People say "money can't buy love and hapiness." I think that's true somehow, but on the other hand, this saying has some problems.
First of all, what is love anyway? If you can't buy it with money, how do you get "love"? Is "love without money issue" the true love? I am not sure about that.
When we say somebody "love me", we have no proof, we only "feel" that we are being loved, we choose to believe the words "I love you" from someone's mouth but there is no base, standard to distinguish "true love" or "how true it is".
People love money so they pretend to love men with money and they also say "I love you", they also care about him and being nice to him. In terms of that, how do you judge the true or false of the love? As long as you have money, people say they love you and you do feel be loved anyway.
"Money can't buy love and hapiness" is a logically accurate statment because when you buy something, it belongs to you. The love from people who love your money don't belong to you, when you lose money, you lose their love. But on the other hand, because as long as you have money, people love you, you are actually "renting" their love, which is also good. After all, love is just a feeling, when you feel being loved, you are loved and happy.
So yes, money won't buy everything, but you can get everything with money.



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