Within the context of this system, one may very well come to believe that the "profit incentive" is an essential feature of human nature. But this system, and that very belief itself, has a history. It's been beaten into our heads for generations, until it finally shows up in the warped worldview you represent. — Xtrix
I personally don't believe the profit motive is an essential feature of human nature. I do, however, believe that it's an essential feature of any modern, successful economy.
See? I don't even believe in the position that you're ascribing to me. — BitconnectCarlos
So yes, assuming the game we're playing is legitiamte, the 1% perhaps haven't attained their extreme wealth in an "ill-gotten" way -- no murder, no rape, no (legal) theft, etc. But that's quite an assumption, which most people (including you) fail to even question. If the game itself is a sick one, and furthermore tilted in many ways... — Xtrix
Give your head a shake, Xanax. Take away the profit incentive and you get stagnation. — geospiza
Finally someone speaking some sense. — BitconnectCarlos
What Geo said to you isn't a straw man. — BitconnectCarlos
This isn't just a "you" thing - plenty of people are moving out of California because the state is ridiculously expensive and moving over to Texas where they can buy a house at a 1/4 the cost. — BitconnectCarlos
There's always much talk about the 1%, and I wonder if anyone has read or researched extensively who exactly these people are and if there are trends in their philosophies or religious outlooks. — Xtrix
This seems an interesting question. One way to approach the question could be to consider that on a global scale the average American consumer is an economic elite. How we regard our wealth in regards to the very many around the world who have so much less might provide some insight in to the mindset of the American top 1%. — Hippyhead
Let’s talk first about money—even if money is only one part of what makes the new aristocrats special. There is a familiar story about rising inequality in the United States, and its stock characters are well known. The villains are the fossil-fueled plutocrat, the Wall Street fat cat, the callow tech bro, and the rest of the so-called top 1 percent. The good guys are the 99 percent, otherwise known as “the people” or “the middle class.” The arc of the narrative is simple: Once we were equal, but now we are divided. The story has a grain of truth to it. But it gets the characters and the plot wrong in basic way.
It is in fact the top 0.1 percent who have been the big winners in the growing concentration of wealth over the past half century. According to the UC Berkeley economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, the 160,000 or so households in that group held 22 percent of America’s wealth in 2012, up from 10 percent in 1963. If you’re looking for the kind of money that can buy elections, you’ll find it inside the top 0.1 percent alone.
Every piece of the pie picked up by the 0.1 percent, in relative terms, had to come from the people below. But not everyone in the 99.9 percent gave up a slice. Only those in the bottom 90 percent did. At their peak, in the mid-1980s, people in this group held 35 percent of the nation’s wealth. Three decades later that had fallen 12 points—exactly as much as the wealth of the 0.1 percent rose.
In between the top 0.1 percent and the bottom 90 percent is a group that has been doing just fine. It has held on to its share of a growing pie decade after decade. And as a group, it owns substantially more wealth than do the other two combined. In the tale of three classes (see Figure 1), it is represented by the gold line floating high and steady while the other two duke it out. You’ll find the new aristocracy there. We are the 9.9 percent.
At 9 figures I'd imagine things get pretty insane. — 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.
1: They’re very hard workers
2: They’re very good a setting an objective and then making a plan to get there
3: They’re very good at projecting into the future
4: They’re very adaptable
5: Many of them are very innovative
6: They’re very good at choosing people to work with, understanding them, motivating them
7: They inspire people within their circle
8: They have a through understanding of the world they’re operating in
9: They’re very good at networking
10: They create opportunities for others — Brett
Some things about them we may not be impressed with.
1: They make decisions in a pragmatic way that may hurt others: what do I need, what don’t I need, how do I get what I want?
2: They measure all actions, all success, in terms of profits
3: They may at times bend the rules to achieve their objectives
4: They probably lie and deceive often
5: Their egos are all powerful
6: They view politics as merely a tool to achieve their objective
7: They’re never satisfied — Brett
When you start asking questions about THAT group, comparisons to average Americans just don't seem to fly. — Xtrix
It seems to me that in terms of values, morality, psychologically, the 1% are actually similar or even the same as the middle class people. What makes the difference is that the 1% are operating within an entirely different socioeconomic context, which makes for vastly different results. — baker
For example, Bill Gates' father wrote a book, Showing Up for Life: Thoughts on the Gifts of a Lifetime. In terms of morality and psychology, it's nothing special, it's middle class mentality. — baker
Since they're the "masters of the universe," it's worth understanding exactly who they are. — Xtrix
look with distain upon those who have a considerable amount more than you do. — I like sushi
Yes. Harvey's great. — Xtrix
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.