We can always reduce the workweek to ensure near 100% employment, should the underclass decline in numbers, or should consumption/production decrease when people are no longer compelled to consume/produce so much, for we’ve raised wages and reduced prices for (essential) goods and services.
Since you like bums so much, you and your ilk should be conscripted to wipe their asses for them because they’re too lazy to do it themselves.
Working people shouldn’t be held at gun point and forced to work harder than they’d have to if both the underclass, and the overclass pulled their weight.
It’s people who’re able and willing to do the work that still needs to be done to take care of society who’re ultimately going to help society progress, not the unable, nor the unwilling, they’ll just hold us back.
Furthermore, if the unable/unwilling happen to procreate more than working people, or more and more join their ranks, we’ll have to work harder and harder to support them.
eventually we may have to work much harder than we have to today, and because we’re overburden, we won’t be able to handle a sociopolitical, economic or environmental crisis should one happen to occur, and sooner than later, one will.
Disabled people should be treated humanely, we could all wind up disabled someday, but I have no sympathy for those who’d rather make other peoples lives harder than work.
They’re not entitled to anything, and if they commit serious crimes, felonies, they should be given lengthier prison sentences, and again, possibly sterilizations, depending, if necessary.
Given that choice, I suspect many or most of them will work.
The ones who refuse have no excuse, particularly since wages and prices will be much fairer.
We’ve already established Hitler pretended to be Christian for political gain, so it’s not that much of a stretch to say he may’ve pretended to be a theist as well.
And it wasn’t just him:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Nazi_Germany
Contrary to what the anti-Christian left would have us believe, Nazism was in all likelihood a synthesis of occult pagan, social Darwinian and Nietzschean thought.
Why’s it so difficult for the left to believe in conspiracy?
Sure, if the Nazis pretended to be Christians, and the communists pretended to be, well, communists, maybe the people at the very top of the Catholic pyramid, the popes, bishops and cardinals are atheists, or Satanists, I mean it would make sense considering they’re obscenely rich and don’t practice a thing Christ preached.
As far as I’m concerned they’re all a bunch of sociopaths, same goes for democrats and republicans, liberals and conservatives.
They’re all plutocrats pretending to be for the people.
It was just because he was a pacifist, Jesus stood for nearly everything Hitler stood against, Jesus said the meek shall inherit the kingdom, Hitler wanted to crush the weak.
Pffft, you’re the robot, you can’t even think outside the left/right/libertarian paradigm they’ve fed you.
I have took what I consider to be the best from all three and synthesized them into a new political philosophy.
Whether one believes in God or not says next to nothing about their character, or willingness to obey tyrants.
Religion can be a force for good in this world.
Look at all the charities founded by religions.
Religion can bring communities together and strengthen them.
Benjamin Franklin
Most enlightenment philosophers and revolutionaries from John Locke, Montesquieu, to Thomas Jefferson were Christians or irreligious theists, the founders of liberal democracy.
Direct and representative Democracy was founded by the Greeks and Romans respectively, who were heavily steeped in religion.
Atheists are like haughty children who shit all over their parents, saying we’ll do a better job than you once we’re in charge of the world, subsequently blaming their parents for all their mistakes.
Yea right, that’s what the monotheists said about polytheists and animists.