Now you see me

10/17/2017, 8:13 PM

The world is based on exploitation of lesser powers. The few people rebel against society and silently rise out of the shadows as the highest elite. Think of people like Steve Jobs, Michael Dell, Bill Gates, and Mark Zuckerberg (NOT Beiderbecke, okay auto-correct?). They left the lawful education system to dominate society today, magnetizing the economy to the effects of their decisions. The rebels win, but the people are unaware of the rebel elite's actions; they are left to serve the elite who exploit the employed to their very remains. The end point of society is that education system is trying to hold back people, but the smart, mischievous few are tricky enough to reach ahead for the stock market and take control before the collegiate infant's first breath into the real world, a heartless, ruthless, scathing place of competition - essentially a realistic Hunger Game. Only the difference is that it's world in which we live. And if you try to fight back, they have AI and guns. One thing to be aware of is that everyone has vulnerability; we all fall victim to something. Mark Zuckerberg was forced to use Facebook profiles as currency profit off bargains with other companies. Bill Gates was born out of the Lakeside Education Enrichment Program (LEEP) (see: http://crosscut.com/2007/04/lakeside-schools-dirty-little-secret/ for details), which made "students into 21st century global citizens and has been raising tens of millions of dollars, much of it from Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Lakeside’s most famous alum, to support that mission." As sophomore year approached to Michael Dell in the University of Texas, he dropped out and used $1000 in capital and an idea to conceive the Dell corporation. Steve Jobs never graduated from college, but co-founded Apple, which was a success claimed to be due to a clever use of calligraphy. He was later fired for conflicting idea propositions, yet afterwards bought Pixar Animation Studios, becoming its Chief Executive Officer. These people defied the lawful system and came looming over the marketplace, dominating the economy and edging into history textbooks.

A reminder that no one is perfect, seriously no one, regardless of sociopolitical ranking. Presidents are mocked and insulted. Everything has major flaw; there goes conceited educational systems. A form of peaceful anarchy and communist capitalism would help. One's thoughts are not the best; America was built by multiple Founding Fathers whose constitution lay ignored by millions of today's people.

Berger, Knute. “Lakeside School's dirty little secret.” Crosscut, Crosscut.com, 28 Jan. 2015, crosscut.com/2007/04/lakeside-schools-dirty-little-secret/. Proper citations seem redundant unless the viewer is too lazy to observe details upon actually accessing the website. Viewers' discretion is advised upon reading this annotation.

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