Gino
Premium Subscriber
You must be so proud to be the person to thrash the thread and turn it into your usual drama.
No, you already took that title quite a few posts ago...........
You must be so proud to be the person to thrash the thread and turn it into your usual drama.
You are what you have chosen to be. You are responsible for your own condition. If you are rich, poor, fat, slim, whatever this is what you have chosen. Not one big choice rather the sum total of all of the choices you've made in what passes for your life.
No one but you is responsible for your choices.
So you mean to tell me my Portuguese ancestors emigrated to Hawaii as farmers, were poor very poor and over 6 generations each of them became entrepreneurs, now we are comfortably middle class. Hell my grandfather and grand uncle designed and built the valves and pump system for one of the first heart bypass machines, the idea was then stolen and all they received was a plaque on the wall at the military hospital.If you're born poor you're probably going to grow up to be poor too. Americans like to think this country is completely above that. And it might have been decades and centuries in the past. The mechanisms of our society today are devolving it into an old-world caste system. All we need left is to start crowning royalty.
If you're born poor you're probably going to grow up to be poor too. Americans like to think this country is completely above that. And it might have been decades and centuries in the past. The mechanisms of our society today are devolving it into an old-world caste system. All we need left is to start crowning royalty.
So you mean to tell me my Portuguese ancestors emigrated to Hawaii as farmers, were poor very poor and over 6 generations each of them became entrepreneurs, now we are comfortably middle class. Hell my grandfather and grand uncle designed and built the valves and pump system for one of the first heart bypass machines, the idea was then stolen and all they received was a plaque on the wall at the military hospital.
Its bull that people are stuck in their position, that's called no drive. Set forth and conquer.
You probably need a pulitzer prize writer to show and convince you of understanding that Toad. I am not that person to explain that to you. I also don't want to go over my post limit as the member mentioned at the start of their thread.
Now I am #3 posts and I was only hoping for #1 but I had to show you the article and don't have time for holding your hand through the rest of it.
2CT Media said:So you mean to tell me my Portuguese ancestors emigrated to Hawaii as farmers, were poor very poor and over 6 generations each of them became entrepreneurs, now we are comfortably middle class. Hell my grandfather and grand uncle designed and built the valves and pump system for one of the first heart bypass machines, the idea was then stolen and all they received was a plaque on the wall at the military hospital.
If we would follow the Bible and pass along a blessing when it is given to us then income inequality may not be as big of a problem.
I made 2 grand today lettering 3 trucks. I tipped the waitress $20 dollars on a $10 tab. Service was slow Because she had a lot of tables. She was a very hard working woman. I passed along a small blessing, I left before she saw.
This sums up the reality of the situation. People believe otherwise because there is some upward mobility in our country vs others where it is even more limited.
The biggest thing people seem not to grasp about the income inequality discussion is people still continue to believe it's about getting paid despite providing limited societal value. The idea isn't to move away from a merit based system. The idea is not to have some "winners" and some "losers". The idea is that the winners should not hoard all the wealth and oppress normal people. That is in fact what is happening. Wealth growth in the top 1-5% is insane compared to the bottom 95-99%. It's a huge huge huge difference. It's not remotely close.
But again, people will dance around this subject, for unknown reasons, and make the discussion about welfare and lazy millennials.
important to recognize the decline in community and family values.
God have nothing to do with this.
Laziness and God have nothing to do with this. The issue is perceptual, and largely comes from a former elite class gradually losing their position of privalge due to global political and socio-economic shifts.
If you were white and male and born before 1945, your success was virtually guaranteed by how the world economy was shaped by WWII. Females who married into this male dominated economy also enjoyed the same riches. This generation, what Dan Rather called the "Great Generation", felt entitled to this watershed because of having suffered through the Great Depression and the human cost of WWII. Beginning in the late seventies, the economic picture drastically changed, and the tax laws began to favor those that had already accumulated wealth. Increased competition for jobs had the effect of lowering relative pay, and the economic development of countries that had been battered by WWII and the emergance of China, India and other third world countries further reduced the advantages the US had after WWII. Now, a global economy and technological efficiencies continue to place downward pressure on the earnings potential of young people all over the world. Some cultures, such as the Chinese, did not enjoy the relative prosperity of the "Great Generation" US population, and as such feel no entitlement and instead feel a responsibilty for the economic success of their children. In turn, Chinese children have a great deal of gratitude for their parents and feel cuturally obligated to take care of them in their declining years. 90% of Chinese own their homes. Most experts say it is because of family support. Family and community is more important than individual wealth. Nobody expects young people to lift themselves up by their bootstraps and achieve unrealistic "Horatio Alger" success.
The word "communism" has the same root meaning as the word "community." While it is easy to blame the obscenely rich for much of our economic discontent, it is perhaps more important to recognize the decline in community and family values.
1. Communism is not what Gino stated. Communism is the idea the government, and by extension the people, should own "everything" and because everything is communal, it can be more equitably distributed and used. Suggesting better wealth distribution is not communism. It's an American tradition. https://taxfoundation.org/us-federa...2013-nominal-and-inflation-adjusted-brackets/
2. Defenders of our current system still have not reconciled or addressed the actual point of income inequality.
Income is flat. Expenses are higher. It costs more money than ever to enter the workforce. The economy is doing relatively well. The stock market is at an all time high. Wealth in America is at an all time high. The wealth is concentrated heavily within the top 5%. Their wealth has grown at a far more rapid pace, not even remotely matching the wealth growth (or lack of) of the other 95% (which I'm going to take a stab at and say 99% of this forum belongs to).
I'm perplexed as to why people don't see the real issue with so much wealth being in so few hands. Think about the options a bit of money opens in your life. Now take that and multiply it by a billion.
1. Communism is not what Gino stated. Communism is the idea the government, and by extension the people, should own "everything" and because everything is communal, it can be more equitably distributed and used. Suggesting better wealth distribution is not communism. It's an American tradition. https://taxfoundation.org/us-federa...2013-nominal-and-inflation-adjusted-brackets/
2. Defenders of our current system still have not reconciled or addressed the actual point of income inequality.
Income is flat. Expenses are higher. It costs more money than ever to enter the workforce. The economy is doing relatively well. The stock market is at an all time high. Wealth in America is at an all time high. The wealth is concentrated heavily within the top 5%. Their wealth has grown at a far more rapid pace, not even remotely matching the wealth growth (or lack of) of the other 95% (which I'm going to take a stab at and say 99% of this forum belongs to).
I'm perplexed as to why people don't see the real issue with so much wealth being in so few hands. Think about the options a bit of money opens in your life. Now take that and multiply it by a billion.