Centralizing obscene amounts of money, rewarding non-production and constraining national economies is exactly what the current economic system promotes.There are mathematical reasons that billionaires probably represent a symptom of systemic problems. But most of the left does a shit job of selling this beyond hate of rich.
What really matters is that X percent being so far beyond the median eventually represents NOT production. It matters if someone is making money without production. If so, then we need to reexamine the system and tax and pay.
Capitalism needs to reward output not just positioning.
You and I are making data for amazon and/or Google right now. Where's our share of the work? How can you realistically opt out?
@Kneeblock does a better job than Bernie in discussing why people siphoning off and centralizing stagnant capital is a problem.
I tire of the demonizing of "them" (Bernie calling a million in salary or wealth "millionaires" interchangeably so lazy) but centralizing too much capital is an inefficient use of that capital. And it's also anti-capitalism as much as monopolies. It breeds instability, boom and bust, and eventually slows the economy with contraction.
Thanks for the compliment Doc. In defense of Bernie, the rhetoric gets pared down to its crudest form in presidential campaigns. Most of the goal of election cycles, especially during primaries is to pump up turnout and carry a reliable base into the convention if need be that will hit the streets for the hard campaigning in the general. An overwhelming majority of people in the US will never see a million in income or assets in a lifetime of earnings, to say nothing of a billion. Even though there are a few people in the millionaire asset class who would probably be good allies for some of the reforms he proposes, the ones that aren't already riding with his reforms are too tough a nut to crack during the primaries and so worth the risk of alienating because realistically we're talking about a group of people that barely fill a small county, even though they have the spending power to seriously influence elections.There are mathematical reasons that billionaires probably represent a symptom of systemic problems. But most of the left does a shit job of selling this beyond hate of rich.
What really matters is that X percent being so far beyond the median eventually represents NOT production. It matters if someone is making money without production. If so, then we need to reexamine the system and tax and pay.
Capitalism needs to reward output not just positioning.
You and I are making data for amazon and/or Google right now. Where's our share of the work? How can you realistically opt out?
@Kneeblock does a better job than Bernie in discussing why people siphoning off and centralizing stagnant capital is a problem.
I tire of the demonizing of "them" (Bernie calling a million in salary or wealth "millionaires" interchangeably so lazy) but centralizing too much capital is an inefficient use of that capital. And it's also anti-capitalism as much as monopolies. It breeds instability, boom and bust, and eventually slows the economy with contraction.