Andrew Carnegie- You are a sick, blind man. You must be crazy to think that you have the right to decide what is best for this nation. You may be one of the least corrupt of industrialists, but you are a greedy man nonetheless. How can you expect for your workers to prosper if you do not give them the honest wage necessary for them to live off of? How can you provide them such facilities as a library, if they must work too long of hours to use such a tool? You think you are helping your work force improve, but you are just breaking them further into submission
Andrew Carnegie- You say you have bought everything you need to run your business, but you are forgetting one major resource: your workers. Being even above government on the social and political hierarchy, I’m sure money blinds you to the simple farmer, but your control over the economy is making not just one suffer, but all of the breadbasket suffer, and mark my words Mr. Carnegie. If you are so naïve as to let big businesses such as yours solidify our money, and let contractions plague the Great Plains, your work force will suffer a very real hunger and your beautiful business will come crashing down whether you change your ways or not.
Eugene Debs- It is so very rare for me to find someone on whom I can thoroughly agree with. I agree that our nation has become selfish, and perhaps after your work has brought the nation to a turn around, then the average American and the big business leaders alike will see the importance of sharing the wealth our nation runs on.
Eugene Debs- I would very much like to meet with you some time and discuss the means by which we can assist the working class as a whole further. If we try, perhaps we can convince the government to set standards for regulation upon these big businesses.
President McKinley- You are a puppet. You say you use high tariffs to keep competition fresh, and yet, even after high tariffs have let business prosper, you let domestic competition suffer and whither. You have been led by industrialists so that they may continue to feed on the fertile soil you have laid for their facilities.
President McKinley- If you want this economic crisis to end, put the money in the hands of the people. Let them spend it and use it to allow the water of wealth to flow evenly throughout. If you were smart, you would do this, but instead you have decided to let money pool in the hands of the rich who have no intention of giving it to the poor and the hungry in any way whatsoever.
William Tweed- To say you are a thief is an understatement. Even thieves may feel morals at some point, but you are absolutely heartless, as you yourself have stated so proudly. The corruption you have spread and worked into the structure of all of New York is baffling to say the very least. The parasites you have buried in New York’s economy and business will take years to remove and correct.
William Tweed- It is the boss who is carried by the people, and it is the leader who shows them the way. Therefore, you nickname of “Boss” is well suited. What you do to develop and better the city is not a gift, but a cover-up. You know very well that without such distractions as the buildings you have created, you would not have been able to drain the immigrants of their money. I know you have died in prison, and I rest well knowing you are gone. I know you were fond of rings and scandals, so you should feel right at home in hell, drowning in the tarry eighth ring along with the other corrupt politicians of your kind.
Andrew Carnegie- You say you have bought everything you need to run your business, but you are forgetting one major resource: your workers. Being even above government on the social and political hierarchy, I’m sure money blinds you to the simple farmer, but your control over the economy is making not just one suffer, but all of the breadbasket suffer, and mark my words Mr. Carnegie. If you are so naïve as to let big businesses such as yours solidify our money, and let contractions plague the Great Plains, your work force will suffer a very real hunger and your beautiful business will come crashing down whether you change your ways or not.
Eugene Debs- It is so very rare for me to find someone on whom I can thoroughly agree with. I agree that our nation has become selfish, and perhaps after your work has brought the nation to a turn around, then the average American and the big business leaders alike will see the importance of sharing the wealth our nation runs on.
Eugene Debs- I would very much like to meet with you some time and discuss the means by which we can assist the working class as a whole further. If we try, perhaps we can convince the government to set standards for regulation upon these big businesses.
President McKinley- You are a puppet. You say you use high tariffs to keep competition fresh, and yet, even after high tariffs have let business prosper, you let domestic competition suffer and whither. You have been led by industrialists so that they may continue to feed on the fertile soil you have laid for their facilities.
President McKinley- If you want this economic crisis to end, put the money in the hands of the people. Let them spend it and use it to allow the water of wealth to flow evenly throughout. If you were smart, you would do this, but instead you have decided to let money pool in the hands of the rich who have no intention of giving it to the poor and the hungry in any way whatsoever.
William Tweed- To say you are a thief is an understatement. Even thieves may feel morals at some point, but you are absolutely heartless, as you yourself have stated so proudly. The corruption you have spread and worked into the structure of all of New York is baffling to say the very least. The parasites you have buried in New York’s economy and business will take years to remove and correct.
William Tweed- It is the boss who is carried by the people, and it is the leader who shows them the way. Therefore, you nickname of “Boss” is well suited. What you do to develop and better the city is not a gift, but a cover-up. You know very well that without such distractions as the buildings you have created, you would not have been able to drain the immigrants of their money. I know you have died in prison, and I rest well knowing you are gone. I know you were fond of rings and scandals, so you should feel right at home in hell, drowning in the tarry eighth ring along with the other corrupt politicians of your kind.