| > Did I say that? Or did I specifically refer to slimeballs, loopholes, Paradise and Panama papers, bribing legislators etc. With the exception of bribing legislators these are perfectly fine things to do. And in fact amount to having a smart accountant. > I don't remember any normal people paying thugs to bust up strikes, or paying to print anti union propaganda and rig unionising votes. I don't remember any billionaires doing that either. What I do remember is companies doing that might have a billionaire at the helm. And as far as I can see most companies helmed by a billionaire do not do that. > You seem to be saying, might makes right; and that we'd do those things above if we were in their position. Even if that were true (it's not), that would be all the more reason to change the rules that allow such consolidation of wealth and abuse of power to exist. That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying my default assumption is that the expected behavior of normal people and billionaires is the same. The billionaires outcome is simply different because they are billionaires, they have much more weight to throw around. > Going back to your original claim - that it's not obvious (to you) that billionaires care less about the common good than common people - here is a poem that has survived the last 250+ years Yes and we also used to believe putting blood sucking leeches on your skin to suck out blood would cure illnesses. It's always easy to blame someone in a better position then yourself. Something that exists in a poem doesn't mean anything. What I'm asking of you is essentially do you have data/studies that shows very wealthy people have a fundamentally different psychological profile in regards to caring about society then non wealthy people. Because that is your claim. There are also plenty of counter examples. Like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation or Azim Premji. Or the entire billionaire philanthropist archetype. |
Dear god man, NO. Those may be legal - and who wrote those laws? But they sure as fuck aren't fine, morally and ethically speaking, unless you're a fucking sociopath. Which billionaires are more likely to be.
> as far as I can see most companies helmed by a billionaire do not do that.
Didn't Amazon get in trouble recently for interfering with a union vote?
> my default assumption is that the expected behavior of normal people and billionaires is the same.
That's a bad assumption, and there are mountains of research out there on the topic. It's stunning that you can't seem to look for any yourself, because if you looked you would find it.
> we also used to believe putting blood sucking leeches on your skin to suck out blood would cure illnesses. It's always easy to blame someone in a better position then yourself.
That's a very, very lazy take. That's really the best you could come up with? Leeches and victim blaming?
> What I'm asking of you is essentially do you have data/studies that shows very wealthy people have a fundamentally different psychological profile in regards to caring about society then non wealthy people. Because that is your claim.
https://www.vox.com/2015/6/16/8790357/rich-people-jerks
Read the above link. Look into the sources it cites.
There are huge differences, and it's not even remotely in doubt. Your whole assumption is so far off base it's not even funny; just sad.