| lol. If you made the top %1 liquidate all their assets to give to others everything would stop working. You would create more problems than ever. Somebody would have to buy the assets, and because we are doing away with anybody who would have the sort of money to buy the assets, you would likely deadlock long before you would get 34 trillion out of the system. Like its mind boggling what you said. Where would this money come from? Other 1%ers who would then have to sale their assets? Folks, Net Worth is not tangible, and even less tangible if you required a mass amount of folks to liquidate. It would simply drive prices down to a point where they were no longer in the 1% and then our economy would simply pop. Every major system that moves money (this is what we want) would grind to a halt, and the folks you want to steal money for would simply have no job and have no cash flow. But beyond that, stealing money assets, or even in this case "net worth" is immoral. Bezos was a nobody driving a Honda Civic, folks just mad he drives a rocket now. |
Most of those assets fall into two categories:
1. Real estate, which doesn't need to be liquidated to be put under public ownership
2. Corporate shares, which don't need to be liquidated to be put under public ownership
The thought experiment around liquidating that wealth and cutting everyone a check was purely a response to your own hypothetical of liquidating a fraction of one billionaire's wealth and cutting everyone a check. Specifically, it was to point out that your "argument" misses the bigger picture around how much wealth is locked up in the accounts of even just billionaires, let alone millionaires.
> But beyond that, stealing money assets, or even in this case "net worth" is immoral.
Unless the wealthy do it through rent, lobbying, labor exploitation (including union busting), and monopolization, then it's all hunky-dory, right?
That's why I put "steal" in scare quotes. Retaking wealth already stolen from the working class is the precise opposite of theft, yet here you and others are, white-knighting for the poor millionaires.
Something's gotta give, or else the outcome will inevitably be far worse for that 1% than merely having to liquidate their assets.