[quote name='willardhaven']We've got multi-quote, you just click the button with a "+" and then on the last post you're quoting click the regular quotation button.[/QUOTE]
Thanks, I missed that without the label.
[quote name='Koggit']being equal..[/quote]
Be more specific. Equality with respect to what? You should be able to answer that question if you've really thought about what you're saying.
it rubs a lot of people they wrong way because they want to believe they're a unique little snowflake. they want to believe their middle class family in american suburbia is different than the starving family in africa. they need to believe they're different. it makes sense; we have compassion. i wholly believe compassion is a spandrel of consciousness.. our capacity for metaknowledge.. our metaminds.. what 'separates' us from the 'beasts': our ability to imitate.. we developed an understanding of how others must feel. it enables us to thrive as we have, but the downside is that it allows us to feel the suffering of others. we see a man making 15k a year unable to get his sick newborn to a doctor without going into debt and, if we don't separate them from us we feel bad. humans have evolved to reject the idea of equality. our minds, to survive, to cope with killing competing tribes and animals in spite of our innate compassion, must differentiate, we are not equal.. a dozen people die in the middle east and it's sad, a dozen people die in chicago and it's a tragedy, a dozen people die at your school and you need therapy.
we are equal beings and all deserve equal living conditions. it's unfortunate that biological evolution is so much slower than social evolution. we no longer need to differentiate.. but we're stuck with it.
I'm not happy with starvation in Africa or someone having to go into debt to care for their sick newborn.
we're stuck here thinking people like us deserve improved living conditions more-so than 'them'.
We? I don't believe people like "us" deserve access to improved conditions any more than "them". I'm not sure why you would.
[quote name='Msut77']Consumption is 70 some odd percent of GDP.
Go College.[/QUOTE]
You want to tell us how anything you said refutes what I said? Or did you just drop in to give us some random statistic and show your school spirit?
[quote name='Ruined']#2 - No one is saying that anyone is lesser than anyone else. But if someone is making $200k-$500k or more it is likely because they are in a high pressure job or one that requires a ton of skill that a $20k worker could not provide. If they could, the company would simply hire the $20k worker and save themselves $180k. That being said, if you are going to "equalize" the money, then what is the motivation for the $200k-$500k worker to stay in a high pressure/difficult job? As a result we have much less of those skilled people, and the economy suffers drastically - if not collapsing entirely. As a result EVERYONE gets screwed then.[/QUOTE]
Normally, this argument would apply, but not in today's world. There are many, many occupations where people are highly paid for no good reason. Nothing personal, but my guess is Koggit is about to be an example, as he himself admits.
[quote name='willardhaven']This would normally work, except the world is not fair. The financial sector is full of worthless people who lose money and swindle people for a living. They make millions and billions of dollars a year and when their business fails they just call their friends in Washington to fix everything up. Sucks doesn't it?[/quote]
This is the kind of thing I was referring to. You are absolutely correct that
in today's world, many people in the financial sector are a drain on society.
[quote name='Koggit']to directly address your question: i kinda already have. i've said reward is necessary for society to thrive. i acknowledge that there needs to be incentive for good work, but currently the reward is often for "success" in ways that do not benefit humanity / the global economy, and even for the actions that
do the reward need not be so extreme.
let me tell yet another story. i'm in a story mood. this story makes me uncomfortable: i'm on track to
start, at my first real job, making $125k+/yr before bonuses.. that'll then go up to $250+k/yr within five years. that's absolutely ridiculous. on TV i see a family of 5 living on around 17k a year... without papers they worked for less than minimum wage. they worked hard. probably much harder than i've ever had to. and they were very fortunate, relative to the family members of theirs that stayed behind in mexico. my salary will be enough to sustain
fifteen such families. that's

ed up. that's epicly

ed up. why am i being so rewarded? my job won't benefit society. i don't (and won't) work particularly hard. i'm fairly intelligent, but nothing super extraordinary. even if they weren't born as smart as me, even if they didn't work as ahrd or deal with as much stress, all of which i doubt, why should i make fifteen times as much money? why should i be buying a $50,000 BMW while they can't afford decent food?
most people aren't bothered by it.. it's unfair. it's extraordinarily unfair.[/QUOTE]
Believe me, I'm very bothered by it. It is absolutely unfair. That family does not deserve to face such unnecessary difficulties while you are about to be overpaid for no good reason. Now the question is, why do things like this happen? I'll wait for you to answer cochese's question before I answer that one.
[quote name='Capitalizt']kogg, congrats on getting a good job, but I expect you to not be a complete hypocrite once you are hired and to donate $105,000 a year to charity right away. You can live on $20k. That's all you really need, and as you rightly said there are families with children living on less. It's only fair that you give most of your earnings for their benefit. Do your part to improve economic equality. Will you accept this challenge? Or will you be a typical limousine liberal arguing for the forced confiscation of other people's earnings while hoarding your own?[/QUOTE]
[quote name='fatherofcaitlyn']You know what you could do?
You could contact that family. Tell them how wonderful you're going to do. Then, offer to put the smartest member of their family through the exact same steps you have taken. If that smartest person succeeds, he or she will then be in the same position as you and will be able to support the other four members of his family with an income equivalent to yours. If that smartest person fails, you've done the remaining four members a favor by removing one of the mouths they have to feed for the time it requires that smartest person to fail. You could call it a focused scholarship.[/QUOTE]
These are pretty good ideas to start. I'll be interested to see what Koggit thinks of your scholarship idea.
[quote name='Ruined']And, while the family you saw does likely work hard, there is a difference between skilled and unskilled labor. That is why they hired you instead of one of them for 1/15th the cost.
Is it fair? Yes it is, lets get the obvious stuff out of the way first. First, you are being paid for skilled work, the family you quoted likely could not do it. If they could the company would hire them for 1/15th of the cost.[/quote]
This isn't really true. We don't know that the family couldn't do what Koggit does. And if they're here illegally, the company would have a hard time hiring them, even for 1/15th of the cost.
Second, you are a legal citizen, it appears from your story that the family in question is not - that will of course affect their salary. If they go through the process of becoming a citizen over time, that will allow them a significant pay increase.
Third, not everyone can make it big, but if you both work your butt off and have ambition you can make it big and/or make it much easier for your kids to make it big; my guess if you feel like you haven't really worked for your money, your parents (or their parents) most likely did so that you would be in the position to make money without as much effort as they had to go through. The family you questioned is likely in the fledgling stages of that same process; they are attempting to build their way towards a better future. It may not happen for the father of that family, but his child will likely be one step closer than he was. If the child keeps working, that trend will continue down the generations. So if you feel guilty, just be grateful that your parents/their parents had to work hard for their money so you didn't - whether its quality of life, easier ability to go to school, or the like.
It's true that there is hope for future generations, but that doesn't excuse the artificial barriers put in place to obstruct this family and help people like Koggit unnecessarily.
Fourth, your job DOES benefit society. If you make $125k/yr, think of all the taxes you are paying! When you bought that BMW, you paid sales tax on it. When you get paid, you get taxed. Even using a flat tax @ 20%, 20% of $125k is a massive amount of money. You don't need to tax someone at 50% in order to get a wad of cash when they are making $125k+, even 20% is a massive amount of money. And, you are at a great position to donate to a charity of your liking - that will likely go much farther than the same amount of money going to the government.
Just because Koggit will be paying taxes doesn't necessarily mean his job will benefit society. It could be a net drain on society if money that is going to pay his salary would have been used more productively elsewhere - with that Mexican family, perhaps.
Fifth, what happened if people who made $125k had to forfeit 75%? Why would you take a job like that over the many jobs in the 15-30k range that have much lessened pressure and/or skill needed? If you needed to go to school, why would people bother going to school? Its just as unfair to you to take a giant chunk of your money as it is to the family not making that much and working hard. And, as a result of that unfairness the economy would collapse as everyone goes for the easy & unskilled jobs over time because they plain require either less work (whether physical or mental) or less preparation (higher learning). History has proven this.
History hasn't proven this because it's not what happens. People will generally try to improve their conditions. You don't need schools or "skilled" jobs for that to be true.
Sixth, our society's mainstream media and major educational institutions unfortunately has many who put a guilt trip on people who make a lot of money. It appears you are afflicted by this, and I am not surprised. If you want to alleviate some of that guilt through using your money simply donate money to charity. There is no reason the government should need to donate that money for you, especially when the government usually screws up royally and ends up wasting most of the money anyway. Your money to a reputable charity will probably go MUCH further than if it went to the government.
There's some truth to this, but some well-paid people
should feel guilty if they're a net drain on society. Again, the financial sector is a good example.
[quote name='thrustbucket']Koggit, after reading those last few posts of yours, I think I've found
where you belong.
Make sure to watch the orientation video:
the video.
And no, I'm not joking. You sound like you'd fit right in. Which is cool, I have a few friends that are really into this sort of belief system too. I personally haven't decided what I think of it yet, and have too many questions.[/QUOTE]
Like that thread in GG, good concept, bad execution.
[quote name='Koggit']patent law - elec. engineering / comp sci[/quote]
Did you go to law school?
the engineers whose patents i'll be dealing with benefit society, but me directly, all i do is game a system.. no better than a day trader. there's a game to be played in which people can get rich.. even though it benefits noone other than those directly involved, and ultimately the money comes from greater causes (e.g. a sued company could've spent the money on research & development instead of litigation).
you could argue the engineers would have less reason to innovate without patent law, but fact of the matter is very few patents are innovative. the vast majority are just gaming the system.
I agree 100%. And now I can confirm what I was getting at earlier in the post - you are in a sector that is a net drain on society. The resources diverted to your sector could be more productively used elsewhere, and this is at least partly responsible for the plight of the poor.
Edit: Sorry if that sounds harsh. I'm only being so blunt because you alluded to it yourself.