UPDATE: Shortly after I published this article and posted it to fascistbook, a message appeared on my monitor from my very good friends at fascistbook. I was apparently in violation of an unidentified “community standard” for an image I posted. There was no specific reference to which image, nor was there even a hint, just a warning that one of the dozens of images I post daily was in violation of community standards and was taken down. This usually means I said something politically incorrect about Muslims, and a Muslim or some liberal weenie complained. This is a new intimidation by the swell folks at fascistbook. Typically, fascistbook goons cut me off at the knees and I wind up in fascistbook jail for a couple of weeks when I post an image like this…. Burkas R Us Anyone who has spent any time in fascistbook jail knows how much fun it is. There was also no mention of what this new “warning” means. Does it mean that three warnings and my fascistbook page will be deleted, thus the thousands of dollars I have given fascistbook to promote my page will have been wasted? Who knows? Fascistbook is very secretive that way. And try to communicate with ANYONE at fascistbook. Ha! It would be easier to get President Trump on the phone. So, I slug along every day, paying fascistbook to violate my First Amendment rights. Do I sound bitter?

What sort of oxymoronic, paradoxical mess have we gotten ourselves into when the richest capitalists in the world, who made billions on the free market/free enterprise system begin shouting for communism? It’s bizarre.

Mark Zuckerberg, who started shaving last week, not that he needs to, is the latest mega-bazillionaire to advocate communism, which he cleverly disguises in the lingual cloak of “universal basic income.”

Is history so recent as the starvation happening in North Korea and in our own hemisphere in Venezuela, thanks to the wonders of communism, not enough to make the rich bastards see the light?

No, no, no! Their fortunes came easy. If they hadn’t, they wouldn’t be espousing a politico-economic system that gives NO ONE incentive to produce, not to mention the fact that communism has never succeeded anywhere it has been forced down the throats of the unwilling. Only rich bastards, morons (forgive my redundance), and welfare recipients love communism. The rest of us get up every day and go to work, suffering the noxious gas escaping from the idle parasites.

So, what is it with the spoiled, entitled elitists that they would abandon the very system that provides their everything in favor of a system that has historically provided no one with anything? A mystery, indeed.

I have a solution. The rich bastards should put their money where their mouths are and donate EVERYTHING they own to the poor – their money, the stock in their companies, their many vacation homes, their airplanes and yachts, their fleets of fine automobiles, their furniture and jewelry, EVERYTHING! Give it all away. What a wonderful feeling that will be, right, Herr Zuckerberg? Don’t be a hypocrite. You are promoting it. Now do it!

How about the Pope, one of the loudest voices advocating the utopian “income distribution” fairy tale. The Catholic Church must be worth a bazillion quintrillion dollars. The Pope could buy facebook with his lunch money. But, nope, keep passing that basket to the mindless guilt-ridden, reminding them of what miserable creatures they are for not contributing more for the needy. Vow of poverty, my ass!

From Robert Ringer, via Thomas Ventimiglia….

Wow! I can’t believe what a unique idea Mark Zuckerberg came up with last week: “universal basic income” for all. The thought of everyone sitting around all day and kibitzing about global warming, methods for shutting down free speech, and a world without borders is enough to make one quit his job and head for the nearest Starbucks.

But, alas, just when my excitement had reached a frenzied level, my modest cache of knowledge got in the way. When I say got in the way, I’m referring to the fact that knowledge is the number-one antidote to bullshit.

I fought it as hard as I could, but I simply couldn’t ignore the fact that “universal basic income” goes back to at least the mid-19th century and the world’s most famous drunk, Karl Marx. Except Marx called it communism, a word that didn’t attempt to hide its connection to one of the most dreaded words in the English language — commune or communal.

Even the Radical Left understands that you have to be careful about throwing around the word communism loosely, because virtually everyone — including the lowest-information people on the planet — realizes it’s a political system that has caused more suffering and death than all other political systems combined. Some people, like Cuban exiles, for example, have been known to become pretty ticked off when hearing elites talk about the wonders of communism.

Nevertheless, I forgive Zuckerberg for his childish idea, because — his $68 billion in net worth aside — he is, after all, just a kid. I know, I know … he’s built a giant company, but how philosophically deep can you expect someone to be if his entire adult life has been focused on an intellectually stimulating project like Facebook?

And even though he dropped out of Harvard, Zuckerberg was there long enough to become infected by the school’s radical-left views. So when he departed Harvard to expand his Facebook company, it was quite natural for him to choose the capital of billionaire Radical Leftists, Silicon Valley, as his new home.

Now, you might think, “But surely after putting in long, hard hours working seven days a week for years, he would appreciate capitalism and eschew communism in all its forms (socialism, progressivism, et al).” Unfortunately, your thinking would be wrong. Zuckerberg bought into the billionaire-communist mind-set like most everyone else in Silicon Valley.

Which leads to the question: Why do so many super wealthy people espouse transfer-of-wealth programs? When you think about it, it’s really not all that complicated. Remember, multibillionaires like Zuckerberg pay little or no taxes, so they don’t have to pay for the welfare programs they applaud. The whole issue is outside the cushy hi-tech bubble where they reside, because the bulk of transfer-of-wealth payments are made possible by middleclass men and women who pony up against their will.

The whole notion of a universal minimum income is based on the false premise that goes unchallenged by everyone on the left and, sadly, a majority of those on the right. I’m talking about the belief that income equality is a moral objective. And, as with the global-warming scam, if you’re against it, you’re evil.

The fact is that those who believe income equality is a good thing are merely stating their opinion, which is fine. But if they use their opinion as a premise, and their opinion is false, then it becomes a false premise. And it’s literally impossible to start with a false premise and arrive at an accurate conclusion.

Zuckerberg argues that if everyone knew they could rely on a guaranteed minimum income, they wouldn’t have to work at a job and could instead spend their time working on creative projects. Sounds great, but I’m not buying it.

Perhaps you remember an article I wrote a few years back titled “The Adventures of Surfer-Dude”. Do you really think a guy like Jason Greenslate (the beach bum who was the focus of that article) would spend his time on creative projects if he had a guaranteed minimum income? Let’s get real. The people who would be creative if they had a guaranteed minimum income would likely be the same folks who would be creative without a guaranteed minimum income.

One final note: Not surprisingly, Zuck’s comments reignited the cry for a guaranteed minimum income in the People’s Republic of California. Yep, financial wizard Jerry Brown is all in for doubling the state’s budget that is currently $180 billion. Hmm … now how does a state that is already $1.3 trillion in debt and boasts the highest income tax in the country pay for a new program that would be as large as its entire current budget?

Answer: You deplorables in El Paso and Des Moines and Tulsa would take care of it, just like you’re going to take care of California’s existing debt — whether or not you realize it. No time to think about it, though, because we have to concentrate on how to avoid the mass extinctions that are coming down the road as a result of the United States pulling out of the unenforceable transfer-of-wealth program known as the “Paris Climate Accord.”

I better stop there, because my blood pressure is a little high today.