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Can Money Buy Happiness?

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Can money buy happiness? It’s a philosophical question that has been discussed for centuries and there is no simple answer. For example, Graham Hill in “Living with Less. A Lot Less” gives his input on this highly debated topic through a multitude of short anecdotes. She asked herself not if “Money can buy happiness,” but if money could “help buy happiness” (Rubin 293). She also brings up the idea of modest splurging and spending out as methods of using money to help one buy happiness. Rubin describes modest splurging as not being afraid of spending money upon activities or items if it brings one happiness (Rubin 295). Not spending out, on the other hand, is buying things, but then just never using them and saving the items for a better day (Rubin 305). Though Rubin addresses the use of money to help one buy happiness, I intend to complicate her argument to understand how constant subjection to the media’s influence causes our western society to view a materialistic life as a happy one. I’m especially thinking about the media’s message that our lives are not perfect, but that we can and should buy items which can make it perfect. Through the use of short anecdotes, Rubin is able to portray to his audience how the use of money can help one buy happiness. He first brings up how a lot of people think of large amounts of money as being an easy way of achieving happiness, but what truly brings one happiness is the anticipation of events. Rubin says, “Because money permits a

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