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We suggest you turn to the Tao Teh Ching:

46

When dao reigns in the kingdom, galloping horses are turned back to
fertilise certain fields with their manure. If the world in accord with
dao, racing horses are turned back to pull refuse carts.
When the world hardly lives in accord with dao, dao doesn't prevail
or win. Next war horses will be reared even on a sacred hill below the
city walls, and blatant cavalry will frolic in the countryside, driving
and riding pestering war horses in suburbs in between. Dao does hardly
prevail if war is on in city suburbs.
No lure is greater than to possess what others want.
There's no greater guilt than [sudden] discontent. There's (...) greater
disaster than greed. [Eventually] there's hardly a greater sin than
desire for possession.
No disaster could be greater than [...] to be content with what one
has [in dire need and disabling poverty]. No presage of [airy] evil is
greater than men wanting to get more.
He who has once known the pure [orgasm] contentment that comes simply
through being content [at its peak], gets rather content-centred a long
time after.
     -- tr. T. Byrn