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feathers and tying flys with them
Mr. Opus McDopus wrote: "rw" wrote in message k.net... These people don't live in the same world we do. Something has happened to this country in the past couple of decades. The distribution of wealth has become dangerously skewed. There will always be rich and poor, but I'm afraid we're becoming an hereditary aristocracy. NPR related a study/survey that said that the 1% of the U.S. population has/owns/controls 33% of the wealth, currently. Additionally, the study/survey suggested that the Bush tax cuts were *likely* responsible. And: "Day to Day, March 10, 2006 · The exclusive club of billionaires aroundthe world jumped to a record 793 over the past year -- and according to Forbes magazine's 2006 rankings of the world's richest people, their combined wealth grew to more than $2 trillion. Madeleine Brand talks to Bob Moon of Marketplace about the good fortune of the world's billionaires." http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...toryId=5256403 Moreover: "One percent of the US population owns sixty percent of the stock and forty percent of the total wealth." http://www.endgame.org/primer-wealth.html Op http://www.osjspm.org/101_wealth.htm Very interesting. Did you know that Bill Gates alone has wealth more than the bottom 40% of all US households? And that the top 1% have more wealth than the bottom 90%. Or that the wealth in the US is more concentrated than any other developed nation. --riverman (in the wrong business. I should be in the Inheritance business...) |
feathers and tying flys with them
On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 03:58:44 GMT, rw wrote:
The "family farm" is a myth. A profitable family farm certainly is. My wife grew up on a "family farm" and I knew a lot of other small farmers when I was in Kansas - they all had full time jobs in addition to farming. Estate taxes were the least of their worries. -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com |
feathers and tying flys with them
"Jonathan Cook" wrote in message ... [most posts don't show up local for me, so I'm following up on my own to chime in again.] I agree with much of what others are saying, just not that nobody is affected. And I think property taxes are the worse evil. Two anecdotes: One of my sibling's in-law's family owns some beautiful land that a nice NE Ohio river forms part of the boundary for. The county has been after them to sell some so they can add it to their park system. It's been family land for a long time, they are simple country folk, but the county has been pushing up valuation on it and they are at the point of not being able to afford property taxes anymore. That's just wrong, in my book. I looked at Op's post and www.endgame.org. Interesting site. I agree with alot there, but well, everyone has an agenda. In their "top 100" landholders list, many of the entries are "families". Well I know (quite well, we just visited them last month in TX) some of one of the top-50 families, and while yes they are sitting on a reasonable value in terms of their share of the family land, they're scraping by day-to-day just like the rest of us. Their house in Austin is probably 1/2 the value of my house here, their children are working in semi-blue collar jobs (vet assistant, dog kennel manager, married to a border patrol agent), and no one that I've met is living a "rich" life. Not exactly the life one would expect if they found themselves on the top-50 landowner list. I'm not saying we should weep for them; if the family cooperation collapsed and everyone sold off, yes they'd get a good windfall, but all they're interested in is keeping the ranch in the family, and keeping it in the black in most years. Jon. I know (quite well, I just visited one who sits at the desk next to mine a couple of minutes ago) some people in the bottom 50,000,000 or so land owners in the U.S. She and her husband own about a third of an acre in Milwaukee. They both work full time in semi-sorta-technical jobs. She says the story of your friends' plight breaks her heart and asks would they like to borrow a hundred bucks. Wolfgang |
feathers and tying flys with them
"Jeff Miller" wrote in in contrast...if i believed my son capable and of good mind and heart (which i do...well, he's got a heart far superior to mine and a mind that means to do good), i'd leave him everything i'd been able to accumulate and that was available for bequest at my death. i'd prefer to pamper my son beyond his own efforts because i love him and because i'm skeptical of most good causes i can neither control nor kiss. Jeff, I admit that sounds great. My son has a far better heart and mind than my own ( not a big accomplishment, but he really is a damn fine young man ) and it is easy to be skeptical of most good causes. And I'll add that my experiences may be the exceptions ... before I cite them. It's been my observation that the further from the original source the money gets as it is inherited and inherited the less likely the hearts and minds are to be 'good' I don't know you, maybe you are a billionaire that has succeeded in raising a very pampered but still socially responsible child. But in my case, my kid is such a damn fine specimen in large part because he was not that pampered and he was taught that he would have what he could earn and he was taught to be very grateful for what he had and to realize it could all slip away with a slight change in luck and that a major difference between him and his cushy middle class life and others barely surviving was his luck, not his superiority or their inferiority. My kid would handle a fortune well, and do good with it. BUT his kids would also be raised differently even if he tried to do his best. There is a good chance that they would start to feel that superiority I've seen in so many rich brats ... a air of superiority that can only come from never, ever, having to actually prove oneself to maintain one's place on the top of the heap. And my great grandkids, the third generation wealthy without effort would be damn UNlikely to echo my son's high standards of self discipline ....and the cycle would spiral down etc etc. They say power corrupts ... nearly without exception .... and my experience is that inherited money and it's power corrupt far more thoroughly than worked for money and power. So, back to where I was, I'd provide well for my kid, but not well enough to start a cycle of inherited corruption ... the rest would get 'spread around' .... too much concentration, in any one place is a bad thing ... that is, I believe, rw's point that I agreed with. |
feathers and tying flys with them
Charlie Choc wrote:
On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 03:58:44 GMT, rw wrote: The "family farm" is a myth. A profitable family farm certainly is. My wife grew up on a "family farm" and I knew a lot of other small farmers when I was in Kansas - they all had full time jobs in addition to farming. Estate taxes were the least of their worries. um, speaking of kansas...the chief castrator in the waynesville s/m dungeon neuticle drama is from kansas... apparently he was employed for 23 years in some hospital out there. |
feathers and tying flys with them
"Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... So, you found a use for the trailing edge of the primaries, two of which should give him nearly a lifetime supply of biots. Now, what does he do with the rest of the goose? -- Scott Reverse name to reply Not that its important to the discussion, but I believe that biots are on the leading edge. Bob Weinberger |
feathers and tying flys with them
On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 20:40:26 -0400, Jeff Miller
wrote: um, speaking of kansas...the chief castrator in the waynesville s/m dungeon neuticle drama is from kansas... apparently he was employed for 23 years in some hospital out there. I haven't read about that (other than here), but that must mean the place is covered by medical insurance and has lousy food. g -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com |
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