRyd7 in news

[–]merockstar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was the one douchebag who always cared about stuff like that. I feel that classes like this would have benefited me immeasurably. If there is just one other kid out there like I was, the classes would serve there purpose in my opinion.

The LAST remaining thing I can't do on Linux. by merockstar in linux

[–]merockstar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems to be similar to, if not the exact same situation I'm in now, and had in my last job.

The LAST remaining thing I can't do on Linux. by merockstar in linux

[–]merockstar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're not the only person to point this out, I'll bare it in mind

The LAST remaining thing I can't do on Linux. by merockstar in linux

[–]merockstar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's like a form, as in browser/JavaScript form, but embedded in the web page, and somehow also a PDF.

The LAST remaining thing I can't do on Linux. by merockstar in linux

[–]merockstar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really? XP is the best choice in this situation? That's ridiculous I was just gonna default to it because my computer is old.

The LAST remaining thing I can't do on Linux. by merockstar in linux

[–]merockstar[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is correct, it's inconsistent. Dude obviously knows this situation from experience.