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Major wealth disparity, getting worse.


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2013 Sep 17, 8:40am   41,036 views  148 comments

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86   thomaswong.1986   2013 Sep 20, 4:15pm  

MershedPerturders says

most of America's infrastructure was built by FDR through civil labor programs

didnt do much of nothing until Factories in the late 40s and through out the 50s-60s started peak manufacturing exporting across the globe.

so the answer again is building factories for the long run. Roads otherwise have
no benefit. The other real infrastructure ... transportation industry was all private.

87   thomaswong.1986   2013 Sep 20, 4:19pm  

MershedPerturders says

were on the cusp of WWIII and these pathetic moral degenerates on here are arguing for 'free markets' so they can make money in real estate. It's disgusting. California deserves to be nuked.

There is no California.. perhaps it should be better known as
Northern Mexico or New York West.. Look at who is hustling RE in California
these days. Its mostly people from out of state.. east coast.

Real Californians already learned during the 89-91 recession, inflated
home prices do not work in California and have a horrible impact on jobs and economy.

88   bob2356   2013 Sep 20, 6:12pm  

Reality says

The "Robber Baron" term was coined in the late 19th century. The per capita income in the US increased from roughly 1% per year to 2% per year in the middle decades of the 19th century, after the "Robber Barons" built the turnpikes, canals and railroads.

Managed to get out of college without taking a history course somehow? It was required where I went to school.

Toll roads were from the late 1700's through the 1840's. Mostly funded by local citizens, merchants and farmers, with some state's subsiding, almost none turned any real profit. They existed to open up local industry to a wider market. Canals were 1800 to 1830's or so. Private capital wasn't enough to canals to be built so they were mostly private/government combined funding. Railroads were 1830's to 1870's. Lots of government involvement, lots of corruption. Canals and railroads killed the toll roads.

The robber barons of the guilded age were 1870's to early 1900's. They were industrialists and bankers. They used the infrastructure to build great wealth but they most certainly didn't build the infrastructure.

89   dublin hillz   2013 Sep 21, 2:56am  

MershedPerturders says

a day of reckoning will soon be upon us.

Who will implement the "reckoning" knowing that "we" can retaliate up to nuclear weapons level?

90   Reality   2013 Sep 21, 7:48am  

bob2356 says

Managed to get out of college without taking a history course somehow? It was required where I went to school.

I satisfied the college requirement on American history by getting a 5 a AP test while in high school.

Toll roads were from the late 1700's through the 1840's. Mostly funded by local citizens, merchants and farmers, with some state's subsiding, almost none turned any real profit. They existed to open up local industry to a wider market. Canals were 1800 to 1830's or so. Private capital wasn't enough to canals to be built so they were mostly private/government combined funding. Railroads were 1830's to 1870's. Lots of government involvement, lots of corruption.

No kidding. Robber Barons often involved government cronies. While robbing taxpayers via government subsidy has a very long history, the speed of robbing via government granted privileges really took off in the middle of 19th century, leading to coining the term "Robber Baron."

The robber barons of the guilded age were 1870's to early 1900's. They were industrialists and bankers. They used the infrastructure to build great wealth but they most certainly didn't build the infrastructure.

Many robber barons made their first pot of gold in railroad. Incidentally, Lincoln was a corporate lawyer for one of the largest railroad companies, as was Douglas. What were the chances that the election of 1860 came down to between two railroad lawyers?!

91   freak80   2013 Sep 21, 9:20am  

Like I said, "Reality", if you think it's best to have no government, move to Somolia or Haiti. They are fine examples of libertarian paradise.

92   curious2   2013 Sep 21, 9:27am  

Reality says

I satisfied the college requirement on American history by getting a 5 a AP test while in high school.

This comment reminds me of history professors' common complaint that the most frustrating part of their job is overcoming all the falsehoods that students are taught in high school, especially about American history. The Texas school boards have had a particularly pernicious influence on American history textbooks. A high school AP test can show an aptitude for history, and 5 is the highest score, but the failure to pursue further study suggests a lack of serious interest.

Regarding the OP topic, there is now a Christian Dominion view to support Republican tax policy, i.e. wealth is a sign of divine favor, and raising taxes would go against divine will. In that view, if you're poor, you need to pray harder. It's the economic equivalent of faith healing, and like the American history textbooks, it is very heavily influenced by Texas.

93   freak80   2013 Sep 21, 10:02am  

Curious2 is exactly correct. The Religious Right's view is: if you are poor, it's because God is punishing you for your sin or lack of faith. Magical thinking is fundamental to the religious right. I know, because I grew up in that world.

We have a significant part of the voting public which is literally delusional.

94   thomaswong.1986   2013 Sep 21, 11:24am  

freak80 says

Curious2 is exactly correct. The Religious Right's view is: if you are poor, it's because God is punishing you for your sin or lack of faith. Magical thinking is fundamental to the religious right. I know, because I grew up in that world.

Lol.. you know very little about the Western Tradition and history of self sustain's ones self as well as seeking new opportunities. Call it the Protestant work ethic or Catholic work ethic..

Its no wonder many like my great grandfather moved west ... while yours stayed behind. were they cowards like you today ?

95   thomaswong.1986   2013 Sep 21, 11:30am  

curious2 says

Regarding the OP topic, there is now a Christian Dominion view to support Republican tax policy, i.e. wealth is a sign of divine favor, and raising taxes would go against divine will. In that view, if you're poor, you need to pray harder. It's the economic equivalent of faith healing, and like the American history textbooks, it is most heavily influenced by Texas.

How do you explain JF Kennedy's tax cut from 1960... was he also pushing to increase the poor ?

96   thomaswong.1986   2013 Sep 21, 11:33am  

Reality says

No kidding. Robber Barons often involved government cronies. While robbing taxpayers via government subsidy has a very long history, the speed of robbing via government granted privileges really took off in the middle of 19th century, leading to coining the term "Robber Baron."

Robbing what taxpayers and what government subsidies are you talking about ? .. and what were they in 1800s considering the modern tax system came to be in the 1910s.

97   freak80   2013 Sep 21, 11:53am  

MershedPerturders says

There is precisely NO WAY we could be living the lifestyle that we do, the way we do it, without exploiting people. Let's try to do things first off without using illegal aliens, foreign labor, imports from slave states like China.

Very true. Not sure how this will lead to WW3 though...

More likely the American standard of living will continue to fall until we reach equilibrium with the rest of the world. In a globalized economy, everyone makes Bangladesh wages. Except for the few hundred billionaires living in floating cities in the ocean (where they can avoid taxation).

98   Reality   2013 Sep 21, 11:57am  

freak80 says

Like I said, "Reality", if you think it's best to have no government, move to Somolia or Haiti. They are fine examples of libertarian paradise.

Somali living standards improved faster during the time when they had no central government than any time when they had one during the last 200+ years.

Haiti is in practice a UN/US colony.

The US was founded on breaking free from the shackles of a big centralized government . . . i.e. the principles of liberty and freedom, which means liberty and freedom from big government.

99   Reality   2013 Sep 21, 12:09pm  

curious2 says

Reality says

I satisfied the college requirement on American history by getting a 5 a AP test while in high school.

This comment reminds me of history professors' common complaint that the most frustrating part of their job is overcoming all the falsehoods that students are taught in high school, especially about American history. The Texas school boards have had a particularly pernicious influence on American history textbooks. A high school AP test can show an aptitude for history, and 5 is the highest score, but the failure to pursue further study suggests a lack of serious interest.

Two basic errors in your assumptions:

1. You assumed I took no further history courses and did no further study in history in college after satisfying basic college degree requirement. That assumption is thoroughly wrong. I mentioned AP history in high school to show that I had far more than average interest and knowledge in history, from early on. During 4yrs of college, in addition to my course work in classical history, my main past time on weekends was researching late 19th century and first half of 20th century warfare; i.e. industrialized warfare from ironclad age to the dawn of nuclear age. I actually read through the entire sets of official histories in green and blue. You should check it out at a good library to see just how many books that entails. That was before I switched interest to economic history during graduate school years.

2. You are assuming college history professors are disinterested parties in those comments belittling AP American history taught in high school. The professor who taught my AP class actually taught at college at the same time.

100   freak80   2013 Sep 21, 12:10pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

Lol.. you know very little about the Western Tradition and history of self sustain's ones self as well as seeking new opportunities. Call it the Protestant work ethic or Catholic work ethic..

The Calvinist/Puritan Work Ethic is all about "proving" one is among The Elect (the ones God predestined to Salvation) by being financially successful. Those who are not financially successful are "obviously" among The Reprobate (the ones God predestined to Damnation). It's a great way to hide one's greed and/or contempt for the less fortunate behind a veil of pious religiosity. It's an attitude which is very common on the Religious Right today. I know, because I grew up in that world.

No, it's not a new idea in American culture. It's been with us since the Puritans landed here in 1620. Puritanism infects our whole culture.

101   Reality   2013 Sep 21, 12:17pm  

freak80 says

More likely the American standard of living will continue to fall until we reach equilibrium with the rest of the world. In a globalized economy, everyone makes Bangladesh wages. Except for the few hundred billionaires living in floating cities in the ocean (where they can avoid taxation).

Bangladeshis make bangladeshi wages largely because of the weight of bureaucratic red tapes crushing the local economy. Give them a couple decades of relative market freedom, their wages would rise just as fast as those of Japanese and Chinese did.

102   freak80   2013 Sep 21, 12:18pm  

Reality says

Bangladeshis make bangladeshi wages largely because of the weight of bureaucratic red tapes crushing the local economy.

Evidence for that?

103   Reality   2013 Sep 21, 12:37pm  

freak80 says

Reality says

Bangladeshis make bangladeshi wages largely because of the weight of bureaucratic red tapes crushing the local economy.

Evidence for that?

Chinese and Vietnamese used to make less than Bangladeshis did . . . now they make more thanks to their market reforms/liberalization. Even wages in Bangladesh has been rising due to its slow pace market liberalization.

104   indigenous   2013 Sep 21, 2:06pm  

curious2 says

This comment reminds me of history professors' common complaint that the most frustrating part of their job is overcoming all the falsehoods that students are taught in high school, especially about American history.

Lincoln profited as president by dictating where the RR would go which was through his land. Which isn't too surprising considering that he got 650,000 Americans killed to protect the FED income from tariffs on southern exports. Not to mention that he could not care less about abolition.

Did any of these fun facts make into the recent Hollywood rendition of the Lincoln fairy tale?

105   bob2356   2013 Sep 21, 2:36pm  

Reality says

Many robber barons made their first pot of gold in railroad.

A few made their first pot of gold in railroad. Many more last their ass. Something like 30% of railroads went under in the panic of 1893. The ones that became really wealthy in railroads ( Morgan, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and Jay Gould) bought up and consolidated existing railroads that were already built.

Your comment was that the robber barons BUILT the railroads, canals, and tollways. Tollways and canals were long since built by the time the robber barons came onto the scene. Very few of the robber barons were the people who built the railroads. Are you sure the AP test you took was in history?

106   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 4:09am  

You guys forgot Cambodia in your no government rants.

OK, the problem is that our government was founded by, and for the People, so we are different from Europe in that way.

It was a deliberate wording to distinguish ourselves, our government, from monarchies, and aristocracies.

I especially like the Apollo 13? reference as not benefiting any one:

A November 1971 study of NASA released by the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, Missouri ("Technological Progress and Commercialization of Communications Satellites." In: "Economic Impact of Stimulated Technological Activity") concluded that "the $25 billion in 1958 dollars spent on civilian space R & D during the 1958-1969 period has returned $52 billion through 1971 -- and will continue to produce pay offs through 1987, at which time the total pay off will have been $181 billion. The discounted rate of return for this investment will have been 33 percent."

A map from NASA's web site illustrating its economic impact on the U.S. states (as of FY2003)
A 1992 article in the British science journal Nature reported:[14]

"The economic benefits of NASA's programs are greater than generally realized. The main beneficiaries (the American public) may not even realize the source of their good fortune. . ."

That's from Wikipedia, but there are many more detailed accounts out there:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budget_of_NASA

107   freak80   2013 Sep 22, 4:50am  

indigenous says

the cost of a privately launched satellite is a fraction of the cost, you are smoking dope.

It wouldn't be possible to launch any satellite, public or private, w/o the massive government investments in NASA and the Apollo program. Basic science research and development is usually too risky and expensive for private companies.

Disclaimer for idiots: I'm not saying the government should run everything.

108   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 5:31am  

Some one else compared Intel to Federal government research?

There wouldn't be an Intel without government research.

109   Bellingham Bill   2013 Sep 22, 5:54am  

Reality says

I satisfied the college requirement on American history by getting a 5 a AP test while in high school

110   indigenous   2013 Sep 22, 9:09am  

You are a mouthpiece for the cr
onies and don't realize it.

My contentions ate based off of axioms of economics . Yours are based off of conjecture.

Which is how I can say that you cannot coherently say all government has value. And to think that is insane

111   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 9:48am  

indigenous says

My contentions ate based off of axioms of economics . Yours are based off of conjecture.

Which is how I can say that you cannot coherently say all government has value.

I'm missing something here.

The money our government spends goes into the economy.

If the money isn't spent we would have a surplus instead of a deficit.

We are deficit spending, and trying to catch up to breaking even.

We have tried giving the wealthy money, but they just hoard it. That is the game the wealthy play. They may buy a gold plated Ferrari, but the bulk of the wealth is in safe, secure investment instruments.

Uh Oh, our government is now deficit spending to make those safe investments more secure.

The bottom line is that I think I read some place that if the government were to give $85 Billion a month in middle class pay checks, or benefits, our economy would be much stronger than it is now.

112   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 11:57am  

As usual, the government worshipers are asking for proof that the sun would rise the next morning even if we stop human sacrifice on the stepped pyramid today. It's amazing anyone having their heads out of their asses would even ask for proof that NASA launch cost is much more expensive than the private sector. For crying out loud, the commercial satellite industry has been using alternative launchers for well over a decade, ever since using anyone other than NASA has been legal. Here's the latest comparison:

http://www.policymic.com/articles/11354/spacex-spends-320-times-less-on-building-the-dragon-than-nasa-does-on-the-orion

113   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 12:04pm  

David Losh says

"the $25 billion in 1958 dollars spent on civilian space R & D during the 1958-1969 period has returned $52 billion through 1971 -- and will continue to produce pay offs through 1987, at which time the total pay off will have been $181 billion. The discounted rate of return for this investment will have been 33 percent."

This is of course utter hogwash designed for the economically and financially illiterate. Do you really believe something with an annualized return of 33% would have no investors? NASA had government granted monopoly on space launch from its founding to the late 80's (if not 90's). As soon as alternative space launch became legal, companies needing to put satellites into the orbit quickly resorted to alternative launchers. What does that really say about what was NASA's real impact on the advancement of space technology and space industry?

114   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 12:15pm  

David Losh says

I'm missing something here.

The money our government spends goes into the economy.

Yes, you are missing something. The money spent by the government goes to big buggy whip making companies with tons of lobbyiests when the free market has just collapsed the horse carriage price due to the emergence of automobiles.

To the aggregation idiots, a $1000 worth of buggy whips is just as good as $1000 car (about the price of early cars at then price, equivalent to about $65,000 today, for a primitive car at the time). In fact, to those idiots, the more expensive the buggy whips the better.

If the money isn't spent we would have a surplus instead of a deficit.

How exactly has spending money blowing up bridges and schools overseas then rebuilding them on your dime have helped you in anyway?

We have tried giving the wealthy money, but they just hoard it. That is the game the wealthy play. They may buy a gold plated Ferrari, but the bulk of the wealth is in safe, secure investment instruments.

Most government spending of course go to the wealthy . . . as in government contracts. Who do you think hire the most lobbyists? the poor? The idea that the wealthy just hoard the money is also wrong. They get wealthy by investing and let money grow. When government borrow money from them and pay them back in interest, the wealthy are just using the government as leg breakers to grow their money.

Uh Oh, our government is now deficit spending to make those safe investments more secure.

The bottom line is that I think I read some place that if the government were to give $85 Billion a month in middle class pay checks, or benefits, our economy would be much stronger than it is now.

When government spends $85B a month, it has to pay that money back plus interest by taking in taxes in the future. The upper middle class who are not rich enough to buy their own lawmakers are the ones who ultimately foot the bills. When the government spends $85B a month, it's not sending $85B to the middle class, but promising to take that much from the middle class in the future to pay the creditors, who are mostly the rich banksters who conjure up the money from nearly nothing to begin with.

115   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 1:02pm  

Reality says

Here's the latest comparison:

Did you read the article?

The government funded the research, like it usually does for most things.

Then you followed this up with a comparison to buggy whips.

It's really easy to say the private sector will do something, but they do what is profit driven.

If you look at the auto industry today it looks a lot like it did after WWII. It's a gas combustion engine for God sakes!

So in WWI the federal governments of Germany, France, Italy, England, and the United States funded the production of thousands of vehicles, but you discount that.

Since the innovations of the thousands of vehicles used in WWII, the gas combustion dinosaurs look pretty much the same.

Private enterprise isn't going to do anything, not now, not ever. They can't even build a better mouse trap, or cure the common cold.

Private enterprise will wait for the government to supply the technology, then capitalize on it.

116   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 1:38pm  

David Losh says

Did you read the article?

The government funded the research, like it usually does for most things.

Yes I did read the article. No, the government did not fund the research. The government buys a product, just like the Nazi's bought a bunch of IBM punch card computers.

David Losh says

It's really easy to say the private sector will do something, but they do what is profit driven.

If you look at the auto industry today it looks a lot like it did after WWII. It's a gas combustion engine for God sakes!

So in WWI the federal governments of Germany, France, Italy, England, and the United States funded the production of thousands of vehicles, but you discount that.

Just like the Nazis bought a bunch of IBM punch card computers. Would you also argue that Nazis building concentration camps launched the modern building industry?

David Losh says

Since the innovations of the thousands of vehicles used in WWII, the gas combustion dinosaurs look pretty much the same.

You are out of your mind if you believe that . . . and you deserve the Soviet Lada built up to the 1980 according to the 1950's spec. The rest of us have long moved on from such dinosaurs.

Profit opportunity is literally how consumers express their preferences for resource allocation. It's called the price signal . . . works much better for the masses than political signals transmitted by lobbyists.

Private enterprise isn't going to do anything, not now, not ever. They can't even build a better mouse trap, or cure the common cold.

Private enterprise will wait for the government to supply the technology, then capitalize on it.

Do you live in North Korea or just time travelled from the soviet union of the 1970's? A simple visit to home depot or any grocery store would show you plenty different types of mouse traps or cold meds offered by different private enterprises.

117   mell   2013 Sep 22, 1:46pm  

Reality says

The upper middle class who are not rich enough to buy their own lawmakers are the ones who ultimately foot the bills.

Agreed.

118   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 1:50pm  

Reality says

The government buys a product, just like the Nazi's bought a bunch of IBM punch card computers.

I think you are doing yourself a disservice by using this example, which is kind of like the automobile example I used.

Your government funded computer research. IBM capitalized on it, and another government with unlimited funds bought the technology.

119   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 1:54pm  

David Losh says

Reality says

The government buys a product, just like the Nazi's bought a bunch of IBM punch card computers.

I think you are doing yourself a disservice by using this example, which is kind of like the automobile example I used.

Your government funded computer research. IBM capitalized on it, and another government with unlimited funds bought the technology.

So you are saying the Nazis in the 1930's bought the fruit of US government funding in the 1940's? How does the time vector work in your world? No wonder you are confused about . . . just about everything!

120   David Losh   2013 Sep 22, 1:57pm  

Reality says

So you are saying the Nazis in the 1930's bought the fruit of US government funding in the 1940's?

You'd have to make that comment a lot more clear. What time line are you using?

121   freak80   2013 Sep 22, 2:13pm  

Can the private sector cure disease and advance medicine?

"Ain't no money in a cure...they still mad about all the money they lost on polio!"

--Chris Rock

The free market alone can't provide us with everything we might want.

122   freak80   2013 Sep 22, 2:16pm  

"Reality",

Do you suggest that Las Vegas wouldn't exist if we just got government out of the way?

123   Reality   2013 Sep 22, 2:19pm  

freak80 says

"Reality",

Do you suggest that Las Vegas wouldn't exist if we just got government out of the way?

If gambling and prostitution were legal everywhere else, Las Vegas as we know it would not exist. Gambling and prostitution would of course exist, but the pay off would not have been as rich if other venues of personal success are more open to the youth. It is no co-incidence that drugs, prostitution and gangs are more common in low-income low-opportunity neighborhoods, esp. when measured vis other sources of income.

124   freak80   2013 Sep 22, 2:21pm  

If we could just get rid of government schools on those low income neighborhoods, there would be much less drug use and prostitution there.

125   freak80   2013 Sep 22, 2:27pm  

Reality,

How would you increase opportunity in low income neighborhoods? A tax cut?

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