If you bring up UBI, or other reforms, you'll inevitably get someone who brings up: "voting yourself someone else's money".
You could convince me, except that things have gotten to an absurd state.
I look at some graphs of wealth inequality and it is unimaginably shocking. I never dreamed it could be this bad. More than 50% of the US wealth is owned by 5% of the people. [1] 35% is owned by only 1% of the population.
This image from this article also tells the story.
I'm not going to argue how accurate those numbers are. Rather, I will extrapolate the trend.
Let's continue the current trend to its logical absurd conclusion. The entire planet is owned by one single person. You (and everyone else) are one of the wage slaves in the bottom 99.99999999 % of the population (at least 8 decimal places). [7.5 billion people, minus that one person who owns everything, then divided by 7.5 billion people.]
Naturally, we should respect property ownership. Somehow this one person deserves and "earned" the wealth of the entire planet through his hard and diligent efforts and deserves to own everything and everyone. It is absurd on its face.
At this logical endpoint, it clearly seems that the rest of the planet should seize the wealth of the one person.
Wealth transfer has already happened. And is still happening. Republicans are just fine with this as long as it is all trickling upward.
Yes, "voting yourself someone else's money" involves taking away some of the absurd amounts of wealth hoarded up by a few. Amounts of individual wealth that one person couldn't spend in a lifetime; then leaves to others, who themselves can't spend it in their lifetime.
Not as a proposal, but just to make a point, hypothetically, if all of these people who exceed this threshold had their net worth capped at $100 Million, they would still be just fine. Yes, really! They would still live in fabulous homes, drive fabulous cars, and eat whatever they wanted, travel wherever and whenever they wanted -- for the rest of their natural lives.
In case my "one man owns the world" didn't get the idea across, I'll be more blunt. Any time too few people have owned way, way too much, and too many had nothing, there is always an uprising. I'm not proposing an uprising. I'm merely warning it is inevitable. Hopefully not in my lifetime. Maybe it would be better to solve this peacefully where the wealthiest, while heavily taxed, still end up, after taxes, fabulously wealthy beyond the dreams of most everyone else. I'm not proposing reducing all the rich people's wealth to some cap. Just that they should pay their fair share. Why are they the ones who get the tax cuts?
(Score: 2) by Arik on Wednesday October 28 2020, @05:52AM (4 children)
Possible? Sure.
Very dangerous though. When a king owes you.
Maybe he's a good king, a good friend. Ok. It's a lot of money still. Maybe it takes 2, 3 generations to pay off.
You think his grandkid is going to happily pay your son interest? You think he might just prefer to proclaim him a traitor and seize his lands instead?
Yeah, that's shit that happened. A lot.
If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
(Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday October 28 2020, @06:04AM (2 children)
Aren't you describing today's market? The "kings" on Wall Street are still seizing land, homes, and possessions when they get tired of paying and/or losing interest.
Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
(Score: 2) by Arik on Wednesday October 28 2020, @06:09AM
Not exactly, but I was drawing the parallel.
I have no desire to take anyone's property. I am quite skeptical of some claims to property, however.
If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
(Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday October 29 2020, @03:45AM
(Score: 1) by khallow on Friday October 30 2020, @01:16PM