| ▲ | petersellers 2 days ago | |||||||
I disagree with your premise that your non-preferred form of entertainment is equivalent to eating junk food. I’m sorry that you were addicted to playing video games (truly) but I think your past experience is preventing you from thinking rationally about this. People can find fulfillment from many different things, including the ones that you personally don’t find fulfilling. One's fulfillment is also irrelevant with respect to whether the product they are consuming was designed by a corporation to extract maximum profits (though I sympathize with your anti-corporate stance, despite the fact I find this point of yours to be irrational). You admitted your view was subjective, yet you are prescribing it as a general view that applies to everyone which is both elitist and dissonant. | ||||||||
| ▲ | BLKNSLVR 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> prescribing it as a general view I didn't get that read at all. I read it as their journey of understanding how the world works and how they've reached their opinions on personal autonomy. Your replies feel as if they're trying to paint turbobrew's comments as something more than they are; as some kind of prescribed doctrine, as opposed to an individuals opinion. But that may just be because I happen to strongly agree with turbobrew's commentary. | ||||||||
| ▲ | __turbobrew__ 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Suggesting that personal fulfillment should not be controlled by a corporation is not elitist — it is philosophy. You disagree with my philosophy, which is fine. I typed out my ideas as they came to me, so I may have missed the mark. The core idea I want to portray is that you can choose not to play the game of for profit corporations. You can walk away. | ||||||||
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