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Should there even be the concept of a "billionaire"? Is there really anyone on this planet who has actually performed a job that allowed him/her to earn a million dollars a thousand times over? I believe there should be no such concept. I believe that people should only be allowed a personal income based upon the money they are able to earn from a job they perform. All other personal income should be taxed at 90%. What's your opinion?

Rienndo 4 Apr 14
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33 comments

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9

I agree. For several reasons. Money is like manure; if you spread it around, it makes things grow. If you keep it in one place, it stinks.

8

I have come to view people who accumulate a great deal of wealth as suffering from a mental illness not unlike that of a hoarder, except they are just hoarding wealth, not old magazines and doll collections.

Exactly, SallyMc.

8

I do not think anyone perforned a job where that kind of value is justified.

Billionaire, is a product of capitalism, which is based on exploiting the labor and ideas of others to one's own benefit. The "billbion" was not the product of the work of the billionaire, but was skimmed off the work output of others (esploited from the work of others), who worked for the "billionaire."

Personally, I think that workers shoudl be entitled to the lion's share of what their own labor produces, rather than it going to mostly benefit others.

@icolan By "skimming off" I am referring to how teh gap between worker productivity and wages have dramatically increased over the last 35 years. Profit from business has always been off the difference in labgor productivity and the actual costs of labor. Whenever there are huge wealth ineq2ualities, such as now, the gap between worker productivity and wages paid to workers has gotten very large. Thus instead of fair wages for what is produced, the wages become exploitive, as workers are given a smaller and smaller piece of what their own labor produces, and employers skin off more and more of what is produced for themselves.

The net result is th emiddle class shrinks and slides down into the ranks of the working poor. This is not good because the middle class is the consumer base, and eventually there will be a "critical mass" reached where there wont' be enough consumer demand to support our economy.

7

Income and asset inequality in the US is completely out of control.

6

There's a lot of holes in your idea, but I strongly support the intent. Billionaires only get rich by exploiting the rest of us, in one way or another.

6

No one needs that much money. Greedy is what that person is.

Is Bill Gates greedy? Most of the wealthiest people in America are among the most philanthropic. Why are you jealous of their wealth

@jwd45244 I'm not jealous. I was meaning Trump.

@jwd45244 Which is the more generous, the person who makes poverty wages and still donates what they can while barely scraping by, or the person who makes billions and donates what they want while still living in luxury?

6

Capitalism is the same as feudalism, but with dumber serfs and less Revolution.

@Renickulous right.

Money buys and controls Democracy and limits it to the most powerful elites.

Equality is antithetical to Capitalism where the rich get richer and the poor get nothing.

Capitalism and Religion stem from the same tree of bullshit.

@Renickulous statistics disagree with your claim of fairness.

But, like religion, the devotees of the faith don't like facts that counter their narrative.

6

I believe back in the 50's we had a 90% tax bracket for ultras. Then people voted for Repubs and wage earners are paying the price for it .

5

Why would someone need so much money, that their childrens children wouldn't have to work? History shows it doesn't always work out well. People need to have a first hand concept of hard work for small earnings.

5

Of course there are people like that. Greed has no bounds. 🙂

marga Level 7 Apr 14, 2018
4

How do you define "the money they are able to earn from a job they perform"?

If a person writes books that sell hundreds of millions of copies, are you suggesting that beyond a certain point the author should be required to give their books away because they've made "enough" money? Or do they just stop publishing them, and allow the books to become unavailable?

If a person founds a company and grows it until it has thousands of employees, are you suggesting that they should be required to give up ownership of the company? At what point does that happen? Is the founder required to keep running the company without getting paid once they've made "enough"?

What about investments... If people are only allowed to keep money they earn from a job they perform, it sounds like banks will no longer be permitted to pay interest. Investors will no longer be able to receive gains, in which case they won't invest in new businesses. Since no one can make money from lending, no one will offer loans...how prepared are you to pay cash for a car, for college, for a house?

Pensions, retirement accounts, Social Security...all gone. What will you live on when you're no longer able to work?

I could go on, but I think I've made my point.

All of your questions seem to boil down to one big question. How can we have a society without private profit? Look to worker coops. They already exist, are already successful, and answer virtually all of your questions.

@DonThiebaut I’m a huge fan of cooperative companies, whether worker-owned coops, customer-owned coops, or credit unions and mutual companies (which are basically financial-services coops), but that model doesn’t really address the issues of individual creators like authors, actors, musicians, inventors, etc.

@cmadler Doesn't it? If they are the sole creater, they are a cooperative of one. If there are multiple creators, or if those creators work with others (such as writers and printers and distributors), then they should be in a cooperative together, mutually making decisions about how money is spent.

You make many good points that I hadn't considered when I wrote my initial point (which was borne out of frustration with people like Bezos and Zuckerburg to name a few). I suppose a better way to have put it is to ask how many people out there are as frustrated as I am and to encourage meaningful discussion as to how we can correct the problem. Thanks to all for the discussion!

4

"Billionaire" simply refers to someone who has amassed $1B or more in wealth. I have to say, I am sick and tired of everyone propagating the concept that anyone with a lot of wealth is automatically an evil, greedy person. Are there people who have amassed wealth in an unethical way? Sure. Are there crony-Capitalists who are in bed with the government in order to gain unfair advantages so they don't have to compete in the real world, yes. But, I believe the vast majority of business owners, including many who have achieved billionaire status, are honest producers who have created hundreds of thousands of jobs through their businesses. Statements like the one in this post implies that these people should not own the fruits of their labor. I'm sorry, but that's just wrong. Ok, bring on the haters.

Ok, hater here. It is impossible for a person to amass that much wealth,(billionaire), without walking over someone or something to get there. Unless they won the lottery. Sports figures, entertainers and the like are all guilty of it. Back to you.

@SilverDollarJedi You say that "NFL players merely provide entertainment for the masses." If people are willing to pay for that entertainment, why shouldn't NFL players be paid accordingly?

@SilverDollarJedi Who's to say what the criteria is for salary justification for NFL or other sports athletes? They operate within that realm. Their "fans" create the basis for their incomes. As has been said, if people are willing to pay to see them, this is all the justification that is needed. To ask what service they provide to Humanity? It could be said that the joy/enjoyment some derive by watching, following and supporting their team or favorite athlete is a form of service. I could go on and on about charitable foundations that many athletes create and contribute to/promote, and also about the "non-profit" status of the NFL itself, but these aren't really relevant to the issue. As for Stockbrokers, well, they have positioned themselves, smartly, in the middle of a financial transaction. Hopefully, they are making money for their customers. To imply that they are simply skimming money is incorrect. Their success should be based on the money earned for their customers by making wise investments and stock portfolio balancing. I have no problem with their success.

Take a hypothetical: you live in ancient Rome. Slavery is commonplace. Some slave owners are cruel to their slaves. These slave owners are evil. Some slave owners are kind to their slaves. These slave owners are not necessarily evil. But the institution of slavery is still evil.

Billionaires are not necessarily evil just because they're billionaires. But the system that allows them to amass all that wealth at the expense of others is. Maybe people sometimes confuse the two, but that doesn't mean those people are wrong for wanting to change the system

4

Buckle up. This will bring the Ayn Rand-ites out in hives.

3

Why is assumed that if someone is wealthy they made their wealth on the backs of others? Paul McCartney is a billionaire. Bill Gates founded Microsoft and help to create the technology wave in which we are living. Does he need his wealth? No. However, he is entitled to it as he owns shares in Microsoft and his wealth is tied to the share price of the company. Ask yourself if you're not just being jealous.

@David1955 "Wealth regulation? Pardon me, but WTF is that? It's theft, that's what it is. Just how would this be accomplished? I'm sorry, but that is an utterly ridiculous suggestion. Again, we have fingers pointed at the "evil" capitalist "system." It is implied that there is a systemic suppression of the middle class, seemingly with the intention of driving them down into poverty. That's just bullshit, plain and simple. I believe we are going in the wrong direction. If anything, we need less regulation. Yes, I'm a believer in pure, laisez faire capitalism. People have lost sight of the fact that to the degree nations freely practice capitalism, and are free to do so, there is a direct correlation between that, and their standard of living. Even communist China and Russia see the benefit of embracing capitalism and both have prospered to the degree which they have done so.

In the US, we are on the brink of socialism, IMHO. If that comes to pass, there will be a mass exodus from this country. I will be one of those people.

@IAMGROOT In my experience, many of the wealthy are not averse to government regulation when it comes to safe air travel, police, banks, the military or anything else that protects them and their property from others. They just don't want to pay for sick people to get care, or poor kids to have a meal, or clean water to come out of other people's taps. I'm not saying they're hypocrites. I'm saying they're heartless bastards.

@IAMGROOT You are not the first one to confuse Capitalism with Free Markets. Hint: they are not the same thing. Capitalism is private ownership for profit. Free Markets are markets with little or no government interference. Charities typically operate in near-free market conditions, but are not for profit. Coops are not privately owned, but operate in the same market conditions as private, and do well. Neither are capitalist.

@DonThiebaut When I use the term Capitalism, I mean it as the voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange of values between two parties. Not as a political term. Apologies for not using it with the dictionary definition.

@David1955 Yeah, thanks for the insults. My point about Russia and China is accurate. Their increased prosperity is a result of the application of capitalism. You do have a point about there possibly being no escape from socialism, which sucks, frankly.

@IAMGROOT you should not do that. Not using the dictionary definition of a term is confusing. Not using the common usage definition of term is even more confusing. And there's already a perfectly good term for what you're looking for: Voluntary Exchange. It's not capitalism.

@David1955 I never said either of these countries (China and Russia) WERE capitalist, I said their standard of living increased because they embraced capitalism so some degree. You either fail to grasp, or deliberately ignore this. You, who enjoy all of the fruits of capitalism (the smartphone/tablet/PC/laptop you are using to communicate on the system built and supported by privately owned businesses, and every other product and service you use in your daily life), piss all over the mechanism that brings you all of these things. If we MUST be taxed, I would be in favor of a flat consumption tax. That would level the playing field taxing everyone based on how much they consume. Where I live it's like paying 3 or 4 separate governments (Fed, State, County City) various types of tax (income, sales, property). In a supposedly free nation, I feel extremely "governed."

3

Hey, drumpy only paid Stormy Daniels $130,000 for, what, less than 2 minutes? Lol!

@Countrycuz666 oh, sweetie, there ain't enough money in the World to get me to sleep with that pig! She wud robbed!

3

There was a report in the Wall Street Journal a couple of years stating that 63% of America's wealth is inherited. Like Warren Buffett said in the 50's, the rich paid up to 90% on part of their earnings and they still got wealthy. I am assuming that is how they paid for the interstate highway system. I certainly don't have the answer, but what we have is not working.

@Countrycuz666 l have a problem with most people. I reference Buffett because what he as it pertains to this subject. 🙂

3

That’s a slippery slope. It comes down to value. If you have an idea that has a high potential value, why should you not be compensated for using that value?

3

I think that would be a major demotivating factor for new business and make everyone less wealthy. I think a person should be allowed to make as much or a little wealth as they are able and want to.

@WizardBill you make a great point and I’ll concede my first point. I still think, as a matter of principle, that people should be allowed to make as much or as little wealth as they are able to, so long as their means are legitimate.

@WizardBill

Inherited wealth. What is the problem?

Paying employees so poorly... Get another job?

3

That's how we used to do it in the 1950s. The top tax rate then was 90%-ish.

Totally agree with it. No one needs a billion dollars of net worth.

One can argue in favor of a few million by the time you reach retirement age, if you want to consider stopping work at 65 and living a debt-free middle-class existence with modest travel without the need to work at all to be some kind of basic human right. In today's climate, you'd need a few million in net worth to live indefinitely off the interest without any worries of overshooting (living too long and running out of money). But a thousand million, no -- just no. You should either be required to pay it in taxes or give it away to charities that cater to basic human needs and rights.

3

That sounds reasonable

2

There are plenty of examples, individuals that were in the right place at the right time and took their chances and now they have wealth. If it was hardwork on their part, I don't care if it is one buck or billions and bilions, its their work. What's wrong with it????????

Oh well, I don't have a problem with their wealth. If they earned it then I don't know what else there is to say

@SallyMc Reminds me of the quote: "I would be ashamed to admit that I had risen from the ranks. When I rise it will be with the ranks, and not from the ranks." No one makes a billion on their own.

2

Great proposal but ain't gonna happen in any administration. Greed runs rampant in Washington, DC.

2

I think people should be like ants run there lives and take what they need but not what they want. how can someone have one boxing match and earn millions of dollars/pounds while nurses work their nuts off just to survive? communism would work if everyone stuck to the rules. why do rich people need firstly all the money and huge mansions with hundreds of acres of land while other life including humans are dying for maybe water?

1

Zero personal income tax, 20-30% consumption tax, no exemptions.
But very high corporate income tax.
I am playing with the idea of a money tax, each year the currency is devalued by 10%. Still working on this one.

@Countrycuz666 You have a point regarding companies moving off shore. In oz that is less of an issue, most of our manufacturing is dead, we don't even have a car industry, most good are imported. Our only industries are primary and mining, so if they want the raw materials they must stay. Our coal mining needs to be taxed out of business, the world doesn't want it.

1

We all have the right to say "It's my money"..... How come it is any different for a billionaire? ( Or another standpoint, you may disagree all you want and yet you are a billionaire in the eyes of the less fortunate)

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