Since they're the "masters of the universe," it's worth understanding exactly who they are. — Xtrix
Also, on the topic of ambition, and your conversation with apokrisis: society should be structured such that an unambitious person who just wants to stay at home and tend to their little garden can do so. — Pfhorrest
So with great pain and reluctance I resigned myself to an "ordinary" life. Instead of trying to achieve great things, I would aim low, just try to secure my basic necessities like a house, just the minimal level of financial security, so I wouldn't be poor and on the verge of homelessness like my parents by the time my kids (that I then expected to have some day) were adults. — Pfhorrest
...how fucking impossible it is for anyone to achieve even that bare minimum of security: the right to sit and starve somewhere without paying someone for the privilege. — Pfhorrest
I think the mobility issue now is less that people cannot move upwards from middle class, but that you're more likely to move down than up and, once down from middle class, you're unlikely to get up again. — Echarmion
Yes, I would agree that a free market is the closest to a natural economy. Do you think there should be government regulation? — Brett
What would a "truly" free market consist of, given that, historically, markets are state creations? — Echarmion
I think the mobility issue now is less that people cannot move upwards from middle class, but that you're more likely to move down than up and, once down from middle class, you're unlikely to get up again. — Echarmion
In my view the thing that makes such markets unfree is primarily the existence of rent and interest, which are only tenable institutions because of state enforcement of the contracts that create them. I think there are good deontological reasons why those kinds of contracts, as well as others, are not valid and so should not be enforced. The reaction of the market in the absence of such enforcement will then lead to significantly more egalitarian results. — Pfhorrest
Where are the stats that people are more likely to move from middle to lower class than middle to upper middle? I feel like if this were true we'd be seeing an increasingly large lower class which I don't think we're seeing. Keep in mind the "bottom 20%" of income earners is not the bottom 20% population-wise. It's actually a significantly smaller percentage. — BitconnectCarlos
But that doesn't seem related to the freedom of the market. Or, rather, since I don't really know in what sense a market could be free, the proper statement is that this seems a very specific definition of free. — Echarmion
What about the state not enforcing any contracts, a system where contracts are governed by trust. Such systems exist, but with some exceptions aren't usually called markets. The Islamic world of the middle ages apparently had well working markets with no state enforcement (and also strict bans on usury). — Echarmion
Since they're the "masters of the universe," it's worth understanding exactly who they are. — Xtrix
In the 1% you certainly have successful people but I'd hardly call someone with a net worth of $10MM one of the "masters of the universe." — BitconnectCarlos
These are all things I believe: 1) The rich, on balance, have more opportunity than the poor. 2) Even in a completely economically equal society, there would be no equality of opportunity. 3) The notion of "equality of opportunity" is a dubious one. — BitconnectCarlos
Since they're the "masters of the universe," it's worth understanding exactly who they are.
— Xtrix
It seems to me that everyone’s done everything except address the OP. — Brett
The concentration of wealth in fewer and fewer hands is not only unnatural (it's a result of state intervention to protect capital and wouldn't happen in a truly free market), — Pfhorrest
Class mobility is still certainly a thing in this country. — BitconnectCarlos
In an ideal world, no, but you’re missing the point: I’m against “government regulation” that you’re probably in favor of, government action that benefits those who already have excess property — Pfhorrest
As for your list -- I was thinking more in terms of ideologies and values, not necessarily the character attributes you mention. — Xtrix
What makes you say that? — Xtrix
According to the New York Times, among all groups of physicians – academic, private practice, and hospital or clinic-based – roughly 200,000 doctors, or about 20% of the profession, belong to the 1%.
Assuming I’m “ probably in favour of government action that benefits those who already have excess property” because I ask the question is very presumptive and obviously unproductive. — Brett
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