Opinion The Super-Wealthy Have A Problem

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The less self-congratulatory camp of the super-wealthy understand the pressure cooker of inequality and unfairness is going to blow unless they relinquish some of their unearned gains generated by Fed policies.

The cultural consensus holds that the super-wealthy always manage to come out ahead in any spot of bother. Due to their grip on the levers of financial and political power, whatever lays waste to the bottom 90% of the populace is either 1) an opportunity to increase their wealth or 2) a minor bump in the road to ever-expanding wealth.

History offers an abundance of examples. A favorite of mine is the guest books of the French chateaus owned by the super-wealthy, which logged visits from the Usual Suspects (political and financial bigshots) until 1940, when the names of Nazi bigshots began filling the ledgers, and then in 1945, the visitor list reverted to the Usual Suspects: a seamless transition from one set of political overlords to the next that the chateau owners rode without difficulty.

But there are counter-examples as well. Consider the family estate of famed architect I.M. Pei in Suzhou, China. I visited the impressive Pei residence, which is now a government-owned property open to the public. The Pei family was wealthy enough to be comfortably in the top tier of Chinese society. Life was good for China's elite, right up to 1949. These elites did not glide though the revolution intact; their wealth was confiscated.

They were replaced with a new elite, who now holds vast troves of wealth secreted away in the West, and just as I.M. Pei attended prestigious American Ivy League universities, so too do the sons and daughters of China's party elites, under assumed names, of course, to allow them a private experience outside the limelight.

So the super-wealthy don't always skate through tumultuous times, emerging richer than ever. We all understand how vast wealth inequality influences the political and social responses to crises. What is less well understood is the role of fairness in the social and political realms: if the inequality is understood to be the result of extremes of unfairness, the public mood darkens considerably, as humans are innately sensitive to unfairness.

The porousness of the border between the wealthy and the poor matters greatly in assessing fairness. If the financial-social membrane between the two classes is relatively porous, enabling the most ambitious and brightest of the poor to enter the ranks of the wealthy (or the ranks of the the top 10% who serve them), then the society maintains a minimum level of fairness that alleviates the pressure to overthrow the regime.

The remedial actions of the state also matter greatly. If the government acts decisively to raise estate taxes, taxes on unearned (i.e. rentier) income and on the higher reaches of earned income, and devotes some minimal attention to the basic needs of the bottom 90%, these policies also alleviate the pressure to overthrow the regime.

The book The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century addresses these dynamics in admirable detail.

In other words, extremes of wealth/power inequality set the stage, but the closing act is decided by our responses to soaring inequality. If the response is PR artifice, i.e. the rich keep getting richer as the suffering of the bottom 90% increases, regime change starts looking like the only solution available.

If, on the other hand, policy makers and the public push back against the dominance of the super-wealthy, then the status quo can avoid fragmentation and dissolution.

The super-wealthy play a key role in this choice of response, and this fragments the elites into warring camps, a dynamic I've addressed many times over the years, including in my chart of some of the overlapping crises that will demand more than duct-tape responses:

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The backdrop is the policies that have handed the super-wealthy immense gains in wealth and power via policy-driven asset appreciation and the gradual diminishment of the purchasing power of wages. Over the past 45 years, the value of earnings has declined $149 trillion to the benefit of unearned gains reaped by the already-wealthy:

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This chart shows how wealth inequality has risen from the late 1970s, and how it was rocket-boosted by the Federal Reserve's "wealth effect" policies of quantitative easing (QE):

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The bottom 80% own a mere fraction of the wealth owned by the top 1% and top 10%

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While the wealthy cling to the self-serving narcissistic view that since we're doing fine, everyone's doing fine, the reality is the bottom 80% are awakening to the reality that they're not doing fine, a divide that will only widen as recession tightens its grip on the throats of the bottom 80%:

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This is the vision of the "our wealth is rightly all ours" camp of the super-wealthy: the rest of us will own nothing and we'll be gloriously happy. Uh, sure. Since we're so happy, why don't we switch places?

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The less self-congratulatory camp of the super-wealthy understand the pressure cooker of inequality and unfairness is going to blow unless they relinquish some of their unearned gains generated by Fed policies. While they naturally intend on keeping the vast majority of their gains, they realize the dividends of limitless greed might just be the overthrow of the regime they control to serve their own interests.

The rest of us play a part, too, of course, and our choice boils down to this: "And you want me to join this?"

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The super-wealthy have a problem: if they refuse to release the pressure building in a grossly unfair, rigged system that's enriched them beyond measure, then the pendulum may swing to the other extreme and they'll be visiting their former estates as tourists in a few years.

But if they agree to relinquish some part of their gains, they fear the tides of history may erode their sand castles. Aiya, what a dilemma.
 
But if they agree to relinquish some part of their gains,
When i read this kind of article I always want to ask how that would work, becasue the answer to that question is what matters. Are we trying to create a world in which that wealth starts to recirculate and betters us all (and how?) or are we simply confiscating it and giving it to muh government for pet projects?

the government acts decisively to raise estate taxes, taxes on unearned (i.e. rentier) income and on the higher reaches of earned income, and devotes some minimal attention to the basic needs of the bottom 90%, these policies also alleviate the pressure to overthrow the regime.
Ah. The latter, never mind.
 
Pointing out obvious and noticable wealth inequality that if left to fester will (and currently is) destabilizing society = gommunism!!!
He is encouraging wealth confiscation and redistribution and seems to not care if people are hurt in the process.

He is a fucking communist and should literally fucking kill himself.
 
But aren't most of the uber wealthy people donating all of their money to charities that they control that allow them to do things like control the world through setting WHO policy and destroying western nations through flooding them with retard niggers?

All these ingrates can't acknowledge just how much richers like to Give Back.
 
Who gives a fat shit how rich these cunts are?
If the pay, prices and tax are fixed normally, if even a lazy retard could work half the day and afford a moderate living, the stupid masses would be happy. Instead you have some bullshit slave economy in competition with fuck all for nothing.
The biggest problem the rich have is a timer running out until the fucking system breaks yet again and some commie nutcase will rally the stupid masses to put each their foot up some rich asses and then it'll take the wealth of nations to pull each foot out and sow the assholes back together again.
 
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Imo go full reverse. Market freedom to the max and cut social security. Make all fed cash go straight to public infrastructure and defense only.

Starting to think a choice between corporate fiefdoms would be fair and less corrupt than most states. At least Apple-Macville probably would let you throw junkies into a meat grinder of some kind and hang murderers.
 
Imo go full reverse. Market freedom to the max and cut social security. Make all fed cash go straight to public infrastructure and defense only.

Starting to think a choice between corporate fiefdoms would be fair and less corrupt than most states. At least Apple-Macville probably would let you throw junkies into a meat grinder of some kind and hang murderers.
Allow me to quote Mr. Smith:
commie faggot said:
One major point of the book is to explain why global markets have failed to discover the real price of resources, goods, services, risk, etc., and so they have failed at the most profound level. This upsets doctrinaire free-marketers who are then tempted to label me a Communist.

Never mind I see an essential role for decentralized, localized marketplaces. True-blue Communists must then dismiss me as a capitalist running dog, or worse.
So it is not that he is a communist! He knows we need a "free market" but that free market has to know the "real price" of goods and services you see! Who will decide that real price I wonder. Perhaps some kind of government or government adjacent body?

Also people should not make too much money because they must be doing something wrong.

Like...I know who this fucking dude is outside of this article.

He is a financial panic grifter and I definitely think under the layers of bullshit what he advocates for is Marxist which is why so much of what he says is mind numbing word salad like this:
But yes he pointed out that wealth inequality exists and is worse so I guess boo to me for not liking him.
 
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The solution to government distorting the market to favor the few is to have the government distort the market in a different way to favor the masses, which never, ever, ends up with the favoring of a different set of the few. Oh wait it does every fucking time

Jesus these people are so fucking retarded
 
When i read this kind of article I always want to ask how that would work, becasue the answer to that question is what matters. Are we trying to create a world in which that wealth starts to recirculate and betters us all (and how?) or are we simply confiscating it and giving it to muh government for pet projects?
Note that he starts with "the super wealthy" (top 0.1%?), which quickly shifts to "top 10%", then "bottom 80%".

The goal post will shift further, and "wealth" will magically become "income" (easier to track!), and wouldn't you know, we're back to confiscatory taxes on the upper-middle and ultimately middle classes, while those who already have multi-generational wealth whisk it away to foreign shores.

It's just Bertrand de Jouvenal's "High+Low vs. Middle", where elites view an independent middle class as a threat, and weaponize lower class resentment against them to liquidate the kulaks.
 
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If, on the other hand, policy makers and the public push back against the dominance of the super-wealthy, then the status quo can avoid fragmentation and dissolution.
Pay the fuck attention to this line.

If you remember literally fucking nothing from this article other than this, fine.
Pointing out obvious and noticable wealth inequality that if left to fester will (and currently is) destabilizing society = gommunism!!!
He's a fucking communist. He's also a fucking communist who wants to stabilize the status quo.
 

The Super-Wealthy Have A Problem​


No. They don't. They don't have any problems. Literally anything in any media telling you about all the problems of the wealthy are trying to make you say "oh, actually maybe it's not so bad to be poor." Even this fake commie trash. The rich don't want competition, and they'd rather you didn't want to join their ranks. They don't want you vacationing where they do or taking the drugs they do. They don't want you to think their lifestyle is worth attaining.

That's why shows like Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous and Cribs (where even if you saw tacky nouveau riche stuff, it was clearly designed to inspire envy) were supplanted with trashy reality shows about Kardashians and Hiltons and how ackshully you should be glad your daughter is an honor student at John Q. Public Middle School because mo' money, mo' problems.

the pendulum may swing to the other extreme and they'll be visiting their former estates as tourists in a few years.

The author should name one time when the rich have been forced out of their estates and lived to be able to be "tourists" later.

If you want to encourage killing of people, have the courage to say what's on your mind. Don't pretend we'll all sing kumbaya in our bughive apartments together with the former billionaires. That's never happened, and it's not going to start now.

It'd sure be a lot easier to believe commies about any of their shit if they would be honest about what they're asking for. Don't be coy or a coward.
 
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