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Old 11-10-2008
R Mitch R Mitch is offline
U.S. House Representative

 
Member Since: Oct 2008
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 601

   
Re: "Community Service" Yep, Mandatory.

Quote:
Originally Posted by TomBlaze View Post
That is the problem with a lot of people in this country. We wait for someone else to get things done and complain when they aren't done to our satisfaction. I was in then Army and then the National Guard. I served my country and my community and for it I got a free college education.

What I find so pathetic is that there are people who have no idea nor do they care about the implications of a small percentage of people controlling the vast majority of the wealth. The ideology that I hear from people like this is, "I am getting mine, so screw everyone else." We have little to no sense of community. In most all large population centers, people don't even know their immediate neighbors; can't name one of their local representatives; live in a tiny social bubble which they deem "superior" to others; always have reasons to be the exception to the rule; don't do squat to help their community thrive except to complain that someone needs to fix things.

We are a society that has been trained to be one-trick ponies. That being the basic rule of go to school, then college/trade school, get a focused career and do that for the rest of your life. Then of course if that doesn't work out, one is forced to reinvent themselves which, today, is very taxing and almost impossible. We are a single skill society. We are so dependent on this system that it has become so fragile to the point where is one little piece of the system gives the whole system eventually collapses.

When this country was founded, the first settlers had skills in many areas: construction, textiles, agriculture..etc. Now most people do not even know how to change their oil, fix their door frame, some still refuse to learn how to use a computer. It is truly perplexing.

I bring this up because all of this comes together with the idea of community. If you knew how to fix cars and your neighbor knows about carpentry, you can exchange services with far less cash outflow. You get to know your neighbor and in times of crisis you can help one another get through these things. I am not talking about an auto mechanic and a carpenter here. I am talking about two neighbors who have careers elsewhere but also have these skills. What it does is lessen their independence on the system. This is what a sense of community rewards us with. The idea of community service is not a bad one.
The problem is that capitalism breeds that belief, "I am getting mine, screw everyone else". As Americans we are taught that to be successful in any career, one has to screw or screw over everyone else around them. Afterall, they are not only co-workers, but competition.

You take this, throw in the immigrant factor, mix with different class levels, solidify this class disparity by inadequately and unfairly funding education, and you get a modern picture of the American landscape.
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