tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38898685047976491802024-02-20T18:52:11.033-08:00Easy Online Jobs From HomeTo visit : http://profitwoop.com/ref.php?randcode=9876Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12306248021659065920noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3889868504797649180.post-8356392568268743012013-06-25T08:25:00.002-07:002013-06-25T08:25:25.699-07:00http://profitwoop.com/ref.php?randcode=9876<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
<strong>As one “dynamic young entrepeneur” actually said in a
business-news interview, “In an ideal world, you pay people nothing.” Do
we get it yet, that these are the “values” of Profit? Look at the
Profit addicts squatting on their trillions—collecting interest, making
credit scarce and costly, and workers more desperate. Do we get it yet,
that Profit (by its own business-periodical admission) is no longer
interested in America’s future? That Profiteers have just about had it
with the idea of paying wages at all? </strong><br />
<strong>Sure—It’s fundamental that workers with money to spend drive
the demand that creates more jobs, more growth. And since when does an
addict care about reality and consequences? In the first place, nothing
in nature grows forever, not a star, not a cell. Unlimited growth is a
2-word way to say “cancer.” Second—Why pay people (and tarnish those
record profits) when it’s so much easier to squeeze them down into an
ideal abject servitude? </strong><br />
<strong>If one quarter’s Profit has 10 years of consequences, so
what? It’s crazy-time again. For no investment in the world pays back
more than education: the average is $14 out for every $1 in, a profit
margin unheard-of in any other enterprise. And yet education (our most
crucial investment) is precisely the last of Profit’s plans. </strong><br />
<strong>If Profit is such a rational proposition, why do we keep
finding ourselves ass-backwards when we try to study it closely in the
contexts of known facts and observable common realities? No wonder our
heads spin with trying to figure out what’s happening to us.
Economically, the most advantageous kind of worker to employ is in fact
an educated one. And yet according to Profit’s own clear priorities,
somehow education is suspect—perhaps as an investment uniquely unlikely
to produce more Advantages for the Advantaged.</strong><br />
<strong>We look back, around and forward, we look here and there. And
once we understand what Profit is (a delusion that drives injustice),
the clues and pieces rush together toward a realization. The daily aim
of our present arrangement and the goal of this “progress” is an
ignorant, docile labor-force without memory or hope—captive,
self-policing and asleep on an eternal wheel of production and
consumption. To the benefit of an exclusive few.</strong><br />
<strong>People who live delusions and denials must either adjust
to reality, or start forcing the world to resemble their delusions. The
latter state is psychosis, meaning blind obsessive omni-destruction of
self and surroundings. The addiction to Profit is now so intense that
it’s devouring even its own functional basis (educated workers with
money and fruitful skills). We live the consequences, while Profit goes
on with a feast and a <em>danse-macabre</em> deep in its fortified fantasy-casino.</strong><br />
<strong>Only one thing measures the mastery of an addiction. You stop
doing it. Profit never will stop on its own. The point of power,
the nonviolent solution is on our end, in our hands, right in front of
us—Stop Participating. Stop feeding the addiction. <em>Walk out</em> on a
specious “rational selfishness,” which has reigned instead as the
tragically-crazy father of public progress—outstripping progress with a
walking nightmare history of needless slave-toil and destruction. </strong><br />
<strong>Archimedes said, “Give me the right fulcrum-point on which to
rest my lever, and I can move the world.” Our individual day’s work is
that point, and WOOP is the lever in our hands.</strong><br />
<strong><em>We who really work together are reality. Profit cannot survive without our work.</em></strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Right now, when the disadvantaged reach for resources beyond
Profit’s false reductive value of their work, its combined advantages
called Power act to stop them. So, as we consider WOOP action, let’s
remember:</strong><br />
<strong><em>We have a standing system of law and order</em></strong><strong> to back up the values we choose for our economic system. Law enforcement will also work <em>after</em> Profit to protect us (but in new ways, too) from the pathologically selfish and the irredeemably stupid.</strong><br />
<strong>Right now you cannot take from an ATM unless you have put
value into it. After Profit, you won’t need an ATM. You’ll just go to
the store with the card that proves you pulled your planetary weight at
work this week (that’s what your paycheck certifies now, nothing more is
necessary)—and meet your needs with your dignified good looks.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Respect the work of others as your own, and the world is yours, because it’s everybody’s. You and they produced it.</strong><br />
<strong>You can even still imagine that you’re better.</strong><br />
<strong>Maybe you think a world without Profit will make “everybody
the same.” Does that mean You will no longer be You, if other people who
work their best day enjoy equal rewards? What will happen to this You?</strong><br />
<strong>Can it be that without the ranked rewards rationed out by
Profit, you’d have no cause to develop or distinguish yourself? Without
those, no pride, no talents, no motive to work hard—no urge to create,
no reason to do the dirty, dull or dangerous work? </strong><br />
<strong>Maybe you see no fit reward for what you do except special
advantages, which other people (in your opinion) have not earned with
their same day’s work.</strong><br />
<strong><em>Who promised that if you worked hard, others would be denied many things as part of your reward?</em> Surely, you see the needless and odious injustice in such a proposition? Why, then, do we live according to it?</strong><br />
<strong>I assume you’re reading this in part because you want to
understand your own real daily values more clearly. Confident in your
values, you’re not afraid to hear about others. Please, then, articulate
the criteria by which you form your opinion that others don’t deliver
the same day’s work and value.</strong><br />
<strong>If you never have, or find that you really can’t, the criteria must be Profit’s.</strong><br />
<strong>It’s usually the advantaged who see, in the mirror, justice
and/or a merit system working just fine (under them) in a legitimate
republic. Plato (whose name in demotic Greek meant “Fatso”) wanted
everybody trained for war, and trained <em>to</em> war as the measure of
human virtue, while banishing the poets. The grotesquely pot-bellied
Saint Thomas Aquinas described a chief pleasure of The Blessed to enjoy
in his kind of Heaven: looking down into Hell.</strong><br />
<strong>If you find that you want to quit your work when there are no special rewards (beyond <em>your own equal access</em> to everything), quit. </strong><br />
<strong>Pull your weight with honor another way, where you really belong, as yourself <em>and</em>
as part of something greater. That’s where it’s at for both real living
and real respect. There always will be people who want the tough and
crazy work.</strong><br />
<strong>WOOP is a way to live for new reasons, truly yours.</strong></div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12306248021659065920noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3889868504797649180.post-34818921308138848402013-06-25T08:17:00.000-07:002013-06-25T08:17:21.072-07:00Easy Online jobs from home<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
<strong>The empire of Profit has come round-the-world home—to
“reduce,” colonize and impoverish every last working person on the
planet. This means you.</strong><br />
<strong>It’s time to get real with the same intensity as Profit. Our
human equality is outflanked by an economy whose core mechanism and
values undermine law and democracy, big and small. The systemic motto
has always been Profit At Any Cost. Now it qualifies also as an
ecological cancer killing Earth.</strong><br />
<strong>Don’t know what to do? Do nothing, play the game, and what we
call life (freedom) has little chance of survival—let alone of
thriving, as it should—because Profit increasingly builds its advantages
around and against the world’s human ideals.</strong><br />
<strong><em>We defeat ourselves</em></strong><strong> each day in the very terms by which we work—in the fine print of Profit, which tells us there is no other choice.</strong><br />
<strong>My aim on this Labor Day 2011 is to ask you to realize and act on fact. We are not trapped.</strong><br />
<strong><em><em>The value of our daily work is what </em><em>Profit must have. </em>The place where we work is the central point of power </em></strong><strong>to make change happen. Our power is always already in our hands. No one can take it away from us, unless we allow it.</strong><br />
<strong>WOOP (in 5000 words) proposes a sustained local and worldwide
cooperative action to reclaim the value of our work, and for the
creation of a work-based economy of equals. </strong><br />
<strong>A quick poll at the bottom here poses a key question. And I
hope you’ll read through before you’re finally certain of your answer.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Find the act that reclaims the real power of your own work,
help others to do so in that act, and working people win. On Earth there
is no greater power than every person’s share of work—when we bring it
together. </strong><br />
<strong>That is the soul of WOOP: informed, nonviolent, connected and
courageously human workers walking out on Profit, and into a world of
genuine equals—because of the integrity of each life’s daily work
(pulling your weight in the world). </strong><br />
<strong>Beyond that burden—which is actually <em>half or less</em> of what you work now every day—each of us knows how to live our own happiness in a heritage of common freedom. </strong><br />
<strong>By freedom, I mean no more or less than doing what you want
to do with most of each living day, doing no harm. By work, I mean tasks
you might not do if life were a fully-free ride, without demands for
survival and a sense of self-respect about pulling your weight. I feel
sure you’d choose a work-week of 20 hours over the present 40-plus, if
we could work it out. We can, but something’s in the way. Let’s go to
the root of what <em>profit</em> means.</strong><br />
<strong>Please note—Profit is a <em>practice</em>, not a person.
There is no reason to demonize, compel, or harm anybody. A Profiteer is
addicted to Profit. An addiction is that which you cannot keep from
doing, no matter how harmful, in spite of reason. Profit like addiction
must always have more. Willfully unconscious to consequences, it cannot
help but destroy.</strong><br />
<strong>WOOP presents nothing to believe in, and nothing to tear down
except one addictive illusion—that the work we each do, one day at a
time, rightly makes us un-equals in the world economy.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>If others’ deprivations must be part of your rewards for
work, reconsider. If you think you’ll lose your motive to work hard,
produce excellence and be creative when everybody has the same access to
the stores, read on. </strong><br />
<strong>If you think your work is harder or “worth more” than what
others contribute, and that you should get exclusive privileges and
rewards for it, please observe that A) Nobody can work more than one day
at a time; and, B) You chose your work. I feel sure that you don’t see
yourself as a martyr for the world’s well-being, that you wouldn’t want
to “obligate” anyone else into acts or situations against their will
because of choices you made for yourself.</strong><br />
<strong> Here’s the essential WOOP challenge:</strong><br />
<strong>1) Act to recognize and prove the equal value of your and all
others’ work; 2) Do your work well in half the compulsory time each
week; and, 3) Instead of a paycheck (which now proves that you worked
this week), take home an employer-certified card like the current
ATM-type—which henceforth gives you equal access to anything in the
store of worldwide production. </strong><br />
<strong>There’s no need for a nanny-state or “new world order”
computer-chip in your skin. WOOP works with the standing local and
macro-systems that we have—including the world’s best-ever chance to
create real justice, The Constitution of the United States. We only need
to change the engine’s core program, the reason and values by which we
participate in every day of work. </strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Open stores! Yes, people will go crazy at first, for awhile. </strong><br />
<strong>Yet, what happens with almost every thing we acquire? We want
it, work for it, get it, enjoy it, and then the glow and the thrill
wear off—especially as we see others also having it. </strong><br />
<strong>Thanks to the sexy, power-soaked mirages of Profit’s public
relations industry, it’s often too late in life when we realize that <em>things </em>don’t mean very much. People who wake up feel they have quit an addiction: <em>I wanted, I got, I grew bored, and then I wanted more</em>.
That’s all Profit really has to offer—life as a rat turning Profit’s
wheel, kept docile with rations, terror, bribe-sweets, and shiny
objects. </strong><br />
<strong>Question: If living already makes it clear that the one real
thing is how we cultivate and share ourselves—whether we live out the
potentials of being human and free in our own ways—<em>shouldn’t we be living those values now</em>?</strong><br />
<strong>Would <em>you</em> go crazy with greed in a world of open stores after WOOP? Or is it just “other people” who’d spoil it for everybody?</strong><br />
<strong>A life is both unique and meaningful in the web of life
because of its relationships with others. An equal day’s work enables
them all to live in their million ways. Instead, we’ve been living and
toiling under a myth that you produce your daily excellence only if
you’re driven by competitive fear; in a competition whose goal is either
unspeakable or unknown. No good hustler states his goal aloud, and no
truly representative “leader” can be incapable of stating it, since the
people they represent have said it first.</strong><br />
<strong>Work by the vast majority of people on Earth makes your life
work every day, as yours does theirs. Why would most people suddenly let
you down if their work brought them anything you can have?</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>We already prove our power with each day of work. Yet in
return we receive less freedom, more poverty. If that is the
(delusionary, backwards) case, is it not more realistic to expect real
and better results from the actual power of working people’s acts
together—where we are, with what we have and do? </strong><br />
<strong>What is more real (effective) than your work? Consider that, although constantly robbed, <em>you still have your full value for leverage</em>—tomorrow’s good day’s work.</strong><br />
<strong>Let’s take hold of a 10-year time frame. Ordinary planetary
citizen-observer that I am, I have ironic confidence that WOOP will
achieve its goal sooner than anything promised by world-class
governments and global business, for our last 10 years of dedication and
sacrifice to war and Profit. </strong><br />
<strong>WOOP takes back the freedom your real work creates.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Take perspective from a fundamental fact about human work.
Anthropological science reports that “primitive hunter-gatherers” spend
perhaps 15-20 hours a week at the work of meeting existential needs for
food, clothing and shelter. On that basis they do whatever they like for
the other 12 hours a day (with a good 8 hours’ sleep besides). </strong><br />
<strong>Yet, we of the “advanced” world, surrounded by work-savers
and conveniences, work three times as long per week in exchange for far
less (and decreasing) free time.</strong><br />
<strong>Why? What citizen of an advanced free society or economy would choose such a change in life’s requirements? </strong><br />
<strong><em>Economics </em></strong><strong>is the big word for our
daily direct exchange of work and value, which should be making
well-being and freedom more of an actuality for everyone. Something is
in the way (doubling-and-more the time we “have to” work)—so much so
that we work in the opposite direction.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<div align="center">
<strong>P</strong><strong>ROFIT</strong></div>
<strong>Your work (a product, a service) is a value you create and
deliver in exchange for things produced by the work of other people. The
<em>value</em> of work is its real power (from your time, strength,
skill and sweat) to accomplish and contribute something. With billions
of others you make the world work, exchanging work for “value-ables”
produced by everybody else.</strong><br />
<strong><em>Work is a formula: Something For Something.</em></strong><strong>
See you tomorrow. I do not have to like you, or be like you. You
worked, I worked. Now we share an equal right to receive from the world
and its “store” that we created. It’s one day at a time for everybody.
No one can do their job without help from others.</strong><br />
<strong><em>Something For Something </em></strong><strong>works as a
formula because, fundamentally, we recognize the value of each other’s
contribution to another successful planetary day. </strong><br />
<strong>Profit, on the other hand, is by definition <em>Something For Nothing</em>. </strong><br />
<strong>Consult your <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em>, the multi-volume work of impeccable etymology from which all other English lexicons derive.</strong><br />
<strong>What you find is that <em>profit</em> signifies <em>value gained</em> from an exchange<em> that you in no way put into the exchange</em>. Profit, by definition, signifies an unequal exchange of value. </strong><br />
<strong>You <em>profit</em> when you take more than you give. No mountain of expert economic theory changes this.</strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>After all, value that you take <em>beyond what you put in</em>
cannot come from nowhere. Behind every dollar of Profit is the other
guy with a shrinking stack of dimes. Somehow, by hook and crook, Profit
derives from somebody else’s work and value. </strong><br />
<strong>The earliest uses of <em>profit</em> in English speak to its injustice. Here’s one of the very first (<em>O.E.D. </em>1466): “A private profit hurts and harms a common well-being.” The editors of the <em>O.E.D.</em> were not social activists, or imagining a quaint organic merry old England.</strong><br />
<strong><em>Profit</em></strong><strong> has a cousin tangled in
among its root-words—“advantage,” which of course is a relative term.
Nothing from nothing. There can be no “advantage” to one side without a <em>dis-</em>advantage to someone else. </strong><br />
<strong><em>Advantage </em></strong><strong>is part of the <em>profit </em>family because it tries to signify the real-world <em>value</em> of what somebody gains by this corruption of exchange. </strong><br />
<strong>With advantages come more profits. More profits, more
advantages; and ever-on, more injustice, resentment and destruction,
until most people have nothing and a few control everything. </strong><br />
<div align="center">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>Where we are is only what Profit was long “designed” to
accomplish and produce. Nature and human beings are inconsequent
“externalities” to Profit’s formula. </strong><br />
<strong>This was precisely Profit’s original policy. It was nurtured
in late-medieval Europe under the bad sign of Biblical Monogenesis: a
sanctified grand delusion stating that only “we” (the insiders to
Profit) matter, as the planetary Chosen of “God Himself.” Its means and
ends were openly declared in documents sacred and secular as the rest of
the still-unknown planet rolled into the view of a predatory
Europe—which had gone bankrupt because of its Crusades. The one same
murderous hustle goes round and round.</strong><br />
<strong>Discover for yourself the full original horrifying language that blessed the new gentleman-conquistadors in Francis Jennings’ <em>The Invasion of America</em>.
The plan in their words was to force “perpetual slavery and profit” out
of anything alive “discovered” outside the crazy loop. </strong><br />
<strong>From these roots—a delusion of “free unlimited natural wealth
belonging to no creature that matters”—comes the spiraling destruction
that so resembles addiction. (Like capitalism, it really got started
when Europe took up American tobacco.) Chambers of Commerce and
conventional historians erected monuments around a third word connected
with the tangled roots of <em>profit</em>, speaking of its increasingly pathological centuries as <em>progress</em>.</strong><br />
<strong>Changing a healthy planet filled with independent peoples
into a poisoned one with a disadvantaged majority in 500 years cannot be
progress. But it certainly was by the Profit and Advantage of a few.</strong><br />
<strong>And from this, the Advantaged claim no inherited advantages? </strong><br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
<strong>***</strong></div>
<strong>No surprise that unequal, unfair exchange creates resentment.
Profit corrupts and exploits the basic relationship in the midst of our
real working lives.</strong><br />
<strong>Profit attacks the real equality of work when it assigns
different top-to-bottom values for each kind of it. Thus, you may take
from “the store” only according to the value that a self-interested
somebody else assigned to your work, in the numbers on your paycheck. </strong><br />
<strong>Those numbers do not reflect the full value of the work done.
They are cooked, by Profit’s interests “above” you on the pyramid, and
cooked according to yet another preposterously-unsustainable principle:
Give As Little And Take As Much As You Can Get Away With. </strong><br />
<strong>So, ironically—or rather, according to the illogic of
Profit—the higher you go, the less real productive work gets done (as if
only certain people are smart enough to make big decisions); and yet,
the higher the number that measures your access to all that gets
produced. The more people you give nothing, the greater your rewards.
Again we arrive at a backwards description of work’s real world. We know
it has to collapse.</strong><br />
<strong>Lies and violence (24/7, now) make this seem to work. Like
the scam of a hustler who’s got your money, it only needs to “work” one
day at a time until you’re dead. As another money motto puts it: In
every exchange, there’s a loser. If you’re wondering who that is, it’s
you.</strong></div>
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