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So, this word "industry" is a corruption from its original meaning and concept.

The idea is pretty simple. Once you've earned your daily bread, do you go home and play with your family and watch the sunset?

No, we are supposed to be "industrious." That means that we are supposed to spend as much time as we can creating and building and establishing for the economic success of yourself and your children.

If you're a fisherman, spend a little more time on the water. Come home and sell your fish. Take the extra money and save it. Eventually, buy a bigger boat, hire a bigger crew, or buy another boat. As time goes on your wealth increases exponentially. More importantly, your "industry" is creating opportunities for the people living around you. Where are you going to buy that second boat? Where are you going to hire more fisherman? Now you are feeding an entire city instead of just yourself or your family.

This is a concept that most cultures don't even have. Even among Americans, the younger generation doesn't get it. They think building wealth is about stacks of hundred dollar bills. They think that the computer monitor showing large green numbers is wealth. It's not. Just because you own something worth a lot of money doesn't mean you're doing anything good with it.

If you do have a large green number somewhere, are you going to let the jews collect interest on it? No, you should invest that money in something that creates jobs and goods and services that people need. The obvious thing to do is to expand your business. If you're good at your job, train others to do it, fund them and their ventures and get them stacking cash. If you're getting older and the work is getting too hard, it's time to start managing assets and businesses so that younger people can find opportunities to make some serious money.

One of the reasons why you're having a hard time finding good work is because the previous generations aren't re-investing their profits into you. Either they blew it all on cruises and foreign trips, or they have it sitting in a bank or investment account where greedy jews stick their beaks in and suck it dry. That's not industry. That's just pure greed. And industrious person would hire the town to build a bigger mansion, or a factory, or a warehouse, or a market. He'd have all of his money invested in things that create jobs for the people around him.
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3 comments:
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
9 months ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
>If you're getting older and the work is getting too hard

For the love of God, *train people*. I know so many Boomers who will be taking all their skills to the grave over the next 20 years.

If you're slowing down, even before you start slowing down, start teaching younger people what you know before you're too old to do it at all.
MI7BZ3EW on scored.co
9 months ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
20-30 years old: Work your butt off to get as good as you can at your craft.

30-40 years old: Train the next generation, hire people to do your job while working as hard as you can.

40+ years old: You aren't doing the work anymore. But you can tell the younger ones how to solve hard problems.

Once you've made it you have a duty to help the younger generation make it as well.

If the population is growing, which it should, there should be more YOUNGER people working than older people. If you're an older person surrounded by older people, you're doing it wrong!
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
9 months ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
I'd argue 30-40 is time to hone your craft and hit your limits, but otherwise I totally agree.
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