AKA “I don’t do anything for the homeless.”
You can think that. I don’t care. I’m also not on TV gushing over how rich I am.
Sure. If you think it’s cool to buy a $6.8 million house in Beverly Hills while there is a homeless crisis in LA, then yeah, you would think this thread is ridiculous.
To the folks starving in Bangladesh, where ever you live is essentially the same as a mansion. Get off your high horse and accept that you’re just as much a part of the problem as the people you’re incoherently ranting about. You just do less and complain more.
I agree. It’s a moral failing that I live with everyday.
manson1972 writes:
> I’m also not on TV gushing over how rich I am.
I don’t very often see celebrities on TV gushing about how rich they are. What I see are these so-called entertainment news shows in which the hosts gush about how rich celebrities are. I change channels whenever such programs come on. They aren’t actually very much about real entertainment news. They don’t have any analysis of why certain film or TV production companies are doing well or going broke. They don’t have any analysis of how the themes of movies and TV shows have changed over the years. They have little to say about the people who are really in charge of TV and movies, the executives of the production companies. What they have are superficial stories about the lead actors in TV shows and movies, which includes what cars they own. Such shows are as superficial and as honest as those tabloids you see in the supermarket checkout lines. Again, if this kind of superficiality bothers you, change the channel. Watch TV shows about political and economic matters, which are going to actually change how we will be living in the future, while how an actor spends his money isn’t going to change much of anything.
Solving homelessness is far more about political will than anything else.