" . What drives the human race is not the collective...it's the individual."

Yes thats what i ment

Yeah everyone is unique to a point, but all humans base instinct is the
same: selfishness

People are happy and content with what ever there doing until they find out
someone else is succeeding faster than them with less work.  ignorance is
bliss.

Humans always want more.
On Oct 6, 2011 3:29 AM, "Nat Russo" <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 12:22 AM, Patience <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> "because most people just aren't motivated when a crappy effort pays the
>> same as a good effort."
>>
>> People are naturally selfish. They would have been happy if they never
new
>> what someone else was earning
>>
>
> I have to seriously disagree with that statement.
>
> You said it yourself: "People are naturally selfish." But here's the
> thing...that's how we evolved and eventually climbed our way to the top of
> the food chain. Any society similar to the Soviet Union is destined to
> fail, because human beings are incapable of living in a society of equals.
> What drives the human race is not the collective...it's the individual.
> The greatest achievements and discoveries of human history were pioneered
> by individuals, not "the human race". The individual is driven to succeed
> and achieve excellence. When you remove the possibility for the individual
> to achieve, the individual stops striving, because striving becomes an
> unnecessary expenditure of time and energy...another "red flag" we learned
> to pick up on through evolution.
>
> I've seen this happen, time and time again, in individual workplaces. When
> it becomes impossible for a worker to achieve (typically through poor
> management decisions or corporate policy), the worker no longer has
> incentive to expend more energy than what is necessary to simply collect
> his/her paycheck. Multiply that throughout every workplace in every city
in
> the country, and you now have the former Soviet Union, destined to
obsolesce
> itself.
>
> A successful society embraces human nature, it doesn't seek to twist it
into
> something it isn't.
>
> Sorry...everything above came across like pontificating (I have that
habit),
> but it's definitely merely a summation of my opinion.
>
> Nat

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