Thoughts On The Nature Of Ingratitude

Online dating sparks debate in the manosphere. Some swear by it, others hate it. Tuthmosis recently acknowledged the merits of online dating. Western Cancer later countered that it hamstrings game. Both men make well-reasoned and valid arguments.

Online game is not perfect. It is true that you are unlikely to find many 9s or 10s online. It can also become a huge waste of time and energy if done improperly. It is not appropriate for all men. And it can hurt your game if used as an excuse to avoid approaching women in real life.

But you can get laid online consistently with minimal effort. Having a good system in place is crucial to success. It helps to approach it as a business. I like to make a game out of it, challenging myself to pull new women online efficiently.

Here are five ways I have personally improved my online dating efforts:

1. Macros

I cannot take credit for this online dating idea. Macros make online dating much more efficient. Download and install a macro program into your browser. Spend a few minutes creating and recording custom messages. After that, you just hit one button and quickly send your standard email to each new girl. This drastically cuts down on keystrokes and eliminates copy pasting.

2. Dating Apps

You may want to send openers from your phone. In this case, the standard free smart phone app for each individual dating site works well. Use that with an app like ColorNote. Save your custom messages in note form and then copy/paste your emails from your phone. This method is not as good as using macros on your PC, but it is much quicker than typing on your phone.

3. Email At Work

This applies to those who still work for someone else. Stick it to the Man. Set aside a few minutes each day to shoot off openers. Use boring meetings or cubicle down time as an opportunity to send emails. Focus on contacting girls who are “online now.” They obviously tend to respond more quickly and can be open to same night meet-ups.

4. Stack Your Dates

This is an effective way of planning dates. Schedule your dates back-to-back. Keep the two venues close by and leave a half hour cushion in between. Ride the momentum from one date into the next. Every time I have stacked two dates in one night, I have banged at least one of the girls. Stacking two dates in one night creates a real abundance mentality that is hard to fake. It also gives you an excuse to cut the date short if needed.

5. The Local Coffee Shop

I sometimes use bars for first dates. But I’ve been most successful meeting women at coffee houses for first dates. Avoid national chains; look for local shops close to your place instead. Many serve beer and wine. Coffee shops are usually cheaper than bars and will sometimes have evening happy hours. Timing your dates for this will reduce your overall cost per lay.

Online dating is not perfect, and not all men will find it useful. I agree it should probably not be your only source of new women. But, with a proper system in place, it can become an important part of your dating and seduction efforts.

Read More: 6 Types Of Guys Who Try To Get Laid Online

92 thoughts on “Thoughts On The Nature Of Ingratitude”

  1. I like this. The Koreans should show gratitude to the Japanese. And the blacks should show gratitude to whites. Both Blacks and Koreans benefited from being colonized, yet both groups seem to have forgotten that and instead focus on how they were treated “unfairly”.

    1. Just like bitches. They are never grateful for what the beta guy does for them. He gets friend-zoned and used for her sole benefit.

    2. “The Koreans should show gratitude to the Japanese.”
      Are you serious? Even Koreans that I personally know rather feel rightfully offended at that notion. Seriously, you sound like a denialist for the 731 and Militarist Japan, and not to mention how even pre-Cold War Japan actively and deliberately aimed to replace native Korean culture with their own.
      So, you’re still buying the forever debunked WWII propaganda, “Asia for Asians”? Newsflash: Japan has a low opinion of itself, to the point they much rather apply for membership to the European Union than any given Asian alliance. There’s a reason why Japan also emulated Social Darwinism and integrated it into their national propaganda, to the point the WWII Japanese government emulated inhumane acts, which they committed via 731.
      “And the blacks should show gratitude to whites.”
      That’s a mixed bag at best, especially when the American black community parallels their American white counterpart, social economic status for social economic status.
      “Both Blacks and Koreans benefited from being colonized, yet both groups seem to have forgotten that and instead focus on how they were treated “unfairly”.”
      Now that’s just asinine, especially when cultural uprooting is heavily used in both cases.

  2. People don’t show gratitude for government’s protection? On what planet? I’m a vet and generally hide that fact in real life because people will not stop from endlessly thanking me for my service. Seriously it was nice the first few times, but has grown repetitive and stale. Sincere or not I do not know, but they certainly cannot stop squawking on about thanking me. Then every holiday, including ones that are by nature anti-martial in nature (Easter, Christmas) you can’t get away from the constant groveling before the military.

    1. Yes, that makes me uncomfortable too. The more irritating thing is when they ask why I didn’t serve 20. More power to the men who can make it through a career, I know I couldn’t have. Too many small minded people, too much bureaucracy, careerism, and hypocrisy.

      1. Another Vet here. Its amazing how people always ask you why you didn’t give more.
        As a Gold Star family member, I tell them I gave enough.

      2. I’m straight up about that with anybody: “Because I’m a rugged individualist, a traditional American. I don’t mind contributing to the common defense, but I don’t want to spend my life answering to a man who could not make a career higher than janitor outside of the military.”

    2. It’s part of the PC narrative though. Most of those lavishing praise on the US Armed Forces wouldn’t be doing so without being conditioned to and are not acting out of genuine respect. Kind of like we all have to pretend blacks aren’t a complete drag on US society even though we all know the reality is they are.

      1. Yeah, clearly it’s conditioning. To what end it serves, I really don’t know.
        Oddly, and this just occured to me, I don’t see many or any female “vets” being thanked outside of corporate PC commercials. Which hey, ok, but it’s strange as I consider it.

        1. They aren’t in a combat MOS so almost none of them deserve any recognition. That goes for nearly any non-combat MOS though.

        2. Most working in logistics do nothing more than a civilian. I know from personal experience as an 18C as well as now working in a logistics company. Outside of combat MOSs, most military positions could be contracted out to private contractors. Furthermore, most POGs assume almost no risk and expect to be treated as if they were frontline warriors.

        3. 1. Vast majority of contractors working logistics for the military are former service members who did the job in uniform. (Reason why they were hired: experience.)
          2. Contractors can quit whenever they want. If I get pissed at my boss, I can just leave. (Try fighting a war that way.)
          3. Contractors can charge whatever they want. Not many people are willing to go into a war zone just for the sake of money. Case in point: the guy pulling gate guard at Camp Arifjan in Kuwait makes $120,000 a year.
          4. Now that Sequester is here to stay. How are you going to pay for all of your support?

        4. Contractors are cheaper over the long run. Probably cheapest would be GS workers as they don’t have as high of benefit structures. Either way, we don’t need uniform personnel for POG positions. They can also be fired unlike service members so replacing incompetent ones is far easier, especially given the salary they command.

    3. This issue confuses me. I’m from a long line of military and have a brother who is serving (I avoided service like the plague based on my father’s advice). I have lots of friends who are former military. My father, who is a vet and very active in vet organizations and military history, thanks any vet he meets and actively encourages others to do it. When I hear somebody is a vet I don’t normally do the thanking thing. It just feels awkward – I don’t know that person from Adam. Am I just an asshole?

      1. No, exactly, you’re just a normal person. I get the backlash against the 1970’s “soldier hate” thing, but it has swung way too far. If I want to thank a vet, and I only do this for WW2 or earlier, I buy them a meal and leave anonymously with a note thanking them. Or whatever. The whole uniform worship thing bugs this shit out of me.
        Hey, happy new year Gundog.

  3. “We frequently hear criticism of our government. How frequently do we hear sincere gratitude for the protection it provides?”
    Gratitute is given when it is deserved. The same with respect- you have to give it to get it.
    Government has abandoned its people. Not just in America, but nearly every country as well. Government has corrupted the entire economic and legal system and is responsible for the suffering of the masses. They will help the rich elites, banks, corporations and will do everything in its corrupt power to ensure that the masses are deprived of any real opportunity and wealth.
    Look at the world around you- the income disparity between rich and poor has widened to a level unprecedented. Look at all the red tape, regulations and bureaucracy that the small man has to go through before starting any business, look at the hard working man getting screwed over taxes, while the lazy slob sits and collects welfare and lives in luxury government housing.
    In essence, government does not represent any interest for the masses. Which is why they do not deserve any gratitute whatsoever. And the reference you made to the military- hate to break it, but the military industrial complex only serves for geopolitical reasons, not for any patriotic reasons.

    1. don’t get into too much hoo hah about income disparity…. that will always be the case as smart intelligent people create corporations and jobs…. it is the government that is the problem…. the protection they provide is no different to the ‘protection’ a mafia provides to local businesses who must pay protection money (tax).
      no doubt there are some brave and gallant men and women who serve in the armed forces, but their government uses and abuses them for corporate insider (fascist) agendas, and general war mongering to give the common people a cause to rally behind….
      we cannot be thankful for that….

      1. “don’t get into too much hoo hah about income disparity…. that will
        always be the case as smart intelligent people create corporations and
        jobs..”
        I don’t disagree with what you have said, but one of the main reasons why income disparity exists is because government allowed policies which in turn, allowed more jobs to be outsourced to countries such as India and China.
        As a hard working man, who has paid taxes, is it your fault that your job got outsourced, and that you are having trouble to get a similar paying job because for the CEO, it means he can get a fat bonus thanks to laying you off.

        1. in a minute every driving and delivery job will be outsourced to googles robots…. don’t knock progress…. most people don’t want those hard manufacturing jobs anymore…
          protectionism is what caused the great depression…. the Scottish went all bananas when inefficient coal mines were closed, now they all work in banks and call centers…..
          if you want to assemble electronics or dig out coal — be my guest….

        2. I am not knocking on progression but pointing out why income disparity exists. Not all jobs that have been outsourced, are jobs which people did not want. These also include middle class jobs.
          Furthermore, a lot of Americans have been layed off and replaced by hordes of H-1B visa migrants in fields such as engineering and software programming.

        3. I don’t think economic progression is being contested, rather the “crony capitalism” that we have now that makes it nearly impossible for large established corporations to fail whilst making it nearly impossible for small business startups to compete. And regarding automation, people love it when it makes life easier, but they won’t be feeling that way in the not-too-distant future when it starts replacing professional jobs as well.

        4. the problem is not the immigrants, or oursourced labor… you are looking at the symptom not the cause…. America was built by immigrants…
          the problem is the sheer amount of red tape, licensing, tax compliance, worker compensation, insurance and general bullshit that prevents a small business from being productive…. meanwhile, the big corporations, especially lawyers and accountants, lobby the government for all this crap, because it keeps them in a job and preserves their monopoly….
          if you don’t comply, men in uniforms with guns will put you out of business… so the small restaurant, shop, wholesaler etc. has to work nose to the grindstone up all night filling in useless forms and answering to assholes with more red tape than a ticker parade….

        5. “And regarding automation, people love it when it makes life easier, but
          they won’t be feeling that way in the not-too-distant future when it
          starts replacing professional jobs as well.”
          Agreed. According to reports, nearly 45% of jobs will be replaced by technology including professional white collar jobs.

        6. it’s not the corporations that are to blame… the government is the problem here…. take away the government and corporations have to compete on an even ground…. the big boys are just making the best of a bad job….. it’s the government that instigates and enables the monopolies…..
          they do it for votes, for funding, for favors, because they hold the stock or used to work in the company, they do it to repay favors that got them into power, they do it for many reasons, the incentive is mainly within government not within corporations…. don’t blame the rich, that’s Marxism….

        7. “the problem is not the immigrants, our oursourced labor… you are looking at the symptom not the cause…. America was built by immigrants…”
          -On the contrary. I mentioned that many Americans are being replaced by H-1B visa migrants in fields such as engineering and software programming. This is done by corporations because the immigrants are willing to work for a much less salary. This is one of the factors contributing towards income disparity.
          “the problem is the sheer amount of red tape, licensing, tax
          compliance, worker compensation, insurance and general bullshit that prevents a small business from being productive…. meanwhile, the big corporations, especially lawyers and accountants, lobby the government
          for all this crap, because it keeps them in a job and preserves their monopoly….
          -Agreed.

        8. I agree. Corporations are simply taking advantage of the role of big government. But now that the corporations are established, I don’t see the average American at least being independent minded enough to vote against big corporate interests. In many elections no alternative is available- though I think this is something that would change almost immediately if voter sentiment conveyed anti-corporate leanings.

        9. the reason that domestic workers need higher wages is because the welfare state robs more than 50% of everything they earn….. it all goes back around to Govt.
          there would always be a certain amount of immigration, but because of the welfare state – govt. has to control it, which means corporations can abuse it and the little guy can’t compete with out paying huge fees and hiring armies of lawyers….

        10. Equating criticism of capitalism with Marxism is a mental trap. Corporations, the profit motive, markets, banks, and capitalism’s other accoutrements are very done things, but they are not an end in themselves.

        11. Its time to isolate yourself from bad Americans (including “average Americans” most are just a liability), and surround yourself with the best ones you can find or expatriate in a prudent way. It’s too late to save the world; you may save still save yourself, your family and friends.

        12. it sure as hell wasn’t built by natives…. immigration is only a problem when the govt. offers massive social security…. which cannot be supported if too many people arrive…. none of the crops in california would get picked without the wetbacks…

        13. My point is that by putting capitalism as the front piece of our society, you are falling into the Marxist trap of defining all human activity and history around economy.

        14. “the problem is the sheer amount of red tape, licensing, tax compliance, worker compensation, insurance and general bullshit that prevents a small business from being productive…. meanwhile, the big corporations, especially lawyers and accountants, lobby the government for all this crap, because it keeps them in a job and preserves their monopoly….”
          This.
          I spend a lot of time keeping stupid shit out of my clients’ contracts b/c some fucktard thinks there should be some “sharey-carey/kumbaya/can’t-we-all-just-get-along?/Brotherhood-of-Man” bullshit added in for No Fucking Reason and Where It Doesn’t Belong.
          Everything’s all well and good until someone with a vagina or a vagina-of-color feels that they weren’t treated fairly (i.e. overpaid for underproducing) and suddenly you have the EEOC up your ass b/c you agreed to a bunch of shit that made some HR moron “feel good” about themselves.
          Dumb, Dumb, Dumb.
          Mistral

        15. “-On the contrary. I mentioned that many Americans are being replaced by H-1B visa migrants in fields such as engineering and software programming. This is done by corporations because the immigrants are willing to work for a much less salary. This is one of the factors contributing towards income disparity.”
          I disagree with that, as I am in the field.. What’s happening the chop-shop “consulting” firms, bring in H-1B guys, place them with the client charging 2-300 dollars an hour, sometimes even more, and they pay the poor shmucks $50K. Did you see them 3 or 4 sharing an appartment? Now, the poor guys can not do one damn thing about it because, at least for a long while they’re the slaves of the corporation (the chop shop). They are legally bound. How did this come to be? Laws/red tape created by our own government and the corporations. I would do this.. When it comes to high tech workers.. Anybody is welcome, and let’s compete on a level playing field. I will be happy to compete with most of the H1 guys because I know I can bring more value for the same money than them. However, I am at disadvantage because even with all the parasites sucking of of H1Bs work, they are still much much cheaper than I.. Anyway..

        16. Right. Examples include all the government loans to solar energy companies (e.g. Solyndra) which all went bust. Of course all of them were huge donors to the DNC and Obama. It’s “pay to play” now..

        17. Well if the CEO can find someone to do the job for cheaper, then doesn’t that make him smarter than you?

        18. You will feel differently when you are replaced out of the blue.
          “But I bring more to the table!”
          “We don’t care. The clients will accept lower quality. Plus we get a tax write off.”
          If we’re going to have this “free trade” BS, it needs to work both ways. Right now everyone is welcome in but you try seeking an opportunity elsewhere. You are not really free to leave without millions of dollars. This is equivalent of leaving your front door open for the neighborhood to enjoy your resources. But don’t you dare set foot on someone else’s lawn.

        19. Hahahaha he said “vagina of color”
          Aren’t they all like medium cooked burgers….
          Pink on the inside?

        20. There is the “pink on the inside” theory. Although I expressed it in my own argot, I was trying to make the point that the biggest beneficiaries of Affirmative Action are white women. That said, the worst thing that can happen to you in an EEOC case is you get sued by a “twofer”, i.e. someone who falls into more than one protected class, i.e. minority female, disabled vet, etc.
          One of the reasons I was trying to adios the particular language from the vendor contract for that particular client, aside from the fact that it didn’t belong in that contract at all, is this: while that firm is basically a little, mini-United Nations with lots of people from different races/ethnicity, etc., they are very math/engineering intensive, which means that men are “over-represented” compared to the general population b/c men, on average are better at math than women are (we tend to have a broader distribution on the bell curve for reasons dealing with only having one X, so more guys hit the jackpot on brains, and more guys get stuck in the cellar, too). Thus, they are potentially vulnerable to an EEOC claim based on “But…but…but they didn’t hire me b/c I have a vagina!” than other firms would be.
          All it takes is one pissed off person who has a grudge b/c they didn’t get hired, and if they wake up some bureaucrat who had been sleeping peacefully in their 9-to-5 coffin, and pretty soon you’re spending tens of thousands of dollars to find people you didn’t hire so you can pay them money for not hiring them.
          À bientôt,
          Mistral

        21. There will always be income disparity…that is true do to the differing natures of individuals.
          However, there is a true problem with increasing, unnatural income disparity due to the fractional reserve banking of the Federal Reserve.
          The elites make money (in the literal sense) without productivity and this lowers the value of money and stifles the economy.
          They cause crashes that wipe out portions of the economy and then they buy up distressed assets at bargain prices.
          This type of income disparity is wrong.

        22. “it’s not the corporations that are to blame… the government is the problem here…. take away the government and corporations have to compete on an even ground…. the big boys are just making the best of a bad job….. it’s the government that instigates and enables the monopolies…..”
          Thank you Ray. This is one thing that people never seem to get. The same thing goes with the banks. People blame greedy bank CEO’s for the banking collapse.
          Let me tell you something, I didn’t need a banking collapse to know that Jamie Dimon was a greedy SOB who only cared about money. That was his job. That’s what I needed him for.
          Regulators and Pollys taking his money is their fault.
          Also, the big criminal in the entire banking collapse is the American Middle class, but no one wants to go there.
          Corporations are greedy? Yeah, no shit. In what world did we need to learn that on the news. How about the public servants are asslickers and the American middle class is just as greedy as the corporations only weaker, more stupid and not capable of making decent decisions for the most part.

        23. Interesting. All you said was interesting.
          I’m a vet so I see how this could apply to me. But I have credentials in my respective field, not just a military background.
          Cool. Yes, men are the more logical species.
          Ever listen to the Tom Leykis show?

        24. Yep, back in the day, when I could find him on the East Coast. He is a Red Pill godfather for sure. A lot of his material is on youtube and should be required listening for RP newbies.

        25. isn’t it in the interest of the rich to not let the income disparity get too big? I mean you don’t want to get to the point where the poor have nothing to loose and start a revolution. Countries with a low income disparity have more social peace, for example Sweden and Norway.

        26. Yes. That massive wave of immigrants during 1860s to 1920s is what suppressed wage expansion and lead to a whole host of problems. (Do you think that the Progressive/Labor Movements would have took off as it did if the Labor Markets weren’t oversupplied?)
          It’s is the simple Law of Supply and Demand. More people means lower wages. This is why the USCOC, Facebook/MS, and the rest of Big Business desperately want Amnesty. They want cheap labor.

    2. Exactly, you can’t blame them either. If you were in their shoes, you’d probably go for more power every time, too.

  4. While I agree about the theoretical need to be grateful for your military protecting you, I have to LOL heartily if you feel any need to be truly sincerely grateful to the American contractor brute force playing with their dicks in the Middle East

  5. also about that Government gratitude…. I’m pretty sure I’m paying a big cut of my paycheck just for that. Do you feel truly sincerely grateful to the taxi driver when he does his job? How about the McDonald’s clerk who hands you your order?

  6. People need to show more gratitude, but definitely not for governments. The government only cares about you as much as a farmer cares about his chickens.
    And I am always amused by this ignorant notion that soldiers fighting in foreign soil are somehow fighting to defend their country. I guess that makes the ones that are fighting inside their own land the invaders.

    1. I’ve wrestled with that as former military. The military mission many be fucked up, and the government may be selling a pack of lies, but that isn’t obvious to everyone. The naïveté of many of our servicemen doesn’t change the fact that many of them are courageous, brave men.

      1. if they were truly courageous, they’d drive their tanks up to the whitehouse and demand total surrender…

      2. Just ask them if they’d be willing to “serve” for minimum wage. Of course, their “service” is actually self-service. Which is fine. But let’s stop the childish regurgitation of platitudes told to us by government public schools.

        1. The did. During the 1990s under Clinton.
          Pay rates for Servicemen did not start increasing until Bush got into office.

    2. I agree that US service members have done nothing to the benefit of current US citizens. However, while perhaps misguided, they have and continue to make sacrifices for other non-US citizens.

  7. In those brave new times, nobody seems to give a fraction of a f**k about you and what you did, do and will do, bottom line. Gratitude and non-gratitude are expressed just formally, in a sterile, procedural way.

  8. “Gratitude is a sickness suffered by dogs.”
    –Josef Stalin
    “Remember who was still your friend when things got rough.”
    –Uncle Mistral

      1. Real life intervenes. OTOH, if you have a topic you wish to suggest, I am all ears.
        HNY to you also.

  9. Gratitude is one of the highest virtues of stoics. Life, and everything in it is a gift, even the things that appear unfortunate.
    Great post C Contrary.

    1. Life is a gift. Western Society is a curse. It’s too easy to conflate the two (life and society) and that’s where a lot of the confusion arises from.

  10. Government has a gun in my face, stealing from me, coercing me and harming my future.
    It is done without consent and by coercion. No I am not grateful. Government exist to defend government.
    Simply ask why the taxes government takes could not be kept with the citizens and let them choose what they spend–like at the supermarket (which is the only place these days where I am actually free and listened to).
    Politicians quickly back away from THAT- because free choice limits their exploitive power.
    Enough.

  11. Compare the spoiled child (or modern woman) in his tantrums to a wise, poor man who thanks a God for what little he has been given and you’ll see the value of gratitude. His soul is enriched for it. Like temperance, honesty, forgiveness and courage it is something that must be worked towards; and in so doing, one becomes a man.

  12. “we very rarely hear sincere gratitude for the protection of our government”
    OMG, that is soooo adorable. However, one day when you reach adulthood and learn how the world really is, you may feel foolish about making statement.

      1. “Crito”, that takes me back to the good old, carefree days of college. Yeah, the point was we sometime have to “swallow the hemlock” of occasional injustices as the price of civilization. Some would say this is simply socialist propaganda.

      2. Not sure how much stock we should put in plato….a lot of his work reads as a subtle slave manual, at least in parts.
        one thing is for sure, he was no Thomas Jefferson. It’s actually Aristotle, his student who was THE man.

  13. “But to answer the question: we very rarely hear sincere gratitude for the protection of our government.”
    Oh man, where do I start? One thing’s for sure. I am grateful to our MEN in uniform. With that being said, I strongly believe our government has become unbearable.
    I said it before, I lived in communism, completely totalitarian regime and all that. Can you explain why do I feel exactly the same way now, as I did then? I look around and each and every new law is written and designed AGAINST me and for “the common good”. Our legislative system, next to being a sham has absolutely no concept of unintended consequences. Each and every new law is another dent into my individual freedom. I strongly believe we are now at the point of no return. Call me an alarmist, but believe me when I say: I have seen it all before. No difference whatsoever.

    1. “Every new law is written and designed AGAINST me”
      Well, only if you’re a white heterosexual male.

    2. Really, you support the MEN in uniform who will have no problem rounding you up for reading ROK when given the order?

      1. That’s an assumption you’re making. There is a difference between what is already happening and what might happen.

  14. All types of gratitude . Example would be conveying gratitude or “thank you” after receiving gifts ( say for birthdays or Xmas). My mother would make us kids write hand written thank you letters for gifts received. A simple but important thing. It is reflexive for me now. Try getting “these kids” today to write thank you letters or even a thank you email. Gratitude and manners have to be taught . It’s not being done today is my impression. People are slovenly , grasping beasts….

  15. Hey Gents:
    Sorry C. this is off topic but check out this link to infowars.com…Paul Joesph Watson thrashes feminism. Its a great video.
    The manosphere is growing but in terms of our size it still seems to be nascent at best. However, don’t become myopic this Red Pill community is, in fact, not just big but fucking huge and growing. Alex Jones is most definitely a Red Pill man and he gets more viewers than CNN. Love or hate him, he’s consistently spoken out against the anti-family, anti-nature, anti-male culture and feminism. Alex and his crew are focused on fighting the new world order, which by the way, they have connected to be a root cause of feminism. But please note he’s fighting many more battles then just feminism. So, if you just look at the strictly manosphere portion of the Red Pill community, yeah in comparison to contemporary culture or even feminism…it still seems small, but, what if you included the rest of the Red Pill community? Its big and this group has even influenced culture to a small degree. Enjoy.
    http://www.infowars.com/2014-the-year-feminists-lost-the-debate/

    1. Unfortunately his frothing at the mouth when he appeared on public television disabused me of the notion that he was genuine. He seems like a plant.

  16. Yeah you need to rethink this article big time. Why exactly should I be grateful for an incompetent government who taxes the shit out of the people who are the most productive and then turns around and gives the money to parasites who don’t want to work? Why should I be grateful for a government who wages pointless wars that cost good men their lives for a profit? Why should I be grateful for a government who hires a gaggle of incompetent, roided up, violent dipshits or “public servants” as you call them when 1) Its been proven they don’t give two shits about public safety and 2) they only exist to strong arm people out of their hard earned money, collect revenue for the state, and protect the interests of big business. Why should I be grateful for a government who deliberately and blatantly spies on its own citizens and does everything in its power to infringe on the rights our founding fathers gave to us all under the guise of “national security”? Why should I be grateful about how our government actively draws up and enforces anti male laws and how the U.S. has the highest prison population in the world? Are you retarded? Can you not think straight? If you think your government gives even the slightest inkling of a fuck about you other than how much money it can take… sorry tax from you then you are an idiot. You and I are nothing but a number to them. They only time they even remotley pretend to give a shit about you is election time, other that you don’t mean shit. To say I should be grateful for this shit is like saying I should be grateful for fucking cancer.

    1. All good points, I would add or a government that taxes you and then gives the money it stole from you to people who hate you and who they have demographically chosen to replace you.

  17. “Begin each day by telling yourself: Today I shall be meeting with interference, ingratitude, insolence, disloyalty, ill-will, and selfishness – all of them due to the offenders’ ignorance of what is good or evil.” ― Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

  18. “there are many men and women in the armed forces who risk their lives and die in order to protect us”
    Give me one example of this…in real life!
    Would Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, Libya, Panama, et al have invaded the US? No.
    If you want to know who the military really serves…read “War is a Racket” by Major General Smedley Butler US Marine Corps. Google it.
    The head of the Marine Corps himself tells about the corporations he served and protected…not the citizens.
    “I helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests
    in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City
    Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen
    Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. The record of
    racketeering is long. I helped purify Nicaragua for the international
    banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909-1912 (where have I heard that name
    before?). I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar
    interests in 1916. In China I helped to see to it that Standard Oil went
    its way unmolested.
    It may seem odd for me, a military man to adopt such a comparison.
    Truthfulness compels me to. I spent thirty- three years and four months in
    active military service as a member of this country’s most agile military
    force, the Marine Corps. I served in all commissioned ranks from Second
    Lieutenant to Major-General. And during that period, I spent most of my
    time being a high class muscle- man for Big Business, for Wall Street and
    for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.”

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