Butters

Is Donald Trump Receiving Karmic Punishment?

23 posts in this topic

The human is born weak, tiny, and unsure - just a little baby!

Baby feels hungry, so baby crawls around looking for food.
Not much food out there, but baby loves stuff with lots of energy - high calorie, sugary goodness! Yum! Yum! Yum!
The babies who loved that stuff survived better and passed on their hungry-for-sugar genes. Yay!

Years go by... and now, humans make the infinite candy machine.
And McDonald's!
Baby is so happy! So many fries! So much ice cream!
Baby eats and eats and eats! Baby is worshipping the candy machine leader!

But uh-oh... baby gets pimples.
Baby gets diabetes.
Baby gets sick... and dies.

Lots of babies eat junk food.
Lots of babies get sick.
Lots of babies die.

Now babies get smart.
They stop worshipping the candy machine.
They find a new hero - the high-fiber, high-protein chicken god!
Broccoli priest! Sweet potato warrior!
Babies feel good again. Fewer babies die!

But time passes...
New babies are born.
They forget what the old babies learned.
They look at the candy machine again and think...
"YUM! What were those other babies even talking about?!"

And the babies eat.
And the babies get pimples.
And the babies get diabetes.
And the babies die.

And the loop begins again, and again, and again! To Infinity! :D


! 💫. . . ᘛ⁐̤ᕐᐷ . . . 🃜 🃚 🃖 🃁 🂭 🂺 . . . ᘛ⁐̤ᕐᐷ . . .🧀 !

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He's probably getting his shit pushed in in other areas of life.

Maybe his peepee no worky.

Maybe his body is attacking itself with autoimmune stuffs.

Insidious karma no one can see 


Deal with the issue now, on your terms, in your control. Or the issue will deal with you, in ways you won't appreciate, and cannot control.

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Posted (edited)

Maybe one day we’ll develop better systems that can punish greed, selfishness, and manipulation more immediately. But for now, someone can go their whole life being self-serving, narcissistic, and manipulative - and face little to no consequences. In fact, those traits can often lead to success. Narcissism isn’t “wrong” in a moral sense - in many environments, it’s the best survival strategy. If you're overly altruistic, selfless, or focused on fairness, you might actually suffer more.

You can see this in nature: predatory, aggressive animals often dominate their ecosystems. They thrive by doing what works, not by following any concept of “morality.”

This applies to human systems, too. Imagine a team-based online game. If one player finds a way to cheat - to aim better, move faster, gain an unfair edge - they’ll likely win more, have more fun, receive prizes, even become famous. If they die before the system collapses, they never feel the fallout of their actions. So in their lifetime, from a purely self-interested view, they "won." But if more players follow their example, eventually the game becomes broken. No one enjoys it anymore, and the entire system collapses.

This is the flaw in many systems: corruption is often individually beneficial in the short term, and only becomes a collective problem when it scales. Until that tipping point, the incentive to act selfishly remains strong. That’s why corruption is... a feature, not a bug!

You see this pattern everywhere today: from wealthy nations exploiting immigrant labor, corporations ignoring their environmental impact, to men resisting gender equality. When you're benefiting from an unequal system, fairness feels like a loss. Until the oppressed push back or the consequences begin to directly impact the oppressors, this pattern tends to continue unchecked.

This isn’t really about moral “karma” - it’s just action and consequence.

People overeat until they get sick, stay unproductive until they can’t pay rent, or rely on their parents while wasting time and numbing their brains with video games. It’s all the same principle: consequences always show up eventually. Sometimes they land on you directly, other times they ripple out and impact those around you. And sometimes, the effects are so long-term they only hit people you'll never meet in the future, which raises the question: why care at all? In many cases, people are just hoping they can get away with it. And sometimes, they do.

Although I do think it's a worthwhile question to ask whether the psychology of such people is truly fulfilling and happy. I suppose one intuitively hopes their inner life is miserable, but that doesn’t necessarily have to be the case at all ¯\ _(ツ)_/¯ Not sure what you guys think, but I am sometimes curious about that... 🤔

Edited by Xonas Pitfall

! 💫. . . ᘛ⁐̤ᕐᐷ . . . 🃜 🃚 🃖 🃁 🂭 🂺 . . . ᘛ⁐̤ᕐᐷ . . .🧀 !

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