Edward Dolan
12-31-1969, 08:00 PM
"Wilson" <ww@dixiedancekings.com> wrote in message
news:mp-dndPiUc2Mh5HVnZ2dnUVZ_sudnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
> "Edward Dolan" <edolan@iw.net> wrote in message
> news:V7mdnVVm-ItKk5HVnZ2dnUVZ_q-jnZ2d@prairiewave.com...
>>
>> "Tom Sherman" <sunsetss0003@REMOVETHISyahoo.com> wrote in message
>> news:fugo6g$1b4$1@registered.motzarella.org...
>> [...]
>>>>> What you are missing is that the economic theory of supply and demand
>>>>> does not apply because of external factors "gaming" the system.
>>
>> Wilson wrote:
>>
>>>> Sorry, but external factors "gaming" the system (what system?) and
>>>> overriding the economic law of supply and demand is not understood.
>>>
>>> When real life disagrees with theory, do you change theory or believe
>>> real life observations?
>>
>> Mr. Sherman is caught in a local Black Hole. A larger horizon would show
>> him the error of his ways. Maybe there is a shortage of civil engineers
>> in India that he could benefit from. I hear that Iraq also has a shortage
>> and that they pay rather well too.
>>
>> Mr. Sherman must learn to think globally since that is the kind of world
>> we are now living in. While Mr. Sherman is mucking about for a job
>> overseas, Ed Dolan the Great will continue to lead his monastic style of
>> life telling one and all to take their ****ing jobs and to shove it up
>> their asses. The Great Ed Dolan would not be caught dead working at a
>> job.
>>
>
> Mr. Sherman seems to be upset that your forebears purchased property and
> passed it to you as they shuffled off this mortal coil. Apparently this
> property is what, according to Mr. Sherman, enables your monastic
> lifestyle. The fact that you do not have to struggle for your daily bread
> as well as the inability of the corporate demons to strip money off your
> back for their gaming seems not to sit well with Mr. Sherman. Somewhat
> telling I suspect.
I have been on this newsgroup (ARBR) for at least 4 years now and Mr.
Sherman has been bellyaching about not getting enough pay for his
engineering services from day one. If he were married and had 10 kids I
could perhaps sympathize with him but he is single and should be leading the
life of Riley if he had any sense.
The secret to my life style is knowing how to live poor. Others envy me all
my free time (leisure) and I do not envy them their wealth which they have
to work damn hard for. This drives them crazy. Hells Bells, if I wanted to
be wealthy like Mr. Sherman I would have to work too.
The only thing in life that matters to me is leisure. Unlike most, I know
how to spend this precious commodity. I did not waste my time reading
Tolstoy's "War and Peace" for nothing. I learned how the nobility lived and
I put it to good use in my personal life.
Americans worship at the altar of hard work. They will choose work over
leisure every time. It is as if they do not know what to do with leisure.
They even turn their vacations into work. I was born out of my time and
place. I should have lived the life of an English lord in the 19th century.
Regards,
Ed Dolan the Great - Minnesota
aka
Saint Edward the Great - Order of the Perpetual Sorrows - Minnesota
news:mp-dndPiUc2Mh5HVnZ2dnUVZ_sudnZ2d@comcast.com...
>
> "Edward Dolan" <edolan@iw.net> wrote in message
> news:V7mdnVVm-ItKk5HVnZ2dnUVZ_q-jnZ2d@prairiewave.com...
>>
>> "Tom Sherman" <sunsetss0003@REMOVETHISyahoo.com> wrote in message
>> news:fugo6g$1b4$1@registered.motzarella.org...
>> [...]
>>>>> What you are missing is that the economic theory of supply and demand
>>>>> does not apply because of external factors "gaming" the system.
>>
>> Wilson wrote:
>>
>>>> Sorry, but external factors "gaming" the system (what system?) and
>>>> overriding the economic law of supply and demand is not understood.
>>>
>>> When real life disagrees with theory, do you change theory or believe
>>> real life observations?
>>
>> Mr. Sherman is caught in a local Black Hole. A larger horizon would show
>> him the error of his ways. Maybe there is a shortage of civil engineers
>> in India that he could benefit from. I hear that Iraq also has a shortage
>> and that they pay rather well too.
>>
>> Mr. Sherman must learn to think globally since that is the kind of world
>> we are now living in. While Mr. Sherman is mucking about for a job
>> overseas, Ed Dolan the Great will continue to lead his monastic style of
>> life telling one and all to take their ****ing jobs and to shove it up
>> their asses. The Great Ed Dolan would not be caught dead working at a
>> job.
>>
>
> Mr. Sherman seems to be upset that your forebears purchased property and
> passed it to you as they shuffled off this mortal coil. Apparently this
> property is what, according to Mr. Sherman, enables your monastic
> lifestyle. The fact that you do not have to struggle for your daily bread
> as well as the inability of the corporate demons to strip money off your
> back for their gaming seems not to sit well with Mr. Sherman. Somewhat
> telling I suspect.
I have been on this newsgroup (ARBR) for at least 4 years now and Mr.
Sherman has been bellyaching about not getting enough pay for his
engineering services from day one. If he were married and had 10 kids I
could perhaps sympathize with him but he is single and should be leading the
life of Riley if he had any sense.
The secret to my life style is knowing how to live poor. Others envy me all
my free time (leisure) and I do not envy them their wealth which they have
to work damn hard for. This drives them crazy. Hells Bells, if I wanted to
be wealthy like Mr. Sherman I would have to work too.
The only thing in life that matters to me is leisure. Unlike most, I know
how to spend this precious commodity. I did not waste my time reading
Tolstoy's "War and Peace" for nothing. I learned how the nobility lived and
I put it to good use in my personal life.
Americans worship at the altar of hard work. They will choose work over
leisure every time. It is as if they do not know what to do with leisure.
They even turn their vacations into work. I was born out of my time and
place. I should have lived the life of an English lord in the 19th century.
Regards,
Ed Dolan the Great - Minnesota
aka
Saint Edward the Great - Order of the Perpetual Sorrows - Minnesota