When you say everyone has the "right" to college and the "right" to welfare because they "can't work" and the "right" to whatever they want because they feel entitled to it
Just remember that sure everyone [u][i][b]created[/b][/i][/u] equal, that means at the start of the race everyone is equal but as life goes on the party separates and some become higher and some become lower. If you don't want this to happen to you, you have to get up and change the way things are for you, it may be hard and it may seem impossible but just remember
George Washington - almost died of a disease, was a simple farmer from Virginia
Booker T. Washington - Slave
Abraham Lincoln - grew up in a small house and had to struggle just to read
Hitler - was rejected from an art school, mocked all his life
The French people of the revolution - simple commoner who couldn't amount to anything serious
Martin Luther - a stutterer and anxious man
All these people (yes some may have been bad) were almost worthless and they rose up and changed they world to what they wanted, all it takes is the power of one person to change the course of history forever, so next time you think that you're just a kid from bad part of town and can't do anything and just need someone to carry you through life will your next welfare check, I want you to realize that you can stand up, you can make a difference and you can conquer all
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It's easier to take up a moral position about this kind of thing. "Human rights," like the human right to a home, or healthcare, or education, are just empty promises from the state. The simple fact is that these things need to be provided by other people. If the state promises you a right to a home, then it then has to violate somebody else's property rights by coercing them into building/funding that home. Human rights are a contradiction. Natural rights are your only rights. Marxism has poisoned the ideological well, in a way. There's this prevailing idea that we somehow live in post-scarcity world, and that we can employ force to shift resources around and end social ills. That isn't the case. Not only does it fail spectacularly, but it's immoral in the first place. Everything in this world must be worked for. That is a fundamental truth. You don't necessarily have to work to get it (charity can morally exist, and it isn't worked for), but resources come from somewhere. If a man is starving, we can very well employ force to secure some bread from someone else. However, let's remove everybody else from society. Nobody else is around to produce bread. We can no longer use force to secure an outcome. In order to survive, that man would have to work. The sooner we realize that it's immoral to initiate force against other people and their property, the sooner we can start alleviating these social ills legitimately.