inheritance is evil
I don't see how working off your ass and giving what you legitimately earned to your children is bad. The will to "make it better" for your children is probably as old as humankind itself. What is wrong about taking over your parents' possessions once they are no longer, which is what they wanted, too?
On the other hand, we're talking about people who, knowing that they will get ill one day and knowing that they will be old one day, do not make provisions (this is exactly what the Matthew 26 quote says) and still expect to somehow get through it and save their bacon because some fool will pay for them. And meanwhile they expect you to pay for them as well, because work sucks. Labor is exploitation, fuck the system. Except it's the system that feeds them.
This is one reason why retirement pay for most honest, working people is so lousy.
I am very lucky to be a member of a "free profession" (although "lucky" is a bad wording... you will probably consider this "stinky" again, but this didn't just fall from the sky -- I had to work very hard for years, take immense responsibilities, and deliver an intellectual performance that 90-95% of the population is simply unable to deliver, and I had to deliver consistently, and in the middle of the night -- the privilegues that I have now are not undeserved, they didn't grow on a tree).
This ("free profession") means that my retirement pay is managed by a mutual indemnity owned by the association of professionals. After one year of work, my pension claim was already higher than my mother's who paid into the social pension fund for over 40 years. Think about it, how can this be? Well, it's simply because my mother's payments feed thousands (uh... millions?) of slackers who never paid into the system whereas my money goes into a fund from which only people who paid in previously are being fed.
Now, before you accuse me of being "contra anything social", let's get this right. I'm perfectly OK with helping someone who is, without being responsible for it, poor, needy, in trouble. No question about that. You lose an arm and a leg and cannot work? I'll be happy to pay for your life (while being happy that I still have both arms and legs). You need to go to hospital because [some undeserved illness that I wouldn't want to have]? Same thing. I'm happy to pay.
But if you are in trouble solely because you didn't care to work (save, prevent, provide...), then well... go die, sucker. You deserve what you get.
I'm not the first to come up with this reasoning. Aesop (a slave without any material possessions, by the way!) had that same reasoning 1800 years ago already: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ant_and_the_Grasshopper
I also wonder why you choose to not get mad about, say, Foxconn(and Apple, and those are just examples)
Who says that I am not? I didn't mention them, that's right. But there is not enough server capacity to host a post containing everything that I'm upset with.
Now, since you named them: Foxconn. Indeed I really don't have much negative to say. They're big, and they make big money. Work conditions aren't so terribly great, but where in China/Taiwan do you find an employer with good work conditions. Thus... yeah, whatever. They sure could be nicer to their employees, but other than that, they make very real products which are useful and needed everywhere, and they make money from that. Not much wrong.
Oh right, there's those famous suicide cases. This is one of these typical socialist "evil, bad capitalists" lies where they only tell half of the truth and twist it around until it is completely untrue. Foxconn has 1.3 million employees, and 13 committed suicide within one year. That is a 1/100'000 rate.
If you care to look at suicide statistics for China, you find that the average is 13/100'000. Which means no more and no less than work conditions at Foxconn must be exceedingly good (in comparison to elsewhere in China), because suicide rate is 13 times lower than average. Or worded differently, working at Foxconn makes survival 92% more likely.
Apple, on the other hand, makes big money from products that nobody really needs, and tricks customers into spending money and more money and even more money, locking them into a useless virtual store, and brainwashes customers to even stand in line for two days before the release of the next shit that they don't need, blah blah blah...
So you could say they're exploiting the fact that people are just stupid. Is this ethical? Probably not. Is it really bad? Maybe. They're not doing anything that many others (including e.g. every existing religion) aren't doing anyway. But people are kinda guilty, too. I mean, it still takes two. Someone willing to exploit the fool, and... the fool.
(Incidentially, I own an iPhone too, but I didn't pay for it (I would never!). Wifey, who is in management at Big Evil Corporation gets a corporate phone, which always has to be the newest model for a reason that neither she nor I can understand. Either way, it means she regularly gets the newest iPhone a week or so after it comes out, and since no one entitled to get a corporate phone would use the last-but-one most recent model, they're not withdrawing the old one, but telling her "keep it for backup, just in case". Which means I always have the almost-newest iPhone, too. Yup, it does phone calls just as good as my 10-year old Nokia).
But what's more important, Apple is deceptive on tax. I don't have the exact number in memory now, but I think it was something like 5€ tax paid per million euros revenue in the European market. Something like that. Which they got by bribing some officials and making a shady deal with Irish government, rerouting sales from other countries there via some Hollywood bookkeeping tricks, and whatnot. Thus... being totally "legal" from some point of view (although the Court of Audit disagreed on that!), but still definitively immoral in every respect.
I agree that if you make a two-digit-billion revenue, paying a couple of hundred bucks of tax is not OK. And sure, if you do that and feel "right" about it, then something is definitively wrong with you.
But that doesn't mean that making revenues stinks. Nor does owning, or owning more than you stink. What stinks is being deliberately fraudulent.