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		peeonme
Guest
I tend to lean toward what you are saying, but I don't know where there is land available to just take, and even if it was possible to get enough I am not sure that most folks would even have the fortitude or knowledge to do so. I spoke with a former neighbor tonight. I turned over 30 plus accounts to him at the trailer park where I lived. I sold him a riding mower that was not even a year old at a very low price. I notified my customers that a new mowing service would take care of their accounts. Today he has none of the accounts and the mower died.There is a component missing from this construct.
When our great grandparents and their parents arrived on these shores, they lived in tenements, in squalor, and others moved out to the rural areas and worked themselves to death, scraping by, learning their work, including logging, farming, the slaughterhouses, domestic servants, and other grinding jobs.
They didn't suddenly live in Mayberry and have gingham curtains and pot roast.
I remember a masterclass choral director from Baylor who shared that he had lived as a child with his siblings and parents in a dugout in New Mexico, and lived there a year or two until they could build a log cabin.
We too conveniently forget the arduous path of the poor who came before us.
Today, those eaten alive by greed in the cities DO have a choice. They can move out to the rural areas that had been abandoned over the last two centuries. There are yet jobs there. No, they don't pay the riches of the car factories in the boom economy of post-war 1950's, but living there is affordable.
You go to where you must when you can't succeed where you are.
While I believe that corporate greed is out of control, I also think that we are at least 2 generations past the day when we had a work ethic and families that even gave a shit about each other.

