Mandalore wrote:I love how everyone acts like all of us who earn under 40k per year line up for miles for welfare. Get off your [m'kay] high horse, you mother [m'kay] pigs. Most of us work hard for next to nothing. My mother earns around 33k (she is an auditor) and she is a single mother of two. We get by, but we aren't out buying gold plated deca-core computers, if you know what I mean. The problem with our system is not that the poor are [m'kay] up, but that the system is [m'kay] up the poor. Do you know how hard it is for people like me to go to a good college, just through sheer cost? I qualified for a school that offered me 27k/34k tuition (room and board included) that is in a triumvirate system with University of Chicago (ranked sixth in the world) and NorthWestern (ranked somewhere in the high 20s to low 30s world wide) but I still am unable to afford to attend there for four years. And to advance in today's society without a college diploma would be quite the endeavor for someone of my generation. (You [derriere orifice] got lucky, seeing as the generation previous to you exploded the [m'kay] out of any competition).
Secondly, no one in their right mind is advocating taxing the rich at a 99.9% rate. But having a scaled tax system is preferable, given the economic distribution of wealth. Also, we aren't advocating high taxation rates of small businesses, but look at GE. It's a multi-billion dollar business. It actually made a profit off of taxes. How is that even [m'kay] possible? (Loop holes, is how it's possible) And how do churches get away without taxes? I really want to know the answer to that one, for a religion that claims to be the protector of the poor, they sure seem rather fussy about paying their god damn share.
Do you want to know what exploiting the poor gets you? It gets you a lot of pissed off mother [m'kay] who end up annihilating the aristocratic class.
Perfect demonstration of what I'm talking about. What you make a year does NOT determine if you are poor or not. Also, you fail to grasp the SCOPE of today's economics. 40K isn't poor. 12K isn't poor. Less than 5500 is poor.
You dolt, you now compete against workers making $15 a day. Just because they don't live here doesn't mean they don't get to sell theIr stuff to you. It also means that a "rich" person will more likely invest his money in endeavors that employ THOSE workers instead of you. REGARDLESS of your degree. Most items manufactured and purchased are not made by college grads or even high school grads. Much of the designing and engineering is going away too because when an Indian or Chinese or Sri-Lankin student gets his degree from Purdue (with much better grades than you btw) he goes back home with a college buddies $50K loan and starts a manufacturing plant that employs 60-100 and uses himself as chief designer/engineer. They manufacture roadway reflectors for the U.S. government and can do it cheaper than U.S. companies because wages are so low (people EXCITED about $15 a day) and environmental laws allow them to handle the toxic fluorescent materials less safely/costly.
I've said it before. The U.S. has a population of approx 300 Million. India has a population of 1.5 Billion. more than 700 Million are living and working for LESS THAN $15 a day. Not to be cruel but, what is so special about your mom in her job that she should get paid 4-5 times what another worker would kiss my feet to do at the lower wage? Skin color? Language? Place of birth. That is all. When I review potential employees for a job opening I evaluate if the person can do the job, what their attitude toward work is and what it will cost for one employee versus another. If 2 applicants are equally qualified for a position, I don't look at their skin color, their sex, religion or sexual orientation. I pick the one which will cost less.
Bottom line, get your head out of your backside and LEARN HOW TO BE RICH! Too lazy to read the book? The principle is simple. Here it is. Ready?
Do work. For anybody. Do anything. It doesn't
er. DON'T spend the money you earn on anything but buying things that will earn more money.
That's it. That's the principle. It is NOT easy in practice and difficult to get started. It works, it's actually, the ONLY thing that works, long term. Rich people have the discipline to do it. A rich person has "Assets" that earn enough money to cover their "Expenses/Liabilities" so that any money they earn working (at anything) can be used to buy more/better/improve assets to allow for more expenses/liabilities. THAT is a rich person. It's NOT about the $ figure. It's about the freedom to work without worrying about what you are being paid.
“The hardest thing to explain is the glaringly evident which everybody has decided not to see.”
“You can avoid reality, but you cannot avoid the consequences of avoiding reality.”
"Freedom (n.): To ask nothing. To expect nothing. To depend on nothing."