I am not sure what you are saying. Are you for or against higher taxes on "the wealthier"? You seem to be saying two things? What exactly is your answer?
I'm torn on that, because just cutting everything for them seems to hurt the economy, and again, they do not invest it all back; they take a lot of it elsewhere. But if the taxes for them are already in place, I do not think we should be fighting to get them eliminated (while complaining that the poor are the ones being given too much, which I believe has been greatly exaggerated as it is).
Like now, with the Bush tax cuts for the weathy Obama wants to end, I think that since every couple of decades or elections, they do get these cuts, and while everyone else is suffering the tight economy, they should be able to forego that for now. they can't have it all the time. They'll obviously get it back eventually anyway.
But it seems we're made to believe that they "deserve" it, yet when things are tight for the rest of us, we're a the same time blaming the poor, and telling them to be content or work harder, but we're not content either, and someone could say we're not working as hard as those on the top. But you all don't seem to think that way. Something is just wrongly being taken from you, or attemted to be taken from you, and it is all flowing downward.
First of all, if we are still talking about taxes, most, and by a large majority of business owners that make over $250,000 which is the number currently being debated in this country, are earning nowhere near thousands times their employees.
Again, thousands was a mistake.
Second, I really don't care or concern myself with how much someone might make even if it is thousands times more than I.
But instead, when we feel we do not have as much as we should, and the entire economy is faltering, we just point the blame in the opposite direction. That's all people are doing. We imagine that the other end of the spectrum is getting all the money, and we definitely care what they are getting! (since it is seen as not "earned"). My point is, that is very unrealistic, and not really accurate.
If the question is where the money (tax, costs, and everything else) is really going, then the truth is truth, whether they "earned" it or not, what should be done about it or not, whether we should be jeallous or not, etc.
This still comes down to jealousy and envy and while you say you are not arguing for anyone to "claim" anyone wealth, you basically are saying that someone should "decide" what is too much for a person to earn, and you still go back to judging how deserving or how hard or easily someone earns it.
But when people assume that they "earned" all of it, that is deciding the same thing. Again, part of the issue is that there is a lot of pulling of strings and manipulation and dirty dealing going on in being able to gain so much economic power. That was all the comparison to the past was really about. It is not like some fixed principle of a person works this much harder than everyone else, so they make this much more money than everyone else.
My last thought on your post. You said:
If the situation gets so lopsided as you suggest, then that creates the opportunity for competition as you alluded to. That is what keeps it in check. If you have seen a situation where this is occurring, start a company that competes with that, and you should do real well for yourself.
the competition in this case is paying more to lure them away from the competitors. If you just start up some company (which will likely be small), it will be hard to compete, as it will be hard pay more to match the others.
But then what happens, is one company pays the CEO's a certain amount. The competitor then wants to pay even more, and then the next one will want to pay even more. The pay rate is goign up, and where will all this money come from? Likely, what they charge the consumer. But we think it's only big bad government regulation and taxation, and greedy unions full of shiftless lazy workers who are to blame for this.
Am I saying then that they didn't earn more than others at all? No. Am I saying the government should take it from tham? No.
Still, I think we should at least be wise to this part of the game, and not always blame the underdog, which these arguments always get into.
Everyone wants more, not just certain groups.
But here is the thing, that most complainers don't see, the people that do take that plunge also take much risk in order for the chance of the rewards to come later. I have started and owned a few different businesses, and when I chose to put up my house as collateral for an idea I thought would work, and when I worked 70-80 hour weeks, with no vacations or days off for years. The years where I often took no pay while paying people well that were in my employ. The Christmases where my family sacrificed on gifts because I wanted to make sure that my employees all received nice Christmas bonuses. I didn't see too many other people willing to do the same things at the time. But funny thing years later I did have some people comment how "lucky' I was, and they probably just looked at the end results and thought maybe I didn't deserve or wasn't working "that much harder" than they were, in comparison. The ironic thing is I am certain that I never took as large a salary as they perceived at that point either.
Most people just don't get it, they don't see nor understand what makes this country so great. It is the opportunity we all have available to us to take that risk in order to create something. The people that do see it and are willing to take that risk, they are the creator of the jobs and engines that run this economy. The more we have people that resent those that create, and want to punish them for that success, the less people that will be willing to take the RISK. That will be the beginning of the end.
That was great you did all that, but I see a danger in this as well. We hold it a good thing, "deserving" so much wealth, if you work yourself into the ground like that. So don't envy those CEO's and entrepreneurs (and the sports & entertainers as well, while we're at it), instead, go and work 80 hours a week like they did.
But that's not really good for anybody; not their own health, as well as their families. Christians often will point this out when telling the flock not to envy these people, but then we turn right around and seem to justify and look up to it.
A lot of that is just as much greed as the person who has given up on the system yet still tries to get over without working. It becomes mammon.
Just curious, since you worked those kinds of hours. Are you in that rich bracket? (for those kinds of hours, that should put you up way above just $200,000. Isn't that what the top executives of big companies work?)
If not, then why do you think you have not "earned" as much as they, or do you think you did?
I think there is a lot more to just "drive" and risks. I think natural talent, personality, and some things out of our control, such as timing (especially when you're talking about "risk"), also have to do with it.