Originally Posted by
freyguy
There's nothing wrong with scotch and cigars. As a matter of fact, I quite like both. There problem is that despite the few good CEOs who can be mentioned, many of them are greedy cheats, who would see their employees starve while they get fat on the hog. I'll step foot on your side of the arguement for a moment and say that a CEO should get paid more then his underlings. Despite the fact that he sits on his butt in a nice office, while people break their backs with physical labor to bring in revenue for his company, he is more educated, and better prepared to make intellegent decisions for the company. BUT how does that constitue him making an anual salary of $250 million + while his best, hardest working employee in the store makes only $30,000; at best.
Are we forced to work in these stores, for these greedy CEOs, technically no. However, when you have a family to feed, and your college education can't get you anything better a minimum wage job at kmart, are you going to see your family starve out of pride?
I'm not sure what selling you my best razor for $5 has to do with the conversation about CEOs sharing their money, but it brings up another good example. Let's look at a small group of SRP members, say 5, all with a collection of razors, some better then others. If I up and decide to sell my best razor to member 1 for $5, he can then sell his best razor to member 2 for $5. And round and round the cycle goes, and guess what? all 5 SRP members have just shared their best razors, and no one has broken the bank. Now if one of those members at some point decided they wouldn't sell the razor for any less then $100 the circle is broken, and the movement of razors comes to a halt. We are now in razor dead lock. One person has the best razor, and the rest have average razors. The lesson: when money moves freely from hand to hand, we all get to share the wealth, enjoying it's benefits, but when one person stops sharing, you develop all these negative things... want, envy, greed, murder, all because someone couldn't pass the buck.
Well JMS, you make an interesting assumtion yourself, because you see, you and I are not so different. A year ago, I was barely able to afford to buy myself lunch. Today, I can up and drop $250 on an external harddrive, or $130 on a beat up razor just because I like the way it looks. Nevertheless, I don't see what that has to do with the conversation. We're not talking about people like you and I. No matter how many $200 dollar knives, or external hard drives we could afford to buy in a year, we are still in that bottom 99% of that wealth distribution. The top 1% can buy a few $3,000 bottles of champaign with dinner, or a $250,000 Katana for his sword collect. That is the kind of wealth which needs to be redistributed.
Thank you. Finally some people have stepped up and joined my side of this discussion. And your absolutely correct. Humans are condemned to choose, however, when your choice is a homeless family, or an underpaid, over worked position an ungreatful greedy CEO, the crappy job may not look great, but his necessary