“You either give or you suck. There is no in between.” — Kansas City Royals’ first-base coach Rusty Kuntz, quoted by Sam Mellinger in
this Kansas City Star[*1] story.
Do you give, or do you suck?
If your “giving” consists of sucking from others rather than generating your own energy, power, resources, money, and life, I have news for you. That is not giving. That is sucking.
If you spend all of your time and resources donating to “social justice,” “equality,” “human rights,” “racial reparations,” “green environment,” or other, similar movements designed to take from Peter to pay Paul, then I have news for you. You are not giving. You are sucking. You are sucking time, energy, and resources from your fellow human beings to feed your own sense of self-importance and self-worth. You are a vampire, not a social justice crusader.
It is not a virtue to be generous with other people’s money.
America today is filled with suckers, and the givers are starting to get really, really tired of the games the suckers play.
There is only one way to true success: hard work, personal commitment, personal integrity, perseverance, all combined with a true respect for all others.
A common feature of so many of the “social justice” causes infesting our culture today is their very lack of respect for a certain, identified person or group which must be separated out from society, isolated, shamed, demeaned, or destroyed. The person or group to be vilified varies somewhat, but we see a particularly virulent strain of this in the “Black Lives Matter” movement. To these people, the mere suggestion that perhaps all lives matter, not just black lives, brings a visceral, vicious response.
Even something as trivial as a science fiction writing award has come to represent this same pattern. The group in power, when challenged to open up the selection process, responded with some of the most vicious, slanderous rhetoric you can imagine towards the reformers.
Power corrupts, Lord Acton wrote, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Today, the “social justice” campaigners are in power in almost every segment of our society: government, education, media. Represented best by their elder states-woman, Hillary Clinton, they have discovered the profitability of corruption when in power. We don’t even blink any more when Obama shovels billions of dollars of other people’s money to political cronies while calling it “green energy” or “health care.” This is the “power of suck” in full operation.
Our society is corrupt. From top to bottom. Too many ordinary people today only care about “giving” as a way to suck the lifeblood out of their neighbors.
The good news is that this can’t last forever. At some point, the suckers will have taken all that the givers have to give. The bad news is that at that point, civilization will likely collapse. There is time to avoid that, but in order to do so, people have to fight the urge to take. History indicates that this is rare, and usually a result of some catastrophe. Something to look forward to, isn’t it?