Opinion Billionaires Should Not Exist — Here’s Why - This op-ed argues that every billionaire really is a policy failure.

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Teen Vogue (Archive) - December 29, 2021
by, Rebekka Ayers

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In a fair society, there would be no billionaires. Bernie Sanders says they shouldn’t exist and Elizabeth Warren sells mugs of their tears. I’m talking about billionaires and making the case that an economic system that allows them is immoral.

We have arrived at an obscene inequality crisis, in which wealth is concentrated in the hands of a powerful few, at the cost of crippling hardship, precarity, and compromised well-being for the many. When a single billionaire can accumulate more money in 10 seconds than their employees make in one year, while workers struggle to meet the basic cost of rent and medicine, then yes, every billionaire really is a policy failure. Here’s why.


What does a billion dollars look like?

Most of us would consider a multimillionaire to be extremely wealthy. A billion dollars exists on an altogether different scale. If you want to imagine what it looks like, this visualizer compares bundles of $100 bills to show how a million stacks up to a billion. It’s a mind-bogglingly large sum of money, so let’s try to make it meaningful in day-to-day terms. If someone gave you $1,000 every single day and you didn’t spend a cent, it would take you three years to save up a million dollars. If you wanted to save a billion, you’d be waiting around 2,740 years. See for yourself — this calculator works out how long it would take for one of the big billionaire CEOs to earn your annual salary or pay off your student loan. All this shows how the personal wealth of billionaires cannot be made through hard work alone. The accumulation of extreme wealth depends on other systems, such as exploitative labor practices, tax breaks, and loopholes that are beyond the reach of most ordinary people.

How does a billionaire become so wealthy?​

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez explains how the ultra-rich can be seen as beneficiaries of an unjust economic system where she says billionaires don’t make money, they take money. It’s impossible to have that much money without profiting off of other people's lack of it. Even if individuals are only implicated discreetly, the capitalist class generates profits upwards by denying workers a living wage, engaging in exploitative labor practices (directly or indirectly along the supply chain), ensuring that medicine and health care costs remain high, or lobbying for or even simply benefitting from favorable taxation policies and cushy government subsidies. Wealth is also able to accumulate via close proximity to power, with corporate connections leading to elected office, or merely allowing people to use their influential status to set the agenda according to their own interests. This is known as plutocracy, or rule by the rich, and it undermines democracy. It’s no coincidence that Donald Trump’s landmark 2017 tax cuts were driven largely by big business and helped billionaires pay less than the working class for the first time. When the capitalist class is able to write the rulebook and lobby for preferential tax rates, it’s virtually impossible to achieve social and economic reform in a way that is meaningful to the majority of working- and middle-class Americans.

Is it possible to be a self-made billionaire?​

It’s really a question of whether anyone can ever be “self-made,” or whether this is the language of a larger myth that justifies wealth inequality. The self-made myth conceals the multitude of barriers to wealth accumulation and reinforces the notion that if you’re poor, it’s because you’re lazy or made bad choices. The notion that a billionaire has worked hard for every penny of their wealth is simply fanciful. The median U.S. salary is $34,612, but even if you tripled that and saved every penny for a lifetime, you still wouldn’t accumulate anywhere close to a billion dollars. Here, it’s also worth looking at Oxfam’s extensive study on extreme wealth, which found that approximately one-third of global billionaire fortunes were inherited. It’s not about working harder, smarter, or better. There are many factors built into our economic system that help extreme wealth to multiply fast. It’s a matter of being well-placed to benefit from the structures that favor capital and produce a profit off the back of exploitation.

How deep is the inequality divide?​

In October 2021, there were 745 American billionaires, while around 11.5% of the population live below the poverty line. During the pandemic, their collective fortunes swelled by $2.1 trillion — just to frame that figure in real terms, that roughly equates to more than the total outstanding student debt and more than is being offered in Biden’s “once-in-a-generation” American Families Plan, which promises national investment for 10 years. Meanwhile, there’s not a single state in the U.S. in which even a $15 wage, which sits above the minimum in many states, would afford someone to rent a two-bedroom apartment. This report illustrates the scale of billionaires’ surging wealth in line with the precarious conditions of essential workers, many of whom have been denied hazard pay or substantial sick-leave benefits. There is no ethical way to justify this and there’s not an economic reason either. Jeff Bezos could give every single one of his 876,000 employees a $105,000 bonus and he’d still be as rich as he was at the start of the pandemic.

But if billionaires didn’t exist, wouldn’t we all be worse off?​

While it appeals to common logic to think the wealth of the richest few eventually trickles down to the many, the reality is that it doesn’t work this way, not least because America’s richest can entirely and legally sidestep the system to enjoy virtually tax-free status. It’s true that the billionaire class creates jobs and that wages have the potential to drive the economy, but that argument falters when workers barely have enough to survive. The potential to generate tax dollars from billion-dollar profits is enormous. Oxfam found that if the world’s richest 1% paid just 0.5% more in tax, we could educate all 262 million children who are currently out of school and provide health care to save the lives of 3.3 million. But given generous tax cuts and easily exploitable loopholes like the ability to register wealth in offshore tax havens, this rarely comes to pass.

So what could keep extreme wealth in check?​

Prior to the 2020 election, prominent Democrats were rallying to tax the rich. Elizabeth Warren touted an annual wealth tax and Senator Sanders planned to hike the top estate tax rate to 77%, while AOC pitched a 70% top marginal tax rate. Seventy percent may sound drastic, but it’s actually not that radical. The U.S. had a similar rate in the 1960s for the wealthiest households, during what economists like Paul Krugman cite as “the most successful period of economic growth in our history.” Check out this rundown to learn how it would work.

If billionaires do not live off work but live off wealth, why don’t we tax wealth like we tax work? Most Americans believe the government should do more to address extreme wealth. After all, Joe Biden was elected on a promise to raise taxes for those earning over $400,000 from 37% to the pre-Trump cut levels of 39.6%, and limit tax breaks. This barely scratches the surface when it comes to the obscene wealth of billionaires. While taxing unrealized capital gains at death goes some way to shift the balance, it falls short of a progressive tax on the unrealized gains that accumulate while the richest in our society are still alive.

Much more must be done to tackle the systemic causes of soaring wealth and entrenched inequality. As well as correcting under-taxation, legislators must close loopholes to make tax laws watertight. It’s promising that, if passed, the Build Back Better framework contains legislation that would see the U.S. join 136 countries in a global 15% minimum corporation tax agreement, in a bid to deter multinationals from shifting profits to low-tax havens.

Only a progressive, root-and-branch approach is capable of tackling this deep divide. The campaign Make Billionaires Pay has offered up no fewer than 14 ways to tax the rich, while Public Citizen has pitched a Wall Street sales tax on speculative transactions like stock, bond, and derivative trades. Nicknamed a Robin Hood tax, estimates show just a tiny fee of 10 cents per $100 traded would generate $777 billion over 10 years, with the potential to raise even more, depending on the tax rate set. Targeting high rollers through a tax on financial speculation would have the added benefit of limiting high-frequency trading — a type of algorithmic financial trading that can be risky and unfair in its potential to help the wealthiest rapidly accrue assets and has been blamed in part for flash crashes. Some favor the adoption of universal social security measures, paid for via progressive taxes. It’s been argued that Universal Basic Income, Guaranteed Minimum Income, and Universal Basic Services could aid prosperity in a world grappling with growing populations, societal aging, and climate breakdown. Piecemeal proposals are not enough to remedy a crisis of poverty in the midst of plenty. And a fair world would not further the acceleration of either.
 
Certainly in real life wealth is almost always entangled with groups of people, but my point is still made: it's not strictly a zero sum game.

Wealth is constantly being created. I used a simple example of chairs and wood because it's, well, simple, but there are examples everywhere. Intangible examples of wealth are super important too. Like architecture and engineering and things like that.

Proper surveying and engineering for buildings and civil infrastructure is intangible, but it's significantly more valuable than (say) the food necessary to keep the engineers alive. Even adding up all the food and time necessary to train the engineers, their output is significantly more valuable as wealth than the input they required.

You can stack all the rocks together you want, but without the engineering knowledge it's useless.

Money is not wealth. It's a medium of exchange for wealth.
This is so stupid it hurts my brain.

No, wealth is not constantly being created. Wealth is only held in a pool of workers. The amount of people who create wealth is limited. Therefore wealth itself is. Wealth is not a perpetual motion machine. It is not magic. It is ALWAYS defined by limitations.

Do I have to explain fucking scarcity?

Time has always, always been what you are being paid for. Labor is paid for because you are being compensated for a finite resource, time.

Everything, EVERYTHING in economies are based on FINITE RESOURCES. That is why things have fucking VALUE. THEREFORE wealth cannot be infinite.

I'm taking my kid gloves off here. You are not as smart as you think you are. This whole arguement fails not only on economics, but on basic logic.

You are arguing that a system that is based on finite things produces something infinite. This is a perpetual motion machine.

There's no point in even addressing your arguments because it fails at even the most basic level.

Here is an equivalent of what you are saying. A calorie is not energy, it's a medium of exchange for energy. Yes, because a calorie is a measure of energy, as money is a measurement of wealth.
 
This is so stupid it hurts my brain.

No, wealth is not constantly being created. Wealth is only held in a pool of workers. The amount of people who create wealth is limited. Therefore wealth itself is. Wealth is not a perpetual motion machine. It is not magic. It is ALWAYS defined by limitations.

Do I have to explain fucking scarcity?

Time has always, always been what you are being paid for. Labor is paid for because you are being compensated for a finite resource, time.

Everything, EVERYTHING in economies are based on FINITE RESOURCES. That is why things have fucking VALUE. THEREFORE wealth cannot be infinite.

I'm taking my kid gloves off here. You are not as smart as you think you are. This whole arguement fails not only on economics, but on basic logic.

You are arguing that a system that is based on finite things produces something infinite. This is a perpetual motion machine.

There's no point in even addressing your arguments because it fails at even the most basic level.

Here is an equivalent of what you are saying. A calorie is not energy, it's a medium of exchange for energy. Yes, because a calorie is a measure of energy, as money is a measurement of wealth.
Perhaps I didn't explain myself very well. By "constantly" I wasn't being literal.

I'm also not saying that wealth is infinite.

But it's also not a zero sum game, because a big chunk of wealth is intellectual, intangible. The difference between a pile of wood and a chair is ingenuity and time. And the end result is more valuable than the sum of its parts, otherwise everyone would be making chairs themselves and not buying them. (extend this to buildings and cars and computers and anything else worth possessing)

There's an upper bound on wealth somewhere, but we're not anywhere near figuring out what that is. Short of pedantic shit like thermodynamics.
 
But it's also not a zero sum game, because a big chunk of wealth is intellectual, intangible.
A good example of that is the stock market. It's value and wealth is based mostly on what people feel it is worth. In Fortune 500s to IPOs they are selling ideas more than factories or workers or whatever.

When you break down what it is that the management class actually does it is navigating these things. The value of the company, the wealth of it's owners, is more defined by how that structure functions than whatever the product actually is.
 
I know they couldn’t make certain things like food with magic. I forgot what else they couldn’t because I haven’t read it in a while. The economy of the wizarding world is a big weird.

Looks like they made a law to describe it.

It seems they can't make food, but they can make it bigger, which is weird. Dunno why they haven't found a way to abuse that yet.

A hand-me-down pet rat is proof of poverty, but you can conjure a snake out of nothing.

I'm getting off topic here but it feels like we need to release some rules lawyers into the Harry Potter world so they can wreak havok. Too bad Rowling locked them all in Gringots... Which kind of circles back to the economy being weird. Huh, funny that.
 
As certain people like to quip, your network determines your net worth. Problem is, some interesting questions and conclusions arise once you start noticing the prevalence of certain millionaires' and billionaires' (((networks))) (2% of the population, 40%+ of the billionaires).

What's your source for that? I've seen this image before:
privilege.jpg
but it's inaccurate because it counts everyone who makes over 100k a year part of the 1%. Statistics show that in 2009 43% of religious Jews made over 100k a year and Hindus weren't far behind, not that 43% of Jews are billionaires.

pewforum.png
 
lol, people here think billionaires earned their money. Nigger, wealth is a finite resource. Billionaires only exist because the system is rigged for the wealthy and for generational wealth. Being a billionaire is the most immoral thing you can possibly be.

Jesus christ, some of you people are fucking blind. They're taking you for every single iota you've got and here you are sucking their dick. They exercise every single moment of their existence taking wealth FROM YOU. Are you a fucking idiot? The government is functionally designed to cater to THEM at every level.

You're fucking cucks. You're worshipping a system that HATES YOU. It is a big club and you're not in it. Oh, and if they don't like you anymore, your membership can be revoked at any time. If you're 'no longer economically viable'. Billionaire worship and defending them is the most fucking disgusting thing on this forum. I'd rather live through 10000 jewposts and just people spamming 'lol nigger' than this cuck shit. This is like the Bull fucking your wife and you're clapping. Except this time you're now homeless, you own nothing and you're spending $500 for a bandaid at a hospital. Oh, and you're dying of cancer because your medical insurance company decided that preventive was too expensive and just paying 2 years for the chemo would net them an extra five grand.

They create jobs? Nigger, they DESTROYED our manufacturing economy and created a SERVICE BASED ECONOMY. Need I remind you, service based jobs provide NEGATIVE GDP. Please. They will eradicate your job if they think anyone else can do it, even if they can't.

This thread is Stockholm syndrome, Jesus fucking Christ. The end result is a consolidation of wealth. We're at end stage capitalism where billionaires are cannabalizing entire countries and buying up housing so fast you can't even rent anymore.

And all this SJW shit you guys despise? Guess what, it was invented by them so you don't see that they're fucking you. But some of you are so fucking ignorant you don't even give a shit. Jesus. I know you hate Teen Vogue and shit, but broken clock.

EDIT:
And if you think I'm mad at the internet, dumb or autistic, just rate dislike or disagree and I'll take it as such.
It's clear there's a problem, but what's the solution? Communism isn't any better than what we have.
 
We care more about billionaires being billionaires, and yet inflation is making grocery and gas prices rise to prices that we haven’t seen in America in the last 40+ years.
 
I agree to an extent, but not with most of their bullshit. Rich people used to have to invest in their country/region as freedom of movement wasn't as it is now, and people were still more distrusting of outsiders. The problem is now these people can just hop a jet and never look back, while buying their way to an easy life in a foreign country,

The other problem is how broken and rigged the entire fucking financial system is. Not gonna get into it, but their idea of "infinite growth" is impossible; you eventually run out of something, and what you try to substitute doesn't hold up. So instead of doing shit an honest way, you get loopholes, workarounds, and everything else to barely keep the machine turning. And when it finally breaks down; those rich people will just flee the problem they created, while everyone goes full dog-eat-dog in the aftermath of the failure.

Who the fuck thought this article was appropriate for Teen Vogue?
The same kind of Editor who approved the How To Anal Sex article in Teen Vogue.
 
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez explains how the ultra-rich can be seen as beneficiaries of an unjust economic system where she says billionaires don’t make money, they take money. It’s impossible to have that much money without profiting off of other people's lack of it.
This statement is a prime example of why AoC is one of the most economically ignorant people ever to hold office.

What does it even mean?
 
We care more about billionaires being billionaires, and yet inflation is making grocery and gas prices rise to prices that we haven’t seen in America in the last 40+ years.
That has everything to do with the government trying to buy themselves out of their awful covid policies by running the money printer.

Not billionaires doing billionaire things. This class warfare shit is just a distraction.

That was your point, wasn't it. nvm.
 
This whole conversation has gotten predictably derailed into theoretical discussions about free markets and the nature of wealth, rather than how American billionaires actually get and maintain their billions. And really, I think that's the goal of these articles.

Example 1: Jeff Bezos among many others were huge supporters of lockdowns, because lockdowns didn't personally inconvenience them much at all, and drove American consumer activity away from brick-and-mortar institutions and into online shopping and entertainment. What was overall very, very bad for America as a whole shifted a trillion dollars of value away from the middle class and into the assets of guys like Bezos.

Example 2: Elon Musk frequently engages in manipulation of asset prices via Twitter, which he then uses to make moves to enrich himself. This is securities fraud, and if some small-time investor does the exact same thing with penny stocks, he'll go to prison. Elon Musk is allowed to do this because a number of senior people in government in both parties, including Nancy Pelosi, the current head of the SEC, and multiple Federal Reserve officials, have gotten rich off TSLA stocks and options.

You can't discuss lockdown policy critically or the rank corruption permeating the government and mindlessly carry water for the Democratic Party at the same time. So what we actually get is nattering about some nonsense policy that's really designed to block the middle class out of accruing wealth under the guise of soaking the rich.

No, wealth is not constantly being created. Wealth is only held in a pool of workers. The amount of people who create wealth is limited. Therefore wealth itself is. Wealth is not a perpetual motion machine. It is not magic. It is ALWAYS defined by limitations.

Somebody's been hitting Das Kapital a little too hard.
 
Off the top of my head from bookmarks that died with my last computer.

According to the Jewish Telegraph Agency, at least 139 of the Forbes 400 billionaires are Jewish. (34.75%)

If you plug "site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki "American billionaires" "Jews"|"Jewish"" into google, you get 517 hits, out of 923 entries in the "American billionaires" category. (56.01%)
Holy shit, that's a lot. :stress:

When I plug that into google I get 580 results instead of 517.
580.png
That's 62%.
 
They seem to think that the billionaires have all their money in a vault like Scrooge McDuck.

In reality, if you challenged them to open their wallet and match CASH MONEY with you, if you had a $20 bill, you'd probably have more cash on hand than they do at that moment.

The majority of their money is set to making money and is in assets.

But these faggots act like the billionaires just put it in a big pile in the corner then sit there rubbing their hands and going "At last, we will have our revenge."
These people constantly assume that net worth = income. I probably have a net worth of near a million dollars. But, I don't make a million dollars a year.

Elon Musk dedicates the bulk of his wealth to SpaceX and non-profits, which creates jobs as well as R&D for future technologies.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez explains how the ultra-rich can be seen as beneficiaries of an unjust economic system where she says billionaires don’t make money, they take money.

Why in God's name are you still listening to Alexandria Occasional Cortex, of all people?
 
Holy shit, that's a lot. :stress:

When I plug that into google I get 580 results instead of 517.
View attachment 2839318
That's 62%.
Once you graduate from 'Early Life' training, it's fun to move on to more in-depth searches like these.

site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American media executives" "Jews"|"Jewish" (81 entries out of 157)
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American hedge fund managers" "Jews"|"Jewish"(97 entries of 197)
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American businesspeople convicted of crimes" "Jews"|"Jewish" (76 entries of 213)
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American people convicted of tax crimes" "Jews"|"Jewish" (106 entries of 217)
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American defectors to the Soviet Union" "Jews"|"Jewish" (18 entries of 18 )
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American spies for the Soviet Union" "Jews"|"Jewish" (46 entries of 132)
site:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ "American Communists" "Jews"|"Jewish" (235 entries of 336)

And realize that there is something deeply wrong in our relationship with God's Chosen People.
 
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They can make as much as they want, but at a certain point they should have to invest in things that aren't purely for profit but to help society (and if it yields profits, good--it is re-invested further).

The idea that we owe nothing to our country and countrymen is despicable. That doesn't mean giving every junkie a UBI, it means bettering society so there's fewer junkies.
 
lol, people here think billionaires earned their money. Nigger, wealth is a finite resource. Billionaires only exist because the system is rigged for the wealthy and for generational wealth. Being a billionaire is the most immoral thing you can possibly be.

Jesus christ, some of you people are fucking blind. They're taking you for every single iota you've got and here you are sucking their dick. They exercise every single moment of their existence taking wealth FROM YOU. Are you a fucking idiot? The government is functionally designed to cater to THEM at every level.

You're fucking cucks. You're worshipping a system that HATES YOU. It is a big club and you're not in it. Oh, and if they don't like you anymore, your membership can be revoked at any time. If you're 'no longer economically viable'. Billionaire worship and defending them is the most fucking disgusting thing on this forum. I'd rather live through 10000 jewposts and just people spamming 'lol nigger' than this cuck shit. This is like the Bull fucking your wife and you're clapping. Except this time you're now homeless, you own nothing and you're spending $500 for a bandaid at a hospital. Oh, and you're dying of cancer because your medical insurance company decided that preventive was too expensive and just paying 2 years for the chemo would net them an extra five grand.

They create jobs? Nigger, they DESTROYED our manufacturing economy and created a SERVICE BASED ECONOMY. Need I remind you, service based jobs provide NEGATIVE GDP. Please. They will eradicate your job if they think anyone else can do it, even if they can't.

This thread is Stockholm syndrome, Jesus fucking Christ. The end result is a consolidation of wealth. We're at end stage capitalism where billionaires are cannabalizing entire countries and buying up housing so fast you can't even rent anymore.

And all this SJW shit you guys despise? Guess what, it was invented by them so you don't see that they're fucking you. But some of you are so fucking ignorant you don't even give a shit. Jesus. I know you hate Teen Vogue and shit, but broken clock.

EDIT:
And if you think I'm mad at the internet, dumb or autistic, just rate dislike or disagree and I'll take it as such.

This.

We need to eat the rich. shoot up thier families and throw thier bodies into vats of acid.
 
Rather than disagreeing with Teen Vogue we should be pointing out how they're owned by the super rich and this article is just them trying to tap into the wide and growing support economic populism is getting. There shouldn't be billionaires, but obviously there should be classes, I'm not a commie. These billionaires and other mega rich are the ones pushing all the Woke crap, Open Borders, Wars for Israel, etc. Having a billionaire class is like having a gun to your head 24/7 - it's risky. Also billionaires make their money with non-productive and harmful means like finance, monopoly, and trickery while hardworking and honest productive capitalists tend not to get that obscenely wealthy. If you want a more productive economy then billionaires are also bad and the only hard work they do is ripping off and messing with other people (Like you guys here).
 
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