Nine Pictures of the Extreme Income/Wealth Gap
Monday 14 February 2011
by: Dave Johnson | Campaign for America's Future | Op-Ed

The Burj Al Arab in Dubai is seen at night. Expensive hotels, such as the Burj Al Arab, cost $20-$30,000 per night. (Photo: Cajie)
Many people don’t understand our country’s problem of concentration of income and wealth because they don’t see it. People just don't understand how much wealth there is at the top now. The wealth at the top is so extreme that it is beyond most people’s ability to comprehend.
If people understood just how concentrated wealth has become in our country and the effect is has on our politics, our democracy and our people, they would demand our politicians do something about it.
How Much Is A Billion?
Some Wall Street types (and others) make over a billion dollars a year – each year. How much is a billion dollars? How can you visualize an amount of money so high? Here is one way to think about it: The median income in the US is around $50,000, meaning half of us make less and half of us make more. If you make $50,000 a year, and don’t spend a single penny of it, it will take you 20,000 years to save a billion dollars. . . . (Please come back and read the rest of this after you have recovered.)
What Do People Do With SO Much?
What do people do with all that money? Good question. After you own a stable of politicians who will cut your taxes, there are still a few more things you can buy. Let’s see what $1 billion will buy.
Cars

This is a Maybach. Most people don’t even know there is something called a Maybach. The one in the picture, the Landaulet model, costs $1 million. (Rush Limbaugh, who has 5 homes in Palm Beach, drives a cheaper Maybach 57 S -- but makes up for it by owning 6 of them.)
Your $1 billion will only buy you a thousand Maybach Landaulets.
Here are pics of just some of Ralph Lauren’s collection of cars. This is not a museum, this is one person’s private collection. You don't get to go look at them.
Luxury Hotels


This is the Mardan Palace Hotel in Turkey, Burj Al Arab in Dubai.
Here is a photo gallery of some other expensive hotels, where people pay $20-30,000 per night. Yes, there are people who pay that much. Remember to send me a postcard!
A billion dollars will buy you a $20,000 room every night for 137 years.
Yachts

Le Grand Bleu - $90 million.
Some people spend as much as $200 million or more on yachts.
You can buy ten $100 million yachts with a billion dollars.
Private Jets
Of course, there are private jets. There are approx. 15,000 private jets registered in the US according to NBAA. (Note: See the IPS High-Flyers study.)

This is a Gulfstream G550. You can pick one up for around $40 million, depending. Maybe $60 million top-of-the-line.
Your billion will buy you 25 of these.
Private Islands
If the rabble are getting you down you can always escape to a private island.
This one is going for only $24.5 million – castle included. You can only buy 40 of these with your billion.
Mansions

This modest home (it actually is, for the neighborhood it is in) is offered right now at only about $8 million. I ride my bike past it on my regular exercise route, while I think about how the top tax rate used to be high enough to have good courts, schools & roads and counter the Soviet Union and we didn't even have deficits.
I ride there but that neighborhood is not like my neighborhood at all. While there is one family in that house, I live closer to the nearby soup kitchen that serves hundreds of families. One family in a huge estate and hundreds at a soup kitchen roughly matches the ratio of wealth concentration described below.
Here are a few nearby homes up for sale.
You can buy 125 houses like this one with your billion.
Luxury Items
Here is an article about ten watches that are more expensive than a Ferrari.

The one in this picture costs more than $5 million. You can buy 200 of these with your billion.
Medieval Castles

Just for fun, this is Derneburg Castle. Do you remember the big oil-price runup a few years ago that too the price of a gallon at the pump up towards $5? One speculator who helped make that happen got a huge bonus paid with government bailout money. He owns this castle. He has filled it with rare art. You can’t go in and see any of the rare art.
Click here to see the layout in an aerial view. That’s as close as you're going to get, peasant.
Let's Go Shopping
So you say to yourself, "I want me some of that. I’d like to place the following order, please."
- One Maybach Landaulet for $1 million to drive around in. (Actually to be driven around in.)
- One $100 million yacht for when I want to get seasick.
- One Gulfstream G550 private jet for $40 million.
- One private island for $24.5 million (castle included) for when I want to escape the masses.
- One $8 million estate for when I have to go ashore and mingle with the masses (but not too close.)
- One $5 million watch so I can have one.
- Total: $178.5 million.
My change after paying with a billion-dollar bill is a meager $821.5 million left over. I might be hard up for cash after my spending spree, but I can still stay in a $20,000 room every night for 112 and 1/2 years.
So, as you see, $1 billion is more than enough to really live it up. People today are amassing multiples of billions, paying very little in taxes and using it in ways that harm the rest of us.
How Extreme Is The Concentration?
Now you have a way to visualize just how much money is concentrated at the very top. And the concentration is increasing. The top 1% took in 23.5% of all of the country’s income in 2007. In 1979 they only took in 8.9%.
It is concentrating at the expense of the rest of us. Between 1979 and 2008, the top 5% of American families saw their real incomes increase 73%, according to Census data. Over the same period, the lowest-income fifth (20% of us) saw a decrease in real income of 4.1%. The rest were just stagnant or saw very little increase. This is why people are borrowing more and more, falling further and further behind. (From the Working Group on Extreme Inequality)
Income VS Wealth
There are a few people who make hundreds of millions of income in a single year. Some people make more than $1 billion in a year But that is in a single year. If you make vast sums every year, after a while it starts to add up. (And then there is the story of inherited wealth, passed down and growing for generation after generation...)
Top 1% owns more than 90% of us combined. "In 2007, the latest year for which figures are available from the Federal Reserve Board, the richest 1% of U.S. households owned 33.8% of the nation’s private wealth. That’s more than the combined wealth of the bottom 90 percent." (Also from the Working Group on Extreme Inequality)
400 people have as much wealth as half of our population. The combined net worth of the Forbes 400 wealthiest Americans in 2007: $1.5 trillion. The combined net worth of the poorest 50% of American households: $1.6 trillion.

Corporate wealth is also personal wealth. When you hear about corporations doing well, think about this chart:

The top 1% also own 50.9% of all stocks, bonds, and mutual fund assets. The top 10% own 90.3%.
Worse Than Egypt
In fact our country's concentration of wealth is worse than Egypt. Richard Eskow writes,
Imagine: A government run by and for the rich and powerful. Leaders who lecture others about "sacrifice" and deficits while cutting taxes for corporations and the wealthy. A system so corrupt that rich executives can break the law without fear of being punished. Increasing poverty and hardship even as the stock market rises. And now, a nation caught between a broken political system and a populist movement that could be hijacked by religious extremists at any moment.
Here's the reality: Income inequality is actually greater in the United States than it is in Egypt. Politicians here have close financial ties to big corporations, both personally and through their campaigns. Corporate lawbreakers often do go unpunished. Poverty and unemployment statistics for US minorities are surprisingly similar to Egypt's.
The Harmful Effect on The Rest Of Us
This concentration is having a harmful effect on the rest of us, and even on the wealthy. When income becomes so concentrated people who would otherwise think they are well off look up the ladder, see vastly more wealth accumulating, and think they are not doing all that well after all. This leads to dissatisfaction and risk-taking, in an effort to get even more. And this risk-taking is what leads to financial collapse.
Aside from the resultant risk of financial collapse, the effect of so much in the hands of so few is also bad psychologically. People need to feel they earned that they have earned what they have, and develop theories about why they have so much when others do not. Bizzare and cruel explanations like Ayn Rand's psychopathic theories about "producers" and "parasites" take hold. Regular people become little more than commodities, blamed for their misery ("personal responsibility") as they become ever poorer.
Teddy Roosevelt, speaking to the educators about "False Standards Resulting From Swollen Fortunes," warned that while teachers believe their ideals to be worth sacrifice and so do non-renumerative work for the good of others, seeing great wealth makes people think that obtaining wealth is itself a lofty ideal,
The chief harm done by men of swollen fortune to the community is not the harm that the demagogue is apt to depict as springing from their actions, but the effect that their success sets up a false standard, and serves as a bad example to the rest of us. If we do not ourselves attach an exaggerated importance to the rich man who is distinguished only by his riches, this rich man would have a most insignificant influence over us.
Societies that are more equal do better. In the book The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better, Richard G. Wilkinson and Kate Pickett make the case that great inequality harms us physically as well as spiritually, and the these harmful effects show up across society. The book examines social relations, mental health, drug use, physical health, life expectancy, violence, social mobility and other effects and show how inequality worsens each.
Influence Buying
There is a problem of the effect on our democracy from the influence that extreme, concentrated wealth buys. In the book Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer--and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class, Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson make the case that the anti-democracy changes we have seen in America since the late 1970s that led to intense concentration of wealth and income are the intentional result of an organized campaign by the wealthy and businesses to use their wealth to, well, buy even more wealth.
The secretive Koch Brothers are said to have a net worth of $21.5 billion each and are particularly influential. They financed the Tea Party movement and along with big corporations and other billionaires they financed the massive assault of TV ads in the midterm elections that helped change the makeup of the Congress. And now Congress is paying them back,
Nine of the 12 new Republicans on the panel signed a pledge distributed by a Koch-founded advocacy group — Americans for Prosperity — to oppose the Obama administration's proposal to regulate greenhouse gases. Of the six GOP freshman lawmakers on the panel, five benefited from the group's separate advertising and grassroots activity during the 2010 campaign.
... Republicans on the committee have launched an agenda of the sort long backed by the Koch brothers. A top early goal: restricting the reach of the Environmental Protection Agency, which oversees the Kochs' core energy businesses.
We Must Address This
We owe it to ourselves to come to grips with this problem. We owe it to democracy to begin taxing high incomes and inheritance again. We owe it to future generations to use a temporary wealth tax to pay off the debt.
Resources
The Working Group on Extreme Inequality explains why inequality matters in many more ways, and is well worth clicking through to study. They also have a page of resources for study with links to other organizations. Also, spend some time at Too Much, A commentary on excess and inequality because it is "Dedicated to the notion that our world would be considerably more caring, prosperous, and democratic if we narrowed the vast gap that divides our wealthy from everyone else." The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has a Poverty and Income area of research with good resources. The Center for Economic and Policy Research has a research section on Inequality and Poverty.
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.




Comments
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We will now have a flood of
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 16:48 — Burt Lamenor (not verified)We will now have a flood of patronizing comments about class envy and how nobody should listen to the author because of this.
What will it take for Americans to get the picture?
More significantly: what and whom should demonstrators target in the absence of an overt dictator to be overthrown?
One BIG problem with this
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 16:55 — rationalrevolution (not verified)One BIG problem with this article (which I like overall)
You keep using the word "make".
"Some Wall Street types (and others) make over a billion dollars a year – each year."
No, they don't, and that's the point. They aren't "MAKING" over a billion dollars a year, they are TAKING over a billion dollars a year.
You're example on taking 20,000 years to save $1 billion at $50,000 a year (an example I was planning to use myself in an upcoming article) should make this clear.
If anyone believes that 1 person in 1 year creates more value than an average American over a period of 20,000 years (longer than the history of civilization) they are insane.
Clearly these super-rich AREN'T "making" this money, they are taking it from the workers. They are stealing from all of us, and that's the point here.
But to drive this home you need to stop referring to the incomes of the super-rich as being "earned" or "made".
They don't "make money", they "take money".
Folks: We need to pass this
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 17:45 — Anonymous (not verified)Folks: We need to pass this along to everyone we know. It's the best summary of the growing and extreme inequity of wealth and income in our good old USA that I have seen. This is everyone's USA not just the rich's. We need to relentlessly get this information out so that it becomes common knowledge and so that will effect change and hopefully protect our democracy before it is too late.
Note that the median in the
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 18:08 — Dave Johnson (not verified)Note that the median in the article is HOUSEHOLD income not personal income. Personal income is about $29,000.
I do not care that the rich
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 18:09 — Anonymous (not verified)I do not care that the rich have more money than I do, I knew when I was young that I was poor and was never going to be living in a castle BUT they should at least pay their fair share.
People, Wake up and demand
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 18:24 — Anonymous (not verified)People, Wake up and demand that compensation to the CEO's and executives be limited to a multiple of no more than 10 times that of the average worker. Demand that your congressman and senator represent the common American citizen or rise up like Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Algeria and now even Iran. It is not too late to stop t
he greedy from taking everything. Take back control of your country and its government now!
An interesting thing to
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 19:03 — AnonymousDV (not verified)An interesting thing to think about is what will happen when those hobnail boots finally do meet the descending silken slippers. There will be wailing and nashing of teeth for sure!
Well, it's either "living in
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 19:28 — Anonymous (not verified)Well, it's either "living in a moral vacuum," in which there are no absolute rights and wrongs - so we really have no appeal - or, we must determine that there may be absolute rights and wrongs in some value system. Bruce Waltke, an Old Testament and Hebrew scholar says the following: When you find the word "EVIL" in the Old Testament you find people who treat all their resources as if they are their own, to be kept for their own use. And, when you find the word "Righteous" you find people who treat their resources as if they belong to the community at large, and pour those resources into the community for the good of all.
Been a long time since people actually looked at their resources that way - though New York City's most relevant preacher, Tim Keller, has clearly stated these values in his most recent work, Generous Justice -
When people think Keller's way, communities do change for the better.
I think that we need to cut
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 20:05 — gew (not verified)I think that we need to cut Congresses' salaries,
benefits and retirement...to me that is the biggest
entitlement that we are NOT talking about. I want
to see a chart on how much each congressman makes,
his benefits and how much he will retire with...
let's start them on the run and let them start
defending themselves...then maybe they won't
go after my little social security and retirement.
I really want a better world for all with work and
educational opportunity. Just think we might be
preventing someone who will come up with an
intelligent solution to our problems from getting
an education. BUT our kids need to start taking
their opportunity...
I have read that most of our
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 20:51 — Otto Schiff (not verified)I have read that most of our lawmakers are very wealthy.
If that is true then we should not be too surprised that they are acting in their rather than our interest.
The unfortunate part is that a large part of the electorate does not understand this and are voting against their best interest. That is how Hitler and W. assumed power.
But don't you see...when I
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 21:32 — aimlowjoe (not verified)But don't you see...when I make my first billion, I want the nest feathered with gold...
Aimlow Joe was here
www.aimlow.com
My favorite insanity - A
Mon, 02/14/2011 - 22:54 — Anonymous (not verified)My favorite insanity - A friend is on a forum for turntables. They sell turntables for $300k! But that's not all. The tone arm is another #10k, and the two preamps are 10k each. And these fools think that their wealth gives them the ability to hear the difference!
So shameful! But when you have money, you have to spend it on something!
This is a very bad way to
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 01:41 — Anonymous (not verified)This is a very bad way to frame the issue.
Here is the way to frame it in a populist and "lefty-fox-newsy" way:
Our police and military primarily exist to protect the possessions of these wealthy people. Why should we pay for their security? They should pay their fair share! After all, when the mongol hordes invade, they're not coming for your flat in the burbs, they're going after the mansions, penthouses, and vaults.
Our roads benefit primarily the wealthy, and represent a massive subsidy for trucking companies which gross billions a year. Why don't these people pay their fair share for the roads? Why are we funding them with public money?!
"People, Wake up and demand
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 01:45 — Anonymous (not verified)"People, Wake up and demand that compensation to the CEO's and executives be limited to a multiple of no more than 10 times that of the average worker"
artificial caps are a double edged sword in a mixed economy (no, i won't dare call the US a "free market").
Also, I consider such capping morally wrong in that they take away these people's ability to pursue their goal in life, money.
Yes, I really mean that, but I also think the wealth gap should be radically reduced.
I'd prefer we use an asymptotic progressive tax rate. So long as the nominal value of income increases, it will continue to stoke their greed and bring them fulfillment. They just won't be earning more per year than many small nations spend in their entire budgets.
The fix, is amazingly
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 02:14 — Richard Breed (not verified)The fix, is amazingly simple. Let's talk, I have gotten the groundwork done, so that, the fix is amazingly simple. We'll need a team, Truthout & friends, and 24 months. Honestly! I put 8 years into this effort...which is why,I am here! Nice 2 b w/u folks. Honored actually, and excited!
the human race is SO over
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 03:04 — KEITH CALANDRA (not verified)the human race is SO over
Dave Johnson notes in the
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 03:28 — Anonymous (not verified)Dave Johnson notes in the comments above:
"Note that the median in the article is HOUSEHOLD income not personal income. Personal income is about $29,000."
To be more explicit, the Social Security Administration reported that in 2009, the *median* wage in the U.S. was about $26,200. Half of all wage earners in the country have to get by on less than that amount.
See the following link for more information:
http://www.tax.com/taxcom/taxblog.nsf/Permalink/UBEN-8AGMUZ?OpenDocument
Here's the problem: >>If
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 07:24 — FR Tothus (not verified)Here's the problem:
>>If people understood just how concentrated wealth has become in our country and the effect is has on our politics, our democracy and our people, they would demand our politicians do something about it.<<
The human mind does not work like that. This does not motivate people, because it is based on an eighteenth century enlightenment model of thought that is now understood to be incorrect in all of its assumptions. It turns out that people are not rational in the ways that classical education has taught us, are not motivated by appeals to reason.
RSA Animate - Drive: The
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 07:31 — FR Tothus (not verified)RSA Animate - Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us
I can't imagine having that
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 09:20 — radline9 (not verified)I can't imagine having that kind of money and not helping people with it or trying to get out of my taxes. The billionaires are not making a contribution to society, they are ripping people off. There are a few exceptions.
Apparently, when I am rich,
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 10:22 — Gart van Gennip (not verified)Apparently, when I am rich, I am 'entitled' to this wealth, but when I am poor, it is my 'personal responsibility'. It is all part of the same old con, called 'The American Dream'.
Small, do-nothing government, deregulation, low taxes. If taxes get any lower, government any smaller and business more deregulated, the result is not called 'society'; it's called 'anarchy'. Every one for themselves and nobody for all of us.
If we want to live in a society, that means that we collectively take responsibility for all of us. The wealthy are part of that society, whether they like it or not. And so they must bear their equal responsibility for that society. But they have conned you into believing that that is called socialism, and that it is actually a bad thing.
It's time to wake up and hold everyone accountable.
BTW, another nice one for explaining how much a billion dollars is, is this: if you spend one dollar per second, it'll take 11.5 days to spend a million, but 32 YEARS to spend a billion dollars.
@KEITH CALANDRA: "The human
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 10:24 — Gart van Gennip (not verified)@KEITH CALANDRA: "The human race is SO over"
Yes indeed, and the rich won.
It's a mistake to worry
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 10:55 — Paul (not verified)It's a mistake to worry about legislators being too rich. The richer they are, the less dependent they are on the likes of Rupert Murdoch. Look at the track record of rich men in government -- as a group, they are extraordinarly high-minded and liberal. Think of FDR, or Herb Kohl of Wisconsin, or Jon Corzine of NewJersey, or even Michael Bloomberg of New York (a mixed bag, admittedly).
Mark Twain said that America has the best legislators money can buy. It's difficult to bribe a millionaire -- why should he bother taking the bribe? People like the Koch brothers don't run for office. Instead, they pay to put their friends into office.
A million dollars invested
Tue, 02/15/2011 - 13:41 — Anonymous (not verified)A million dollars invested at a five percent return will provide the owner with something close to the average family income in the U.S. A billion dollars invested the same way will provide the owner with about a million dollars each week.
This is not about envying
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 03:21 — Patty M (not verified)This is not about envying the wealthy. I have no desire for a yacht or for staying in one of those extremely expensive (and boring) hotels. What gets me is how disconnected they are from the humanity inside them. Because, you see, even after buying all those expensive items (and lets just assume that they have the right to do that if they choose so), they'd still have so much left that they could easily help others who are living in less than human conditions without even a scratch to their personal budgets! Still... the thought of using even a small fraction of their wealth to improve the world we all live in doesn't seem to cross their minds! That is baffling to me.
After reading the article
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 10:47 — NC (not verified)After reading the article and then the comments I can honestly say I do not find extreme wealth sickening. I am in the top 1%, retired early and spend my time doing good for others. Money affords me the time to help other and I do give freely of my time, expertise and money. Wealthy people support the arts, endow universities, donate land and support many of the programs people take for granted.
Forbes 400 is made up of people from around the world so comparing their wealth to 50% of Americans is a bit dramatic. I also doubt that many of the Forbes 400 make a billion every year, otherwise the list would be much larger.
More important than all of this is the concept of risk reward. People who make extreme wealth take a lot of risks to make money. Sometime is works and you get on the Forbes 400, usually it doesn't and you do not make the society pages. The energy trader who got a huge bonus likely took a lot of risks to earn that money. How many of you would be willing to bet your yearly salary on your ability to predict a market My guess is very few. How many of you are willing to get paid only if you succeed? If you take huge risks you should reap big rewards.
So if you want to join the 1% take some risks, read everything, do math in your head and earn every dollar yourself.
btw... I have stayed in some of the hotels and they really are fabulous
Well, NC, I started to read
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 14:11 — Frances in California (not verified)Well, NC, I started to read your comment and found it truly sickening, regardless of the sickening contrasts pointed out in the article. Obscene wealth isn't sickening, it's obscene. What's sickening is poverty. Guys like you take no responsibility for actions of yours that impact the rest of us negatively, so you've no room to brag. Until you've worked in the kitchen of one of those hotels, washing dishes, your text isn't important to anyone but you.
So here's my graphic
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 15:12 — kathryn Brewer (not verified)So here's my graphic response to the wealth pie chart:
http://www.brewer-com.com/funPages/visualStats.html
David Cay Johnson is a
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 15:46 — JNJ (not verified)David Cay Johnson is a patriot.
We are recreating the society the Founding Fathers rejected. Wealth is not the enemy but extreme wealth concentrated amongst a small group creates a privileged class. Our society works best when wealth is used to benefit the majority. Hoarding wealth, avoiding taxation and the buying of influence weakens us as a nation.
We were once referred to as Americans or citizens but today we're referred to as consumers.
We have lost our identity and with it our power.
We have an identical
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 18:57 — Ranter (not verified)We have an identical problems in the UK. The Middle East and various parts of Europe are rising up and ousting their corrupt money grabbing politicians. Here in the UK anger is simmering under the surface and movements/protests are growing in size towards banks, business tax avoiders and the Government. Personally I can see a revolution in the making, not sure how long it will take, maybe a few more months..maybe a year.
Keep sharing/posting info and educate your fellow citizens. Those at the top of both of our countries need bringing to book.
When the revolution comes,
Wed, 02/16/2011 - 23:19 — Anonymous (not verified)When the revolution comes, they will be the first against the wall.
"More important than all of
Thu, 02/17/2011 - 11:49 — Kimberly (not verified)"More important than all of this is the concept of risk reward. People who make extreme wealth take a lot of risks to make money. If you take huge risks you should reap big rewards. "
That is absurd, and insulting. Those big "risk takers" never risked THEIR OWN MONEY, they weren't worried about not making the mortgage payment or feeding their children - at all. Risking someone else's money is easy when all you stand to lose is pride and a corner office - but they played fast and loose with other people's hard EARNED money; their life savings,played with people's dreams of buying a home or going to college - by extension- played with people's LIVES. And you dare to glibly say they deserved it?!?! Dude, the rich better have homes made of 50 ft steel walls because when the country continues to collapse (and it will) y'all are gonna need a place to hide.
i have decided that while i
Mon, 02/28/2011 - 13:38 — B.E.E. (not verified)i have decided that while i am a capitalist, i am not a corporatist. i believe in the power of the individual to make their own way in the world, and know for certain that most have the ability to sustain themselves. i do believe in giving generously, but i don't believe in theft.
a government would best serve it's citizens by creating and assuring transparency and predictability. when all that is predictable is uncertainty, or when the inner workings of generating wealth is so complex as to defy common understanding, then something is clearly wrong.
people are simple creatures. when a society has confidence that the "system" is fair to all, is predictable, and it's levers transparent, and the "incentives" to do more rather than less commonly pay off, then most will rise to the occasion and pursue happiness.
when it is clearly evident that the "system" is unfair, that the levers to success are hidden or so complex as to be incomprehensible, and doing the "right" thing is not predictably rewarded, and the "incentive" is to do less rather than more, then many will not bother to rise to the occasion, and society as a whole suffers.
so while i admire those that can game the system for their ability to figure it out, the system is still being gamed, at everyone's cost.
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