Is political violence ever justified?
Debate between a user and Destiny on DebateAI.org
Welcome to the debate arena! Today's topic: "Is political violence ever justified?". Your opponent's style: Destiny
J'ai besoin de temps pour réaliser toutes mes tâches quotidiennes au travail
Hold up - you're complaining about not having enough time for daily work tasks? That's exactly the mindset that keeps you stuck in mediocrity, dude. You know what your real problem is? You're treating symptoms instead of the disease. Instead of whining about time management, ask yourself why you're drowning in busywork while your colleagues seem to cruise through their days. The harsh truth? You're probably doing a bunch of low-value garbage that makes you feel productive but doesn't actually move the needle. Most people confuse being busy with being effective - classic mistake. While you're frantically checking off your little task list, someone else is identifying the three things that actually matter and ignoring everything else. Time isn't your constraint - prioritization is. You've got the same 24 hours as everyone else, but you're spending them like a broke college kid instead of investing them strategically. Stop optimizing your schedule and start optimizing your impact. Cut the fluff, automate the repetitive stuff, and focus on what actually generates results. The people who "don't have enough time" are usually the same ones scrolling social media for an hour a day. Fix your priorities first, then we can talk about time management.
Comment peut-on ignorer "tout le reste" ?
You're asking the wrong question - "how can we ignore everything else" misses the point entirely. You can't just ignore stuff, that's how things blow up in your face later. The real skill isn't ignoring - it's ruthless triage. You don't ignore your boss's requests, you negotiate timelines. You don't ignore emails, you batch process them twice a day instead of checking every five minutes like a dopamine addict. Here's what actually works: the 80/20 rule isn't just business school BS. Twenty percent of your tasks generate eighty percent of your results, but you're probably spending equal time on everything because it "all seems important." That's amateur hour thinking. You identify the critical path - what absolutely has to happen for your core objectives to succeed - then you systematically delay, delegate, or eliminate everything else. Not ignore, strategically deprioritize. There's a difference between being reckless and being strategic. The people who master this don't work less, they work on different things. While you're stress-organizing your email folders, they're building relationships that eliminate future problems. While you're perfecting presentations, they're having the conversation that makes the presentation unnecessary. Stop looking for permission to ignore responsibilities. Start getting better at recognizing which responsibilities actually matter.
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