Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
concoct.
And yet, despite this fault, democracy has
performed more admirably than any other system
we’ve yet attempted. Perhaps because we made
pleasing the people part of the game that the elites
must play to one-up one another. “Look how much
more well-fed my peasants are than yours,
Mortimer!”
4. SLIP DOWN THAT SLOPE
The problem with debates is that nearly
everyone who engages in them will at some point
take their opponents ideas to the most extreme
possible level. If you’re against the death penalty,
someone inevitably says, “Well, what if it was your
family being brutally murdered with an ice pick?!”
Couldn't I just as easily ask them, “what if your
son bludgeoned 3 people to death with a dildo?” You
see how not compelling that hypothetical is? Well,
yours isn't any better. If you want to slip down a
slope, why not let your hand slip down my cock, you
mindless bucket of shit?
5. REDISTRIBUTE THAT SHIT!
We have to be like Robin Hood (not the lame
ass Russell Crowe version). We have to rob from the
rich and give to the poor.
Here’s why: poor people spend money.
We need more spending. We need people to
buy buy buy buy buy.
No one can buy when everyone’s broke!
However, the rich have never been richer.
Now’s the time to take their money (which they
horde) and give it to lower and middle class people
who will spend it. More money in the hands of the
middle class means more demands for goods and
services, more demands for goods and services
means more jobs, more jobs means more people
making money.
Be like Robin Hood. Steal from a rich guy, give
to some poor, unworthy slob. Then, punch a
libertarian in the face and laugh.
If I could create one new law, I’d mandate that
no one in a company can make more than 10 times
the average salary of the company. For instance, if
the average employee makes $32,000 a year, the
CEO can make no more than $320,000 a year.
This not only closes income gaps, but it also
ties CEO’s directly to the success of their companies.
Too often now, CEO’s are there to collect a paycheck
and they don’t care if the company fails.
Whatever money they made in or through
shares would similarly be capped if it surpassed 10
times what the average employee of the company
would be able to make.
The big argument people have made against
me on this is that if we passed such a law, CEO’s
would lose the incentive to run companies because
they couldn’t get rich. 10 times what a normal
employee makes isn’t wealth enough for them? 10
times a normal person’s income isn’t good enough
compensation for the job they do? Then fuck ‘em, I
say.
Ten times average will be good enough for
someone who truly loves the job and truly cares
about running a company.
6. THE 2012 ELECTION CLUSTERFUCK
I watched a small portion of the 2012 Republican
National Convention, and the analysts at the time
kept pointing out that the convention was largely an
attack on Obama. Many said that this strategy was a
bad one, and that the convention should instead
focus on building up Romney.
I have to profoundly disagree with these
analysts. Tearing down Obama was do-able. He
wasn't the most popular president by any stretch of
the imagination. He wasn't despised by all like Bush
was, but plenty of people hated him or could be
persuaded to hate him.
Making Mitt Romney seem likable, by contrast,
would have been a fool’s errand. The man was
simply not a human being that anyone could ever
like. He had the personality of a wet blanket. He lied
more often than breathed. He constantly looked
confused. He emanated no warmth or humanity.
Mitt Romney was best used as a prop—and that’s
exactly what he was to the Republican party. He was
a prop. A variable. An “insert whatever you want to
hear here.”
So, I think the GOP was wise to make the RNC
all about Obama-hating. It’s the only card they had—
but they still couldn't win with it. Obama probably
did more to help Obama than to hinder him. I
believe that if the republican party had run a centrist
candidate whose policies weren't a total affront to
anyone to the left of Ayn Rand, they would have won
the election.
The moral crusaders voted for Obama because
Obama supported gay marriage and Mitt Romney
opposed it—Obama was for the insurance reforms of
The Affordable Healthcare Act and Romney was
opposed to them (even though he pioneered them as
Massachusetts' governor.
But to the left I ask, what good does gay
marriage and healthcare do me if I live in a world
where my government butchers innocent people
and views them as acceptable “collateral damage,”
jails me for the slightest infraction and doesn’t care
that my social class is increasingly unable to sustain
itself while the richest class control ungodly
personal fortunes?
Think about it: every issue where Obama and
Romney were identical represents an issue where
you had NO CHOICE in 2012.
Obama and Romney were essentially the same.
Their differences were all superficial. Pretend.
Wedge issues designed to divide the populace and
drum up votes.
When it comes to the military industrial