Thought Experiment
You work for the only business of any substance in town. You make a nice income.
Your boss decides he needs to build a spite fence around a store all the way across town because it threatens his supply of some widget he needs to keep the company going, and he's afraid, terrified, if the price of that widget rises, he'll have to work harder to keep prices in check. Also, employees of another store have been seen shopping in his store, and those guys play rough. He tells you that you have to take a pay cut, because he and his friends will need to spend a lot of money building this defense and putting up a new security system around the shop, and his friends don't work cheap.
Do you agree quietly, or do you argue and protest that you need the money to put your kid through college?
Now, let's say that same boss comes to you and tells you that the janitor, George, is in deep trouble: his family can't afford food or medical care, his wife works two jobs, as does George, but they still can't make ends meet. He tells you that he needs to slice a tiny fraction of everyone's salary to help him stay at this job, because he works hard.
Do you agree quietly, or do you argue and protest that you need the money to put your kid through college?
This is 21st Century America, in a nutshell.
They say that as you get older, you lose strength. Boy, don't I know that feeling. I can't even carry a thought from the third floor to the basement anymore.
Next summer, I'm introducing an adult pool game to drown out those annoying kids: "PINO!" "GRIGIO!"
There are only two emotions that humans feel: love and fear.
Everything else is just a labeling of admixtures of these.
All original images and original text © 2014, 2015 Carl Salonen dba Creating Imagery