Originally
posted by
mdevol:
Your children should not be able to inherit a dime that you earned?
No, but the remote possibility of failure is what I'm referring to. I do believe in an inheritance tax, not 100% obviously, but significant. If my kids inherited everything I will have earned, failure would still be well within their reach, if they didn't work, for example.
The kids of billionaires could retire from day 1, and still be richer than all of us several generations later.
Originally
posted by
mdevol:
I love how there is so much hate on the megarich
I don't actually hate the mega-rich; however, I *DO* despise the tactics of a small group of them who consistently try to buy more power. The mega-rich I admire would include Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, to name a couple.
Originally
posted by
mdevol:
they earned their money, or their parents earned their money
Earned is an awfully strong word for how a lot of the old-money in the US came into being. But that's another discussion.
Originally
posted by
mdevol:
Me personally, I grew up BROKE. One of 7 kids, we had nothing fancy nothing new, struggled to eat full meals regularly. So fluff you for telling me that because I didnt have rich parents I cant make it in this country.
I'm not saying you can't; I'm saying the odds were heavily stacked against you. And I commend you for doing so well. Incidentally, what do you mean by make it? Becoming middle class, or even top 10% is extremely commendable in and of itself, however it's the top 1% that is nearly impossible to break into.
Originally
posted by
mdevol:
Nobody is promised success in America, everybody is promised a chance.
Exactly. And it's this promise that should be maintained; when the odds are increasingly stacked against you, the promise is broken.
Originally
posted by
mdevol:
Doubling minimum wage overnight would cripple small business, if you think otherwise you are a fool.
Who said anything about overnight? That said, you are being blind to the ripple effect it would cause; the increased prosperity of 38% of Americans would be significant enough to buoy businesses of all kinds.
Observe what happened during the boom here in Alberta; McDonalds was paying something like $11/hr and willing to pay for $1000 of your tuition, because they couldn't find anybody to work there. Yet, small businesses didn't seem to suffer. In fact, the general prosperity kept everything moving along quite nicely, despite the fact that there was a demand-induced increase in the average minimum wage.
Prosperity is good; you don't always have to race for the bottom line.