Fuck yeah! He does. And I will say what I will.
God is gender neutral.
I hope you've seen this where I posted it before. And I should think you understand it.
Sir.
Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
Eccieuser, I'm moving this so we won't hijack a thread.
For our non-Spanish speaking brethren, the young priest is called on the carpet by the old priest, for teaching children that an honest days work deserves an honest days wage. Then the young priest goes a bit farther and says a local businessman shouldn't hog all the wealth and his workers should share in it as well. This causes a young woman (the old priest's Sugar Baby?) to say "That's Communism?!" The young priest goes on to describe a famous encyclical, or pronouncement of the Pope, being the Rerum Novarum, or "Revolutionary Change," issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891. According to Wikipedia, the Pope was promoting "amelioration of the misery and wretchedness...of the working class." He however rejected socialism and affirmed the right to private property, while also rejecting unrestricted capitalism.
Eccieuser, In developed countries, I think we've largely arrived at the state of condition favored by the young priest and the Pope. Yes, there's still room for improvement. And we haven't made a lot of progress in the last 20 years. There were signs of improvement in 2019, but they were snuffed out by COVID and inflation. But outside of some businesses like hedge funds, the profits taken out by owners of businesses, in the form of dividends for example, are dwarfed by wages paid to employees. The Robber Barons of yore are no more.
The first thing I thought about when I saw the video was Graham Greene's novel, the Power and the Glory. A priest in 1930's Mexico is persecuted by the government. During that era, the Partido Revolucionario Institucional which ruled Mexico was hell bent on socialism. And like Castro, and Stalin, Mao and others, it viewed the Catholic Church as an obstacle. And the second thing that came to mind was the young Marxist priests who played a part in revolutions in Central America. And how disappointed they'd be with Daniel Ortega, the former revolutionary of Nicaragua, who's become the biggest crony capitalist out there.
I'm not really going anywhere with this, except to say that I believe the sentiments of the young priest are very similar to yours. Despite the photos you post of Che and others, you're not hell bent on a socialist society. You just want people to have a decent wage. Hope I'm not overstepping.
By the way, a generous tip would be to pay half. Only. Max and minimum. Originally Posted by eccieuser9500I tip 30% myself. I think 50% might defeat Hoffman's purpose, that is, skipping the restaurant without paying much.