@MegynKellyShow@PatrickMcEnroe And how many of these are at public universities taking taxpayer dollars. cerno, you’re an Illinois guy. UIUC take a billion dollars a year for sports like track and field to lose 6mm a year and give all scholarships to 22-26yo foreigners.
buying a farm is the greatest gift you can ever give your kids
giving them somewhere free to roam, play, explore, care for animals, build, tend to, steward...
connect them with death, feed them real, healthy food and giving them generational wealth so they dont have to work a job they hate
homeschooling is "so weird"...but meanwhile "normal" kids spend 7 hours a day in a building that's designed like a prison, fed food that's worse than in a prison, asking permission to go to the bathroom, sitting down under toxic blue lights, given less time outdoors than in prisons, learning useless information, trained to be obedient workers and bullied by traumatized kids.
yeah, homeschooling is definitely crazy
@mattlindner@MSGCapital@BlockClubCHI Real journalism describes the type of man. Thanks to the journalism at the Chicago Tribune we know he was a Rogers Park man.
In 1959, Fidel Castro promised to redistribute Cuba's wealth and create equality for all. Within a decade, the island that once exported sugar and cigars to the world couldn't even keep its own lights on. The wealthy fled, but instead of their riches trickling down to the poor, everyone just became equally poor together.
The revolucionarios had calculated that seizing the means of production would mean seizing prosperity itself. What they discovered instead was that prosperity isn't sitting in some vault waiting to be redistributed—it's created daily by millions of voluntary exchanges, investments, and entrepreneurial risks. When you abolish those mechanisms, you don't redistribute wealth; you redistribute poverty.
Today's politicians make the same mathematical error Castro did: they see inequality and assume it represents a fixed pie that just needs better slicing. They never ask why some pies grow while others shrink, or why the countries promising equality most loudly seem to deliver scarcity most efficiently.
The cruel irony is that the only truly "equal" outcome socialism reliably produces is making everyone equally worse off than they started.