From the Sage of South Central ...

ViRedd

New Member
Dems' 'income inequality' silliness

[SIZE=-1]Posted: January 11, 2007[/SIZE]

[FONT=Palatino,]By Larry Elder[/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,][SIZE=-1]© 2007 [/SIZE][/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]You make too much money! And you make too little! [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., put it somewhat differently. But the new chairman of the House Financial Services Committee vowed to tackle the growing, festering problem of "income inequality." "Government doesn't have to interfere with the free enterprise system," says Frank, "but we can work along with it to reduce inequality." [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]Railing against Home Depot's $210 million severance package for its fired CEO, Frank called it "further confirmation of the need to deal with the pattern of CEO pay that appears to be out of control." [/FONT]


[FONT=Palatino,]What does Frank propose to do about the "income inequality" in, say, baseball? New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez several years ago signed a contract for a quarter-billion dollars. That's "b" as in "bodacious." Pity the teammate who toils at the league minimum of $380,000 a year. Will Smith reportedly gets $20 million per picture. Most members of the Screen Actors Guild work at other non-acting jobs just to make ends meet. [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]What exactly is the appropriate gap? How wide should it be? Presumably Mr. Frank possesses the divine wisdom to know when the gap is jus-s-s-st right. [/FONT]
[FONT=Palatino,]Understanding Frank requires understanding the deep recesses of the Democrats' psyche about wealth and its creation. Recall former House Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt of Missouri, who once said people of wealth in America are "the people who have won the lottery of life." Obviously, Messrs. Frank and Gephardt consider the old hard-work formula dated and dysfunctional. [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]A friend told me a story of an executive, "Bob," who works with her at an insurance company. During a golf outing, Bob told her his life story. His dad abandoned him shortly after his mom gave birth. When he was 3, his mother, in a fit of anger, broke his arm. Social services investigated, but found no wrongdoing. Shortly after he turned 8, his ever-angry mother broke his jaw. This time, social services removed him from her custody, and he lived in a series of foster homes and group houses. In school he constantly caused trouble, made poor grades and grew angrier and angrier as he found himself shuttled from one temporary custodial place to another. [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]One day, a priest visited the house where Bob, now a teenager, was staying with other "unwanted" kids. The priest gave a motivational speech, telling them about God's love, and that despite their circumstances, they should value their lives. The priest said that each of you possesses a special gift, a gift you must find and use. Bob's eyes rolled toward the ceiling as the priest spoke – after all, he'd heard this before. "If I'm so special," he thought, "who values me? Please, what 'gift' do I have?" [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]The priest noticed Bob's indifference, and after his talk, approached Bob quietly and asked him why he appeared to pay no attention. Bob asked the priest the very questions he'd been thinking, including, "Where's my gift?" He told the priest about his absent father, and the abuse he suffered at the hands of his mother. The priest said, "Your gift is that you survived. What you endured requires strength, a strength that a lot of people do not have. That is your gift." [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]For whatever reason, the priest's words sunk in. Bob began to work harder, and his grades improved. He went to college, got a degree in business and joined a large corporation, where he began to work his way up. He is married and has two children. He now earns a high six-figure salary and loves his life. [/FONT]
[FONT=Palatino,]To Messrs. Gephardt and Frank, Bob is merely a winner in "the lottery of life." To them, Bob occupies the wrong end of the "income inequality" scale. Never mind that America remains the most upwardly mobile country in history. Or that most rich did not start out that way. Or that, of all the qualities that go into income success, hard work remains the most important. [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]A great man from humble circumstances once said, "[T]here is not, of necessity, any such thing as the free hired laborer being fixed to that condition for life. ... The prudent, penniless beginner in the world labors for wages awhile, saves a surplus with which to buy tools or land for himself; then labors on his own account for a while, and at length hires another new beginner to help him. This is ... the just, and generous, and prosperous system, which opens the way for all – gives hope to all, and ... improvement of conditions to all. If any continue through life in the condition of the hired laborer, it is not the fault of the system, but because of either a dependent nature which prefers it, or improvidence, folly or singular misfortune." [/FONT]

[FONT=Palatino,]Barney Frank, meet Abraham Lincoln. [/FONT]
 

medicineman

New Member
Hey Vi, Nice little fairy tale. Thats your one in a million success story, The other 999,999 are still working (if they can find a job) for shit wages. Wake up, not every one can be a 6 figure employee, there aren't very many of those jobs as opposed to 300,000,000 people, and that is the American ruse: work hard and you'll succeed and make it to the top and end up with a 6 figure salary, Bullshit. I worked my ass off and all I got was a sore back and arthritus, a minute pension and social security. Go pedal that shit somewhere else, maybe to 5th grade students in a special needs school, but don't push that crap off on us adults, we've been there done that and the results are in, it's 99.999999 percent bullshit!
 

ViRedd

New Member
Work hard? What does working hard have to do with it? A hod carrier works hard, Med. Most hod carriers don't end up rich. Helping others get what THEY want, while at the same time, maintaining a positive mental attitude WILL go far in helping one to attain success. Go through life with the belief that the system is rigged against you is a sure way to failure. The Ghetto is full of people like that. A college education is no guarantee of success either. There are plenty of people who have come up here from Mexico, worked the trades with a third grade eduction, who have made it big. A defeatist attitude will get you only one thing ... defeat.

Vi
 

Wavels

Well-Known Member
True, true, Mr. Vi,
in a former lifetime, my job entailed interacting with self made entrepreneurs, many of whom had limited formal education. These guys were all spunky and fairly aggressive and curious....they were able to figure out lots of different ways to make millions of dollars, and buy staggering amounts of muni bonds.
Their perception of themselves and this country is the exact opposite of yours, med!
I am convinced that you, med, could make a lot of money with the computer that you are using to access this site.
It is the attitude and mindset combined with "hard work" and a little good old initiative.
 

ViRedd

New Member
Exactly. I've worked with many people with negative attitudes. They're all the same. Nothing is ever good. Nothing is ever right. They do exactly what is expected to keep their jobs and nothing more ... if even that. The company and the boss are out to get them. The pay is never enough. The benefits are never enough. They add nothing to the equasion except to bitch, bitch and then bitch some more. Then they wonder when the layoffs come, why they are the first to have the door shown to them.

Vi
 

medicineman

New Member
Exactly. I've worked with many people with negative attitudes. They're all the same. Nothing is ever good. Nothing is ever right. They do exactly what is expected to keep their jobs and nothing more ... if even that. The company and the boss are out to get them. The pay is never enough. The benefits are never enough. They add nothing to the equasion except to bitch, bitch and then bitch some more. Then they wonder when the layoffs come, why they are the first to have the door shown to them.
Well if it isn't the mutual admiration society, I've told you before, get a room!
Vi
Vi, Vi, we've had this discussion before. I told you then and I guess I have to tell you again, I always gave 100% on my jobs. It was in my best interest to do so. Why you always suppose the workers are lazy is beyond me. I've worked with hundreds of different people on many different jobs and the large majority were hard working individuals. Were there a few slackers, hell yes, but not the majority by any means. I think you management assholes just presuppose that all workers are lazy. I've seen lazy at the DMV and other Government places, but in the private sector, if you were lazy, you didn't last long. so get off my back with the lazy bullshit. I've done more backbreaking work than you'll ever know. that sparklets job wouldn't qualify you to work beside me for five minutes. Yeah you can work 12 hour days when all you do is shuffle papers, try shoveling concrete for 10 hours a day and get back to me. Lazy my ass! BTW I never bitched at my jobs, thats another fallicy you've made up in your head. If your workers were bitching, maybe it was because you were an asshole, ever think of that?
 

ViRedd

New Member
Med, Med ... Med ...

Why do you take everything so personally? And by the way ... this is a cannabis site. Please be a little more frugal with the personal information, OK?

Vi
 

Wavels

Well-Known Member
Med, where did you get this misguided notion that anyone has referred to you as lazy?
This misses the point by a mile
Defeatist or negative mindset is entirely different from laziness...
 

bleorg

Active Member
hahaha, Barney Frank. The guy had a gay brothel being run out of his house, supposedly he didn't know about it. I'd listen to a thing he says.:roll:
 
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