Anonymous ID: 60522d March 2, 2023, 7:08 a.m. No.18433499   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3516

>>18433404

>>18433410

>>18433419

Most people don't love money, but have a "Stockholm Syndrome" relationship with it. Without money, you can't have a spouse, kids, a house, transportation, niceties, help others, feed yourself or your family, or buy that expensive vibrator for your wife while you're out of town on work trips. So while most people don't "love" money, the relationship with have with it is essentially slavery, and we fight others endlessly to protect what money we have because "I earned it, it's mine". Which isn't an unreasonable position to have considering how rigged every fucking thing is, and without it, you basically don't have a life at all.

 

So yeah, Money, not necessarily the love of it, is the root of all evil. The love of it is just 10x worse than money itself.

Anonymous ID: 60522d March 2, 2023, 8 a.m. No.18433746   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18433516

Drawing a comparison between "Guns don't kill people, People kill people" and the affect that a faulty, nepotistic, keynesian, shifty, currency backed essentially by human trafficking and C_A drug trade has nothing to do with "learn how to be a better investor". Just because the system is workable for a successful few doesn't mean it's ethical. The current system of money is broken, detestable, and unethical. And as has been shown, lately, is used to quash dissent and open conversation even among those that trust where they get their information from because their messages are relatable to their values. What makes it even worse is the people giving voice to those relatable ideas know this about money, and still play along with it because "might as well rake it in while the game works this way".

 

Again, it's Stockholm Syndrome. It's unhealthy.