I would be satisfied to know that everyone in society was taken care of by one another and by their contribution to their community. — Lif3r
Taxes are good. What isn't good is the fact that people get away with abusing them in their favor to extreme measures. The issue boils down to the market's constraint on the infrastructure and their ability to use the infrastructure as leverage to increase their wealth at the expense of decreasing the wealth of others.
It's the same thing that always happens. The system works until it's hacked and the wage gap spreads and the poor people get tired of being poor recycle rinse repeat. The question is where are we in that timeline now, and how do we make the next phase of transition in a manner that will benefit everyone and increase our survival, our happiness, and the future of our existence?
Does it really just equate to "us versus them"? Or is there a possibility in the scenario that can appease the poor man and the rich man without compromising the entirety of the system?
The rich and the powerful versus the meek and the poor. Is this phenomenon not a cycle? — Lif3r
The US is very vigilant about consumer protection. — Wallows
Once you bridge the gap between poor and rich your money makes it's own money and your taxes are often times non existent, and if you do so happen to pay taxes it doesn't matter because you make enough money off of the backs of other people who never see a fraction of your wealth and are just supposed to accept that your life is more valuable than theirs because you came up with the idea and you had the connections, and usually the money to make it work in the first place. — Lif3r
The structural advantages you reference greatly assist the rich in obtaining their status in the first place. — Bitter Crank
The structural advantages you reference greatly assist the rich in obtaining their status in the first place. — Bitter Crank
Fortunes require a foundation of money, from somewhere. — Bitter Crank
Government is a committee to tilt the playing field in favor of big business." (A paraphrase of Karl Marx's statement, "government is a committee to organize the affairs of the bourgeoisie".) — Bitter Crank
Your smarter than that Bitter Creek — Brett
. If you didn't want Microsoft, you pretty much had to buy an Apple, which was more expensive. — Bitter Crank
But the quote suggests that government favours business over people, that it betrays people in the interests of big business, that it serves big business. — Brett
Business is quite a savage arena. Most of us get by without having to enter the ring. All we have to do is wait for the benefits to come our way without any risk at all. — Brett
Business is quite a savage arena. Most of us get by without having to enter the ring. All we have to do is wait for the benefits to come our way without any risk at all. — Brett
Your home is at risk if you do not keep up payments on a mortgage or other loan secured on it
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