He's not land
Or just look at them and start to increasingly look more and more sad that you're reminded by your recently deceased friend. Then eventually break down completely and run out of the room.
Regulations for everything would not allow the greedy pigs to make their own rules. What you're asking for is that they gain some sort of heart and start valuing something other than their products. That won't happen. I really think regulation is a better plan because it's creating laws that cap profits. Then we can hit em with their own medicine and up the minimum wage too. Maybe even put a maximum wage out there.
Maybe I've seen too much star trek and I'm believing that the socialist/communist utopia exists out there someday. Maybe I'm crazy. All I know for sure is I don't like the hand I was delt and it's way too hard to fold.
Getting paid better would be nice, but that will just bring the middle class closer to poverty. I've been a part of this community for a few years now and I have been fighting for better wages this whole time. But the biggest pain to me is inflation. Things keep costing more and more, but I keep making the same amount of money. Wouldn't price regulations be a better solution to all of this to all of this? Not trying to start a fight, but looking for a slight skew from the topic.
You, me, and hundreds of thousands of others according to YouTube.
It's time to come back to the light. I'm soon making the switch to Linux for good. I was waiting for gaming to become much more accessible... But I was messing up before because I was downloading the wrong drivers.
I've been learning how to use it by keeping my main machine on win10 while my laptop is on pop os. Using that to test my games and learn.
I've been using it long enough that once I get a good break from life, I'll be going thru the steps to switch my gaming PC over.
First story driven game to fully immerse me since New Vegas. I'm about 15 hours deep and I'm not even scratching the surface.
New Vegas? that's possibly my favorite as well.
Ratchet and clank?
I had a shower thought this morning:
At a certain point in capitalism, a wealthy person can get enough money to live comfortably the rest of your life. If you decide to continue to grow your wealth from there, you're essentially not just making money for yourself, but so others can't have it.
I have a feeling that number is well below a billion, but I'm no economist.