Quote from burn8:
I'm curious to see if there is an example that does not include the Govt enabling "the rich" to steal from the poor.
-burn8
Quote from Random.Capital:
This is where revolutions come from.
When a country has it for too good, for too long, the elites tend to forget that social programs and a bit of income redistribution is a hell of a lot cheaper than angry mobs in the street.
Safer, too.
Then blood gets spilled, everyone chills out, and the cycle begins again.
Quote from burn8:
I'm curious to see if there is an example that does not include the Govt enabling "the rich" to steal from the poor.
-burn8
Quote from MKTrader:
You're right. The TBTF financial institutions, Monsanto, etc., are all enabled by the gov't. I wouldn't say they "steal" from lower/middle classes, but there's little competition for some of their goods/services (thanks to them pushing out smaller competition via regs & other means from the gov't).
Quote from MKTrader:
You're right. The TBTF financial institutions, Monsanto, etc., are all enabled by the gov't. I wouldn't say they "steal" from lower/middle classes, but there's little competition for some of their goods/services (thanks to them pushing out smaller competition via regs & other means from the gov't).
Quote from bone:
If you see someone truly poor in the United States chances are it is a substance abuse problem and a personal accountability issue. Entitlements and public assistance are provided to the point that the recipients will not take jobs; indeed - there are single parent families with generations ( literally ) who are provided housing, food, vouchers, medical care, education, transportation, and cash payments.
There are volumes of empirical studies dating back from the 60's that shows that the level of financial assistance provided does NOT correlate to reductions in income gaps and poverty rates.
The real issue is not the rich, the issue is personal accountability and substance abuse - which is not the exclusive domain of the poor and intransigent.