• ReverendIrreverence@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Give them an award saying “Yay, you won capitalism!” then force them to retire and enjoy the rest of their life without ruining any more people’s lives.

    • JustTesting@lemmy.hogru.ch
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      6 days ago

      NG+, take away their money and have them start over again, but without help from their rich parents or with the odds stacked against them somehow.

      • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        If they truly work so hard that they deserve all that money, they’ll have absolutely no issue earning it again.

  • Stern@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    If a monkey hoarded more bananas then it could ever eat in its life, to the detriment of other monkeys around it, those other monkeys would kill it, and if they didn’t, scientists would, to see what was wrong in its brain.

    • P1k1e@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Not before ripping it’s face off and maiming it’s genitalia. Honestly, it’s too good for em

  • immutable@lemm.ee
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    8 days ago

    A billion dollars is a hard sum of money to wrap your head around. There is basically no ethical way to make a billion dollars. If you have a billion dollars it’s because you’ve stiffed a lot of people a lot of the value they created and kept it for yourself.

    • MrPoopyButthole@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 days ago

      This is exactly how I have always thought about it too. Pure greed. My father ran a company for 35 years and for 3 of those years he took either no payout or a very small payout so that he didn’t have to let anyone go. I asked him why he didn’t just downsize and he said that other people needed the money more than us. That’s how shit needs to be run. People centric not profit driven.

      • ddplf@szmer.info
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        8 days ago

        Unfortunately it is in human nature to compare oneself to other people, and becoming big in other people’s eyes is easiest when other people around you are already smaller than you.

        This becomes truly predatory when you become the person deciding on other’s situation.

        Do you know a single business where an employee makes more money than his boss? Because I sure know lots of businesses where employees posses much more knowledge or skill than their supervisor, yet none of them surpass them in earnings.

  • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    Forbes did the math once and determined that Smaug, a dragon embodied by greed and selfishness, is worth $62 billion. There are 17 people richer than him.

    Smaug was shot in the heart and it was a morally good act.

  • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Asking this on lemmy is like asking a pack of wolves if they enjoy the taste of lamb. You already know the answer you’re going to get…

  • spittingimage@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I think they’re bad for the economy. Money has to circulate. Every time a billionaire throws another million on the pile, they make things worse for everyone else.

    • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      This is a view we don’t see often enough. Everybody is into hating billionaires the way teenage girls hate the super-hot cheerleader. All they do is complain that it’s not “fair” for somebody to be so rich. There’s not enough discussion of the purely mechanical reasons extreme wealth is bad for the economy, not to mention the corruption opportunities it creates. The ultra-rich don’t spend their money, they just exchange it to trade big blocks of asset ownership back and forth. None of that money ever gets spent on a loaf of bread or a bus ticket, or a GI Joe with the kung fu grip. It essentially disappears from the economy. I don’t think most people even comprehend how that works - it involves more thought than reacting to memes.

  • Mickey7@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Seems logical if there was a law that the average worker had to be paid a percentage of what the top people get paid. I thought that Japan had something like this.