| Coming from a former communist country, I don't understand why smart, capable people want to give away their money to a corrupt, incompetent state to manage it for them. The US is fundamentally different than Nordic countries, where socialism appears to be working:
* The Nordic countries are tiny compared to the US.
* They are highly educated.
* Their society is homogenous. It seems like everybody is assuming that there will be this rational actor collecting money from the rich and distributing them to the poor. What actually is going to happen is that instead of entrepreneurs becoming rich, politicians will grow even richer than they are now. The politicians will have more power, power that they want to keep, and the only way to do that is to suppress the press and the people. And that's how communism starts. It might sound like I'm taking it too far, but it's happened a number of times already. |
You are inventing a complete straw man. That is not what I want nor is it what most other people who are concerned about wealth inequality want.
What we want are policies that do not make it so absurdly easy for those who already have access to capital to continue to accumulate wealth and influence at an exponential rate while those who are not born under such fortunate circumstances live with an ever-increasing disadvantage.
Of course this is inevitable to some degree due to the nature of compound interest. But there are ways to mitigate it. See: progressive taxation. Now it's time to take a look at other things such as the estate tax and taxes on capital gains and dividends. The latter are the most egregious in my estimation. The U.S. currently taxes income earned through labor, time and talent at a higher rate than income earned through investment, thus continuing to privilege those who already have access to capital