Vol8188
revolUTion in the air!
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Sure the companies are larger but that doesn’t justify a 300-500X different between CEO and average worker pay. In the 1960s it was much lower, like a 20X difference.
The shareholders dictate all of this. The actual owners of the companies. If they want hourly workers to be paid more, in order to improve retention etc, then they back a board and CEO that wants that. If they think the CEO is worth a $50 million dollar per year compensation package then that's what they want. It's their money and their risk.I never said business owners shouldn’t be rewarded for starting their company and taking risks. But without workers, there is no business. It’s not communism to say working people generating profit should be able to afford housing, healthcare, and food.
I never said business owners shouldn’t be rewarded for starting their company and taking risks. But without workers, there is no business. It’s not communism to say working people generating profit should be able to afford housing, healthcare, and food.
I never said business owners shouldn’t be rewarded for starting their company and taking risks. But without workers, there is no business. It’s not communism to say working people generating profit should be able to afford housing, healthcare, and food.
Billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Elon musk, and Warren Buffett paid little to no federal income taxes in certain years. If the tax system was really harder on the wealthy, they wouldn’t spend millions lobbying to keep it exactly as it currently is.It’s not systemic failure. Our tax system is harder on the wealthy and easier on the middle class than most of the EU, the idea that the rich aren’t paying taxes relative to “the working man” is an absolute joke and 100% false.
Billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Elon musk, and Warren Buffett paid little to no federal income taxes in certain years. If the tax system was really harder on the wealthy, they wouldn’t spend millions lobbying to keep it exactly as it currently is.
Once again not saying people shouldn’t be paid off skill or value. But that doesn’t mean a AP clerk should be paid so little they can’t afford to survive. It’s about dignity for labor in the wealthiest country on earthPeople shouldnt automatically be able to afford that. They should provide some service that they can provide for housing, healthcare, and food.
I make more than 5x what an AP clerk makes. Is that fair or should I not be compensated for providing a more valuable accounting service?
If middle-class workers could obviously afford all those things, we wouldn’t have record levels of medical debt, millions living paycheck to paycheck, and an affordable housing crisis in nearly every major city. Just because someone isn’t literally starving doesn’t mean they’re economically secure.They obviously can afford those things. Is there some homeless and starvation crisis among middle class workers that I’m unaware of?
Yes, they paid large sums once when they exercised stock options but that doesn’t change the fact that, for years, billionaires like Bezos and Musk paid little to nothing in income taxes. That’s the core issue:, the ultra wealthy can legally avoid taxes for decades by living off loans backed by their assets, deferring income, and exploiting loopholes that regular workers don’t have access to. But continue your bootlickingAnd they paid tens of billions in others when they exercised options...
Billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Elon musk, and Warren Buffett paid little to no federal income taxes in certain years. If the tax system was really harder on the wealthy, they wouldn’t spend millions lobbying to keep it exactly as it currently is.
This is my last reply in this thread for the night,You’re just making up nonsense claims at this point. Buffett has openly stated on numerous occasions that he wants his taxes increased.
Half of Americans actually profit off income taxes. That’s why so many people get excited when it’s tax season.
The wealthy are the ones paying nearly all the taxes. Yes, some years they take massive loses and have 0 net income. That’s rare. Most years they’re paying millions each.
They obviously can afford those things. Is there some homeless and starvation crisis among middle class workers that I’m unaware of?
Yes, they paid large sums once when they exercised stock options but that doesn’t change the fact that, for years, billionaires like Bezos and Musk paid little to nothing in income taxes. That’s the core issue:, the ultra wealthy can legally avoid taxes for decades by living off loans backed by their assets, deferring income, and exploiting loopholes that regular workers don’t have access to. But continue your bootlicking
BS 50 years ago a single salary provided a home,food, clothing and transportation. Kids actually had mother at home. Now both parents work and it's a struggle.The average CEO is running a much larger company than 50 years ago but you’ve also made these numbers up. US salaries are up far more than 30% from 50 years ago
If middle-class workers could obviously afford all those things, we wouldn’t have record levels of medical debt, millions living paycheck to paycheck, and an affordable housing crisis in nearly every major city. Just because someone isn’t literally starving doesn’t mean they’re economically secure.
Only a fool believes that this is good for the country or sustainable.Why would we be worried about wealthy inequality?
Those who do little and have little skills, should have little. Those who do more, should have more. Inequality is not an issue. It’s a positive
This is my last reply in this thread for the night,
But I’m not making anything up everything I’ve said is backed by data from sources like the IRS, ProPublica, and even Warren Buffett himself. You’re right that Buffett has said his taxes should be higher and that’s because he knows the system is broken. He’s publicly admitted that he pays a lower tax rate than his secretary because most of his income comes from capital gains, which are taxed less than wages. It may not be his fault but it’s a broken system clearly. I hope you have a great night brother
Only a fool believes that this is good for the country or sustainable.
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The top 1% of American earners now own more wealth than the entire middle class
More than one-quarter of all household wealth, 26.5%, belongs to the super rich, and their wealth is growing.www.usatoday.com
Set corporate tax rates on a sliding scale based on the number of workers that qualify for and use government assistance programs in spite of being employed, and watch CEO-to-worker pay disparities close, and actual market wages be paid.I never said business owners shouldn’t be rewarded for starting their company and taking risks. But without workers, there is no business. It’s not communism to say working people generating profit should be able to afford housing, healthcare, and food.
I don’t think you know enough about capital gains taxes to realize how nonsensical his claim is.
He’s made that claim. But he’s either wrong, pays his secretary very well, or is even more insanely frugal than I thought (meaning he taxes out next to nothing to live off). And none of those things (wrong, paying her well, or being frugal) are signs of a problem with our system.
You’re insanely wrong about this topic. Most people in this country profit off taxes. The top 1% pay the vast majority of all taxes.
I'd guess probably closer to lied because I doubt whatever drop is being claimed is realistic. I'd say it's closer to political distortion of numbers. Yes, there was probably some exaggeration on how much the prices have changed. But honestly this is how I think they're coming to that number.Again, that wasnt what he said.
So he ignorantly misspoke instead of lied...