Normalizing an inability of tens of millions of people to do a hard day’s work yet not be able to rent a decent apartment or afford health care isn’t the sign of a functional society. When the country in question is the richest in the world it’s the sign of something deeply wrong

Feb 9, 2022 · 10:59 AM UTC

89
400
29
2,106
But the Vax that you live so much is free.
Replying to @marwilliamson
Your first sentence needs an editor
Replying to @marwilliamson
Poorest country in the world now.😮‍💨
Replying to @marwilliamson
So why are others from other countries crashing through our southern border at an alarming rate then?
Replying to @marwilliamson
Normalizing expectations that you deserve more than you earn in a free society or that others owe you anything isn’t the sign of a functional society. Communism only leads to poverty, suffering, and corruption yet many still call for it, it’s the sign of something deeply wrong.
4
Replying to @marwilliamson
normalizing these very people being fired for not taking a shot: your tweets mean next to nothing until you are willing to address this.
1
Replying to @marwilliamson
The people running the country are rich not the average person that has to go to work everyday.
The US has one of the most pressing income distribution gaps in any industrialized nation, surpassed in income inequality only by Russia and Mexico New boss, same as the old boss Both parties deliver unsustainable wealth transfer to the top
3
1
6
Replying to @marwilliamson
Are they unable to do a hard day’s work or unable to pay for an apartment & healthcare despite doing a hard day’s work? I think you meant “the inability… of people who do” not “an inability… of people to do”. At first read I thought you were talking about the disabled.
1