Howard Schulz grew up in a Brooklyn Housing project, George Soros survived the holocaust survived college waiting tables, David Murdock of Dole Foods was homeless. There’s tons of examples.
Now how many are utter psychopaths (or “just” people without empathy)?
They’re an evil bunch and that’s about it IMO. Don’t kill them or anything but being able to have already a Billion dollars is just breaking our social contract, so tax that away from them. They can argue who’s got 56 millions instead of 56 billions, for them it will be the same game.
My parents never could’ve either but $500k household net worth only puts you in the top 20% of households so it’s not like they were exceptionally wealthy and we don’t know if they borrowed to invest or what exactly their specific situation was. Miguel Bezos was a Cuban refugee and then worked as an engineer for Exxon and Jackie Bezos was a secretary so i mean this is pretty middle class IMO.
That doesn’t mean that all billionaires clawed their way to the top as i mentioned above, or that we shouldn’t make progressive changes to the tax code. It’s just important that we separate truth from fiction to make educated decisions.
It’s very fascinating that someone can grow up in abject poverty, gain a tremendous amount of power over their lifetime, and decide to make it their life’s work to push down as many other people into abject poverty as possible.
Most households living below the poverty line have at least one unemployed person, so giving people jobs is pulling them out of poverty. Whether or not they are treated fairly at work and are satisfied with their working conditions is another story.
June@lemm.ee 1 year ago
There’s always an exception to the rule.
huge_clock@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Howard Schulz grew up in a Brooklyn Housing project, George Soros survived the holocaust survived college waiting tables, David Murdock of Dole Foods was homeless. There’s tons of examples.
Phen@lemmy.eco.br 1 year ago
His mother had him when he was 17?
dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de 1 year ago
That must have hurt.
Valmond@lemmy.mindoki.com 1 year ago
Now how many are utter psychopaths (or “just” people without empathy)?
They’re an evil bunch and that’s about it IMO. Don’t kill them or anything but being able to have already a Billion dollars is just breaking our social contract, so tax that away from them. They can argue who’s got 56 millions instead of 56 billions, for them it will be the same game.
deafboy@lemmy.world 1 year ago
A contract requires at least 2 party consent. A “social contract” is more like a ransom.
neptune@dmv.social 1 year ago
Bezos may have grown up poor, but his parents did finance Amazon to the tune of $250k which is closer to half a million now.
He still effectively inherited the capital to start a business. My parents could never just invest half a million in a business I would want to start.
cnbc.com/…/how-jeff-bezos-got-his-parents-to-inve…
huge_clock@lemmy.world 1 year ago
My parents never could’ve either but $500k household net worth only puts you in the top 20% of households so it’s not like they were exceptionally wealthy and we don’t know if they borrowed to invest or what exactly their specific situation was. Miguel Bezos was a Cuban refugee and then worked as an engineer for Exxon and Jackie Bezos was a secretary so i mean this is pretty middle class IMO.
That doesn’t mean that all billionaires clawed their way to the top as i mentioned above, or that we shouldn’t make progressive changes to the tax code. It’s just important that we separate truth from fiction to make educated decisions.
FaeDrifter@midwest.social 1 year ago
It’s very fascinating that someone can grow up in abject poverty, gain a tremendous amount of power over their lifetime, and decide to make it their life’s work to push down as many other people into abject poverty as possible.
dangblingus@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Narcissists.
huge_clock@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Most households living below the poverty line have at least one unemployed person, so giving people jobs is pulling them out of poverty. Whether or not they are treated fairly at work and are satisfied with their working conditions is another story.