I've been thinking about this a lot lately: are NEETs right? Usually they say they have no desire, and that it's in fact wrong, to contribute to a rotten system. I often thought this was mere rationalization, but now am starting to think it's reality.
Seriously, why support this system? The taxes you pay do you no good. Other people get the benefits and you get persecuted. If you're a white male, society doesn't want you. Jobs are nowadays OVERT about favoring women, trans weirdos, and racial minorities. The Western World is corrupt as fuck. The good times are over and are not coming back.
So why bother contributing to this system? I can't see a good reason. Sure, some people have to work to get by, but why should they do anything but work the bare minimum they need to survive, and so contribute as little as they can to this beast?
People who are trying hard seem to be out of touch with reality.
>are NEETs right Yes and all the shilling against them that you see are -Boomers and genxers assmad about not getting service at their favorite goyslop restaurant -Normie cuckservatives and libturds from reddit who unironically like to wageslave becuse their brains are wired for servility -Women sharting and sneeding because men not working means the collapse of society, and women need society more than men do -15 year old kids who wouldn't take a shit unless they had the approval of their conservative dads' or ben shapiro/steven crowder/jordan peterson surrogate daddy figures' permission -wagies who realize NEETs are right but are so cucked that they lash out at us as a cope -glowniggers who call anyone who doesn't like to wageslave an "antiwork tranny"
I just ghosted my boss during a very important phase of renovations on a 240 year old house. The prick was rich, rich enough to brag about buying a 70 foot boat one week and an RV another. But would chew my ass out over a mistake in my hours that equaled to 12 dollars. He invited me over to his house just to move more than 200 beams to build an ocean side dock and he offered me a sandwich for lunch then deducted that from my pay. This happens with many different companies so I just said fick it.im tired of making out of touch boomers money.
Aiden Butler
The only system worth working hard for is a system that's working towards increasing the free time and thus freedom of the people. Anything else is a system built on time robbery.
Jacob King
I've neeted for roughly 15 months total, split into two stints: 1 year and then 3 months. Im 26 now. The first was a gap year during college, and the second was a short sabbatical in between jobs.
If you feel the desire to neet, I recommend keeping it below ~6 months at a time, give or take. Long term neeting fucks you up mentally (and usually physically to) and it takes a very long time to recover. Unless you continuously do extensive excercises of both the brain and the body every single day while neeting, which kind of defeats the purpose. It will be extremely difficult to hold yourself to that, unless you have some top tier self-control. The one year I took in the middle of college took me over 2 years to fully recover from. Even if you think you can just neet for the rest of your life, there will eventually be one day when you want to re-enter society. And when that day comes, if you've been neeting for the past decade, it will be practically impossible to do so. The ideal is to take neet breaks every few years if you can.
Liam Howard
I would have to make huge sacrifices to get back on the wagie train, and the question is it worth it. Because all that effort for just a few scraps off the table, and like you said it's all fucked anyway.
Noah Morales
>he offered me a sandwich for lunch then deducted that from my pay
at 29 i decided to venture out of my comfort zone and got a job to see what the fuss was about. i quit after two weeks. its been 3 years but i still have ptsd and flashbacks of being shouted at by management, alarm clock ringing in the morning, angry customers. never again.
Connor Cook
>Long term neeting fucks you up mentally Normgroid cope
Brayden White
for normal people it does neet life ain't for everyone
Levi Garcia
Yes. It sucks but it is what it is. I see "now hiring" signs in many business windows. They have mostly, as you said, women and racial minorities. I swear there is a ftm tranny at my local food lion in the dairy dept. You do an application. Check, white and male. Hear nothing. For the next 6 months you see "Now Hiring" in those same store windows. I could have "learned a trade". Sure. But that will be decimated as well. Fuck it. There is nothing at all to look forward to.
Gavin Hill
Im not normal, thats for sure. Scored comfortably in low cyborg on the Any Forums robot test. I guess if you're truly weird enough to be able to neet for the rest of your life (and somehow able to financially sustain it) then its not a bad option. And no, just neetbux are not enough usually. Unless you have like zero hobbies. All I'm saying is that if you even have a slight feeling of ever wanting to rejoin society one day: don't neet for several years in a row.
Jace Garcia
Great minds think alike:
Who has been a neet here for the longest? Anyone over 5 years? 10?
Jeremiah Johnson
It really doesn't its just hard to explain to people what you do with your time they demand an explanation and for how you support yourself and what you do with your time. People are rather invasive and critical - that's the crappy part. If I had to integrate into society it wouldn't be easy.
Brody Murphy
My brother has been a neet for most of the past 14 years, if you consider age 18 the starting age for neeting if you don't have a job and aren't in college. I've mostly been a non-neet, and have helped support my brother, but lately I just want to do the bare minimum to get by and contribute no more to society than I must for the sake of survival.
Angel Richardson
I believe in the neet lifestyle but I'm also fucking poor, families in debt and they kept pestering me to get a job again so I here I go wageslaving again
Anthony Morris
I'm sure your brother appreciates it. Some people struggle in less obvious ways. Disability is not always a wheelchair or visible or definable with a neat explanation.
My parents and grandparents spent most of their lives working long hours at tough shifts and if I can avoid that I want to.
Jack Bennett
I'm a crownless King with all the benefit and no responsibility, bitch. If you want me to work. Make me the CEO.
Ethan Robinson
>are NEETs right No and fuck you faggot. Being a neet is the worst thing you could do to yourself. muh contributing to this system, and do what instead being a retard with no friends thats going to die alone ? Go out and live your life bitch, don't be a neet
Landon Martin
I've actually considered becoming a Christian monastic for these reasons. But you're not really a NEET at that point, that shit is a very difficult lifestyle. Much harder than being a hobo
Christopher Sanders
>third world nigger coping with lack of welfare in his shithole "country" by lashing out at chad western neets Many such cases. Sad!
Matthew Kelly
Life is interesting until 30-35, then its just a repetition of the same pleasures that dosent give that many pleasure as they did before,no novelty nor anything new. But bad things ,there is a big variety of things that can happen. You should think un terms if family,not society. If you have kids you will care about society because your kids,not because society. The problem all over the west is not helping locals having kids.
Angel Ortiz
A couple years ago I wrote 500 pages of what would have been my philosophy dissertation in a PhD program (I quit the department due to intractable disagreements) and wrote it in a few months. It was utterly draining, and I still have at least another 500 pages to write in order to finish it, maybe 1000 more pages. Then comes the revisions, which would take even more time, since drafting is the easy part and, like I said, a person who is adept can write 500 pages in a few months. And I read tons of philosophy, history, politics, even quite a bit of science (cosmology, astronomy, geology, physics, chemistry, biology, anthropology). I wrote a lot -- am very active in intellectual and political debates online (have probably written tens of thousands of pages in online comments in my short life -- am age 39 now).
If you have an active mind, or an active body, or both, there is absolutely plenty that you can do as a neet. In such cases, neeting just means following your passions. And I wasn't even neeting while doing all that writing: just doing it in my off hours from a low-level job.