The basis for the Biden Administration:
“Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.” – William Pitt.
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Friday, January 22, 2016
Here's what Seahawk's starting blind side Offensive Tackle Russell Okung has to say about the American Dream
I'm not going to comment. This is for you to ponder.
Seahawks Lineman Says American Dream Greatest Lie Ever Told
Seattle Seahawks lineman Russell Okung, whose Christian family fled Nigeria, seethes with contempt for the American Dream.
Responding to an essay on economic inequality offered by Y Combinator
co-founder Paul Graham, Okung, who founded a Seattle non-profit called
GREATER, pontificated:
Some think working hard solves the problems of poverty
and institutional oppression and the lack of social mobility. Some think
that by sheer determination, one can overcome such issues. But economic
inequality isn’t the symptom; it’s the virus that attacks. You, Graham,
like the rest of America, have been deceived. You are a victim of the
American Dream, the belief that anyone who works hard can move up
economically regardless of his or her social circumstances.
American cultural optimism is one of the greatest lies ever told.
Okung plays
in the midst of a six-year, $48,500,000 contract with the Seattle
Seahawks. The deal included a $1,680,000 signing bonus, $29,300,000 in
guaranteed money, and an average annual salary of $8,083,333. Despite
his salary, and activism highlighting the vile acts of Boko Haram that
he discussed with Breitbart Sports a year ago, the offensive lineman rails against the American Dream.
“So many people will never experience their dreams because there are
far too many barriers of entry they can’t do anything about,” Okung
opines. “And that all goes back to that elitism — the elitism that’s
manufacturing economic inequality.”
Of course, while he’s spouting an attack on the American Dream, Okung
cites his heroes: “People like Steve Case and Barack Obama, who are
actively working to expand capital and invest in untapped talent across
America.”
Okung concludes, “I urge you, Graham, along with the rest of the community, to return to your first love. Build people up.”
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