(Washing machine story)
The proper solution is to put HIM in the Miele next time you see him.
That kind of person is the kind I would wink out of existence if I were an omnipotent diety.
(Washing machine story)
Do you know the story...I do not.
Alpheus, it would take me longer to retype it than for you to read it. Do me a favor...
As to your 'ultimatum' question:
... print trillion-dollar platinum coin (or) print trillion-dollar platinum coin...
What's the difference?
If you are asking whether it is better to raise or lower the debt, then I refer to that (the chess inventor & the king) story to illustrate that sometimes people, without realizing, accept a debt they can never actual repay or is far more than what was reasonably thought to be agreed upon (in good faith).
Miele
Ah, the infamous Miele washing machine story, I know it well... just joking.
It seems that every new anecdote or bit of data suggests we need a new credit system.
Trillion Dollar Platinum Coin
I'm going to entertain your question anyway...
If platinum was trading at 1,000 US an ounce, a trillion dollars worth would weigh ~28,350 metric tons (about less than half of the world's estimated supply).
The U.S. mines approximately 3 and 1/2 metric tons of platinum per year. At that rate, it would take the country ~8,000 years to provide that much platinum to the Federal Reserve. This can be reduced to ~150 years if the U.S. trades with the rest of the world. South Africa would have a lot of bargaining power over the U.S.
You object that some people grow up with parents that have more money, and you make the allegation that the poor kids don't have a chance because they are poor and will always be poor because they're poor, and it's all the fault of the kids who have parents with more money.
That being said, no, it wasn't a bad time, and in hindsight I believe my father made a wise decision back then.
“I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.”
~GTE
How come people here don't see the problem in that someone can makes tens of millions of dollars, or billions, and yet someone can bust their ass and make barely enough to survive.
But there will always be rich and always be poor.
Says who? How is this some self-evident truth one has to accept?
This is like someone saying 1000 years ago "there will always be monarchs, nobles and peasants. We just have to convice the nobles not to rape our wives on our wedding night, that'd be good enough. It's not like the aristocracy system will ever cease to exist and we will actually elect out own leaders".
Just because we find it hard to imagine a radically different society than our own doesn't mean it's outside the realm of possible.
A lazy bum inherits his hard working parents' wealth. Not unfair. Not wrong. Not immoral.
Depends on your value system. If his parent's wealth could be put to much better use than the rich kid's partying, but is used for rich kid's partying nevetheless, then I do consider it unfair, wrong, and immoral. Exactly like you said. Unfair, wrong, and immoral to the highest degree.
Exhibit A: Champagne Gun.
http://www.champagnegun.com/index.html
Yes, it is exactly what you think it is. A water gun equivalent, except with champagne. It serves no reason other to allow kids with rich parents to demonstrate how much wealth they can waste for no reason, and how much shit they do not give about said waste. But it's okay. Why would we want to take away their god-given right to piss away money that could feed whole families just to show how cool they are?
Exhibit B: Flint Water Crisis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint_water_crisis
Yes, right in the heart of US and A, not even some "thirld-world" country. Some kids have fun with champange guns. Some other kids can't even have a glass of clean water right in the most advanced capitalist country.
So, yes. Criminally unfair. Criminally wrong. Criminally immoral. We should be raging red with anger when we see pictures of rich kids partying in Mykonos and Ibiza by throwing lobsters at each other and playing..."champagne war" while other kids can't even have clean water. And we should maybe think about whether those 2 images are *really* irrelevant to each other, or maybe they're connected somehow. But, obviously, we prefer to rage about poor people sometimes cheating on welfare. Because, you know, those kids just have rich "hard working" parents, and they inherited their mass fortunes, and what's wrong with that, right? Because some people having *too much* couldn't possibly have any sort of connection to why some other people have *so little*. Because resources are infinite, apparently.
...
Btw, about the "hard working parents"...well, I won't delve into it too much, but in my own country, trace any of the economic elite families history and query when exactly they actually started amassing wealth and made their small workshops and grocery stores into huge industries that dominate the economy to this day - most of them were after WW2. Lots of..."opportunities" then, let's put it that way, with the main of them being the Marshall Plan, which you could get a tasty, juice piece of, providing of course you aligned yourself with the..."right" people - and obviously not being a dirty communist, you know, one of those that actually organized the Resistance against the Nazis in the mountains, while others, "mysteriously", "someway", "somehow", established businesses right in the middle of the nazi occupation, when most of the population couldn't even get a piece of bread and a spoonful of oil. After all, any capitalist will tell you, crises are opportunities for the smart and industruous, and what bigger crisis than a war?
However, when someone, as you put it 'busts their ass', and still cannot gain proportional wealth or reward for his work, knowledge, expertise, and/or skill, because of arbitrary BS roadblocks, then yes that is unfair, wrong, and immoral, and should certainly be illegal (IMO).
The problem is that so many people bust their ass in jobs that don't create much value, so they don't get paid much. Or people who did nothing for 30~ years of their life trying to suddenly enter the job market, complaining that no one will hire them.
Says who? How is this some self-evident truth one has to accept? This is like someone saying 1000 years ago "there will always be monarchs, nobles and peasants. We just have to convice the nobles not to rape our wives on our wedding night, that'd be good enough. It's not like the aristocracy system will ever cease to exist and we will actually elect out own leaders". Just because we find it hard to imagine a radically different society than our own doesn't mean it's outside the realm of possible.
Wealth is relative. Unless everyone is dead even there will always be "poor".
Exhibit A: Champagne Gun. http://www.champagnegun.com/index.html Yes, it is exactly what you think it is. A water gun equivalent, except with champagne. It serves no reason other to allow kids with rich parents to demonstrate how much wealth they can waste for no reason, and how much shit they do not give about said waste. But it's okay. Why would we want to take away their god-given right to piss away money that could feed whole families just to show how cool they are?
It's just a toy... Do you want to ban toys now or something? And it's not just for rich kids, it's a party toy. According to this, all entertainment is waste... But if anything products like this are the proof that capitalism can fill any market niche.
Let's say you take the whole $450 you would have used to buy a family meals for a month. What about next month? They'll need another $450, so what will you take away next?
Exhibit B: Flint Water Crisis. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint_water_crisis Yes, right in the heart of US and A, not even some "thirld-world" country. Some kids have fun with champange guns. Some other kids can't even have a glass of clean water right in the most advanced capitalist country.
This had to do with a public utility, and trying to provide services to the poor as cheaply as possible, not the best example to pick.
Btw, about the "hard working parents"...well, I won't delve into it too much, but in my own country, trace any of the economic elite families history and query when exactly they actually started amassing wealth and made their small workshops and grocery stores into huge industries that dominate the economy to this day - most of them were after WW2. Lots of..."opportunities" then, let's put it that way, with the main of them being the Marshall Plan, which you could get a tasty, juice piece of, providing of course you aligned yourself with the..."right" people - and obviously not being a dirty communist, you know, one of those that actually organized the Resistance against the Nazis in the mountains, while others, "mysteriously", "someway", "somehow", established businesses right in the middle of the nazi occupation, when most of the population couldn't even get a piece of bread and a spoonful of oil. After all, any capitalist will tell you, crises are opportunities for the smart and industruous, and what bigger crisis than a war?
Hard working isn't what earns money, people need to forget that concept. Productive/valuable work is what earns money.
The Marshall plan was actually very successful in what it set out to do, and obviously with all the communist spies at the end of WW2, selecting based on political affiliation was the right choice as well.
Fascism was going to be ended, but the world's been suffering even more from the effects of communism statebuilding since then. If money from the Marshall plan would have flowed into the USSR, we'd have even more world problems.
In this latest federal trial Chiquita Brands admitted to paying AUC operatives to silence union organizers, to intimidate farmers into selling only to Chiquita Brands, and even providing weapons (3,000 AK 47's) to this terrorist organization in order to carry out their objectives. On the plea agreement, Chiquita Brands were allowed to keep secret the names of the U.S Citizens who brokered this agreement with the AUC, by the Colombian Government, in exchange for relief to 390 families.
poor kids don't have a chance because they are poor and will always be poor because they're poor,