Slightly Green wrote:
DavPaz wrote:
Imagine if John Lennon's dad had sent him down't pit. Or Dickens was a lawyer. Or Davinci a sane person.
People should be given the means to pursue their dreams but why shouldn't that be in the same way that business startups work? Dragons Den for sculpture, anyone?
Yup, but using your own point, John Lennon didn't end up down the pit, Dickens was a prolific author and Davinci was just plain awesome, and all of this happened without any interference from the state. So I don't see that you are making a valid point, if anything the state could have fucked up the formation of the Beatles as a government sanctioned quango decided who should be in the band and what music they should play, Dickens would possibly have been steered away from subversive writing which showed society in a damning light, and gawd knows what may have happened to Davinci.
Indeed mate, indeed. If there's one thing any of us can be certain about anything in this life, it's surely that any State intervention - in any enterprise - is very likely to fuck it up.
In terms of Davpaz' comparison of "art startups" as compared to bona fide business start ups, it's not as though the taxpayer is required to stump up for the latter anyway, so the point is moot. No, the prospective businessman has to put his Business Plan together, do his market research and go out there to raise the money himself via the banks (usually signing away his house and/or other hard won assets as collateral; Heaven help him if he's one of the 9/10 who fail). I've no problem with would-be or existing artistes doing exactly the same thing by the way, as it's not public money that's then involved. (But of course, especially in the current climate, there is precisely zero chance of a bank stumping up funds to keep someone in clover/not having to earn any income on the promise of the production of a piece of art they can then sell).
In a perfect Utopia, it would be lovely if everyone could follow their dreams at a collective risk, indulge their every wish as to how they'd like to live their lives, spend their time, earn a living regardless of their own skill and/or the need of others prepared to pay,
and be indemnified from failure. But as I explained to
many years ago, the world ain't like that; there's no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, Father Christmas doesn't live on the North Pole and there's no such thing as a Money Tree. Hence, some 20 million+ of us in this country have to get up at 7.00am every weekday morning to jobs that most of us dislike or hate, spending the best years of our lives doing this stuff so that we can pay for roofs over our heads, put food on the table for our families, have a meagre 1-week holiday at some 3-star resort in the Med once a year and pay the taxes that keep those who can't (or won't) work off the streets, keep the streets safe, build and run the hospitals so that we all can have healthcare, educate the next generation and so on. If we all of us just decided, or had the option to chase butterflies and pipe dreams, our entire system of commerce, our collective way of life - indeed Society at large - would come crashing down around our ears. Tell me, who the fuck is going to trudge down to
Burger King every weekday morning for a back-breaking, sweaty, smelly 10-hour shift, on minimum wage, if they could grab an easel and paint flowers, make an attempt at a novel/blog or string a few songs together - and get paid for doing just that, complete with a rent paid for place to live?
People who claim it is their 'right' to opt out, for whatever reason, whilst there are countless other poor bastards slaving away in really shitty, sweaty jobs like labouring on building sites, sitting in soul-crushing call centres, working in fast food restaurants or whatever - many of them having to pay income tax (and all of them national insurance & VAT on their hard paid for purchases etc.) - whilst they sit on their butts expecting such support from their hapless peers such as these? Man alive, such people
really piss me off; almost as much as those who would support their 'right' to do so.
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Beware of gavia articulata oculos...
Dr Lave wrote:
Of course, he's normally wrong but
interestingly wrong