75°F
weather icon Clear

Hard work or atrophy, cynicism and failure?

To the editor:

On Oct. 6, a group of people pretentiously claiming to represent 99 percent of the people (even Napoleonic- and Saddam-era plebiscites rarely strained such credulity) marched on the Las Vegas Strip. According to Review-Journal reporter Doug McMurdo, one of the protest organizers claimed the raison d’être of the protest was to “fight the millionaires that control our politicians.”

You would think that 99 percent of the population would have no difficulty in sweeping themselves into office, but go figure.

Aside from traffic disruptions and verbal clashes with antagonistic tourists, the real juxtaposition of absurdity comes when we consider that on the day before, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs died after a long fight with cancer. A millionaire many times over, Mr. Jobs saw a lifetime of tough economic times and rough patches in his professional career. Anyone who lived through the 1970s — a decade that saw oil embargoes, runaway inflation, wage and price freezes imposed by the president of the United States, and much else by way of dismal economic news — would certainly have some sense of economic desperation.

Yet, Steve Jobs (and other everyday Americans) did not pour into the streets to rail against capitalism or even to berate their fellow Americans who had managed to earn and save more than $1 million. Instead, Mr. Jobs and his countrymen worked, they saved, they produced and, in the case of Mr. Jobs, created tremendous new values that they could offer to others in trade.

They pursued prosperity the old-fashioned American way — they worked for it.

Times are indeed tough now, of that there is no question. But wasting time in protest against a system which isn’t in place — there was nothing capitalistic about freezing wages and prices in the early 1970s, and there isn’t anything capitalistic about Wall Street bailouts today — will produce absolutely nothing. And that’s the choice and the lesson offered to us by the example of a man like Steve Jobs and that put forward by the “99 percenters.” One is the path of hard work, thought, striving and success — modest or otherwise — and the other is the path of atrophy, cynicism, despair and failure.

This country, to survive, must exalt the former and reject the latter.

Alexander Marriott

Las Vegas

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: The carbon-spewing Biden family

Climate change is an existential threat to mankind, animals and plants. Why doesn’t the Biden family lead the way?

LETTER: The Trump show trial

Remember, Martin Luther King, Mahatma Ghandi and Sir Thomas More — all innocent men — were also declared to be guilty.

LETTER: No conspiracy involving Hunter’s laptop

The R-J should acknowledge that Mr. Trump’s lies, frauds, defamations, criminal indictments and convictions are exponentially worse than Hunter’s laptop being evidence or any of the other alleged Biden missteps.

LETTER: Trump tries to win Nevada

Mr. Trump advocating for tax-free tip income is definitely one approach to winning Nevada. But my tip to Mr. Trump is to pick Marco Rubio and show the diversity of the GOP.

LETTER: Red Rock development ‘compromise’ is depressing

Red Rock Canyon is a fragile natural wonder. To claim that 3,500 homes and the traffic that goes with them, and changing the nature of the watershed, will not negatively impact the area is absurd.

LETTER: Russian warships off the Florida coast

It’s strange that the mainstream media are treating Russian combat ships miles off the Florida coast as nothing to see here.