Cee-Jay-Cee wrote: » No.
4ensic15 wrote: » Agreed.
Deleted User wrote: » Yes. The more everyone you know has the more you want in general. And then in modern times we have access to the super rich via tv and magazines and social media so we know what we are missing out on. In the past there was no real access to any of that the only measure of your wealth were the other locals and generally if you were born poor you died poor or vice versa whereas now careers can help you climb the social ladder.
bluewolf wrote: » So you're saying tv is the problem
Specialun wrote: » had this hungover debate with my mate earlier. i do think it is. do you think the world is more obsessed with money these days..over what really should matter as in family, love , health or whichever. what do you think has been the driver for this.
lulu1 wrote: » Health before wealth every time
Deleted User wrote: » Absolutely certainly there is far too much consumerism. I love a day where I don't have to buy anything. Nothing to do with money, just with shifting focus and priorities to more real things. I get a great pleasure in the simple things - walks, listening to calm classical piano music, the sound of water and so on. I rarely listen to the radio, tv or "news"/commercial sport bulletins, again to avoid the thud, thud of relentless 'buy, buy, buy' consumerism in all its guises. It's everywhere: western society's new fundamentalism. I may be ahead of the curve by a generation or two here, but in 2018 consumerist culture is a far greater brainwashing threat to kids and adults alike than any religion can come up with. I've a lovely old aunt down the country on a big farm who's loaded. But she drives around in a 2004 car, has a 40-year-old unfitted kitchen, big windows that were put in in the 1920s and only got central heating about 15 years ago (it was hot water bottles and extra blankets when I used to stay with her as a kid). She's not mean by any stretch - she has quietly funded the education of several of us throughout the years because she puts a lot of store in education - but she buys what she needs and that's it. The most extravagant she'd get is when she'd go out and get a nice cake or something when she knows I'll be calling and that would be a special event. No crap food every day, just stuff from her garden or the like. There's something deeply refreshing and admirable in that disengagement from consumerism. A sense of priority and perspective that so many of us have lost under the weight of the incessant consumerist propaganda all around us.
pone2012 wrote: » Yes Money is the root of almost all evil (not all...but the vast majority)
OneEightSeven wrote: » Love. Women are gold-diggers. They love men with well-paying jobs because they can offer them a better and more secure lifestyle. The reason why women are attracted to big, strong men is because they are more physically able to ward off physical threats from other males, but with the introduction of societal laws helping to protect women from rapists and home intruders, this attraction has manifested itself to being attracted to wealthy men, not that they've lost their lust for muscular guys - they like both now. This is why women wet themselves over professional athletes.