I’ve met very few people who are actually happy with being
poor. I know of a few who do believe the
accumulation of wealth is to be avoided and humble lives serving society or God
is better, but it has been my experience these are rare individuals. I would bet for every one of these humble
humans there are three or four hundred others who given a choice would choose
individual wealth over the service to others model.
But these two extremes are both minority views. For the vast majority of our society we
strive for rewarding lives that do not require vast wealth, but certainly seek
to be comfortable and secure in the idea that their physical needs for shelter
and food are met. There is also a sense
in our society that individual worth is measured not in the good acts of the
individual but by the wealth an individual can acquire. For example, let’s look at a baseball
player. How do the MLB owners show their
appreciation for the talents of a great player?
They reward them with contracts that create significant fortunes for
those able to secure them. I would guess
if you look at all of professional baseball, the number of players earning
$15M/year or more would be about the top 1% of the profession. Wouldn’t it be better if the owners took half
of what they will pay a star and have that money put into increased wages for
the minor league players who struggle each day to pay their bills and earn a
living? Surely the star won’t mind, he
has more than he needs and it’s better for baseball.
Our society is like MLB.
There are those who through talent, good fortune, or family circumstance
are wealthy far beyond what is required to meet their basic needs. Why aren't they obligated to give their excess wealth away to the members of society that have not risen to the top, and who struggle to survive?
So what’s the problem, why can’t we do this and make society
a much better place where there is no poverty?
Here are just a few of things to consider, if you can fix these then I
think it is clear sailing to Utopia.
Greed – This seems to be an inescapable human
condition. We all seem to want as much
of something as we can get, and once we have it we don’t want to give it up. How do we overcome greed? How do we convince the entirety of the
population they should not be greedy? We
see efforts on the part of the liberal establishment to accuse corporations and
the wealthy of being greedy, but they exhibit the very same qualities when we
start talking about their money and not someone else’s. I think the first evidence that society will
be making progress eliminating greed is when we stop seeing people killing each
other for money, envy, or jealousy.
Personal Ambition – Historically this has been a
quality that separates the successful from the failures. This should not be confused with people who
have failed, but rather those who give up when failing. As Thomas Edison allegedly said “I’ve not
failed, I have discovered 10,000 ways it won’t work.” That dogged determination is foundational to
the success of America. If the
population is given wealth, with no expectation of achievement tied to it, will
America continue as it has or will we cease to exist? How will you stop the ambition of some to
succeed beyond the rest and rise to a level above the others? For the later will be equally bad if we are
talking about a Utopia were everyone is equal.
Political Agenda’s and Government
Incompetence. I put these together
because they seem to go hand-in-hand. On
the one side we have shown when either of the political parties tries to do
something it will never turn out as they promise. For example, all those who are talking about
income inequity never seem to have a plan that does not involve writing new
laws or creating new taxes. I would
point out that one of the reasons income inequity exists to the degree it does
is because we have created loopholes for some, programs for others, and tax
shelters for the rest. Each and every
new law or regulation we implement, regardless of Democrat or Republican
sponsorship has done its small part in widening the gap between the rich and
the poor. So to believe we solve this
problem with more government involvement flies in the face of common
sense. As Albert Einstein defined it,
“Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different
result.” So I have to wonder, why do we
think our government can make this better?
My conclusion is we don’t! It is
just a convenient sharpening stone for those with political axes. They push the mime because it plays well to
their fan base.
So there you have my synopsis of the minor hurdles to
solving the income inequity problems created by having rich people getting
richer and poor people staying poor.
1 comment:
pretty nice blog, following :)
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