@manii_iranian: #fussball #wm #iran #fußball 🇮🇷⚽️🇮🇷⚽️🇮🇷

manii_iranian
manii_iranian
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Monday 08 June 2026 18:03:45 GMT
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pariiii.e
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2026-06-09 02:06:44
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Inshallah gewinnt Iran 🇮🇷 diese Weltmeisterschaft 💚
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Why does working harder no longer feel like enough? That was the question I kept coming back to in this debate between Daniel Priestley and Nick Hanauer. Because everywhere you look, people are angry. They’re doing the work and following the rules, but still feeling like security and opportunity are moving further away. Nick’s view is that capitalism only works when the people doing the work are properly included in it. Better wages, better standards and companies being forced to treat people with dignity. Daniel agrees that people are being left behind, but he thinks the deeper problem is ownership.  His point is that if people don’t own a home, a business, shares or any part of the system, then they don’t really feel like they’re part of capitalism at all. We discussed things like: - Better wages and protections and whether they can solve a deeper ownership gap. - If taxing the rich a real solution or political slogan? - AI changing the value of human labour. - Small businesses caught between government pressure and corporate scale. - People losing faith in an economy that no longer gives them a stake. One version of capitalism creates growth but leaves too many people behind.  Another version protects people but can make it harder for businesses to grow, hire and take risks.  That’s why this conversation felt so important. I was genuinely trying to understand where the middle ground is, because if people don’t feel protected by the system or included in the upside of it, it’s easy to understand why so many are losing faith in it.
Why does working harder no longer feel like enough? That was the question I kept coming back to in this debate between Daniel Priestley and Nick Hanauer. Because everywhere you look, people are angry. They’re doing the work and following the rules, but still feeling like security and opportunity are moving further away. Nick’s view is that capitalism only works when the people doing the work are properly included in it. Better wages, better standards and companies being forced to treat people with dignity. Daniel agrees that people are being left behind, but he thinks the deeper problem is ownership. His point is that if people don’t own a home, a business, shares or any part of the system, then they don’t really feel like they’re part of capitalism at all. We discussed things like: - Better wages and protections and whether they can solve a deeper ownership gap. - If taxing the rich a real solution or political slogan? - AI changing the value of human labour. - Small businesses caught between government pressure and corporate scale. - People losing faith in an economy that no longer gives them a stake. One version of capitalism creates growth but leaves too many people behind. Another version protects people but can make it harder for businesses to grow, hire and take risks. That’s why this conversation felt so important. I was genuinely trying to understand where the middle ground is, because if people don’t feel protected by the system or included in the upside of it, it’s easy to understand why so many are losing faith in it.

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