• @DandomRude
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      222 months ago

      Unfortunately, only for their own benefit.

      • @Korkki
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        272 months ago

        Increasingly not even for their own benefit. They are like a parasite that is killing it’s host and therefore it’s means of subsistence

        • @[email protected]
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          152 months ago

          That’s what always gets me. You can’t spend a billion dollars on yourself - you could live in the highest possible luxury, waited on hand and foot by the best, and you’re barely going to eat up half of it in a lifetime - even if your money earned no interest

          They’re not even happy. They’re hated by many, idolized by others, and the rest want to leech off them. They don’t even have good relationships among their peers, it’s like a never ending dick measuring contest

    • @ieatpwns
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      112 months ago

      so the adjuster notices them

    • GHiLA
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      2 months ago

      None, that’s the funny part. You could almost call it a flaw with humanity as a whole.

      We can’t focus on any sort of task-at-hand for any greater good. We simply are just that self centered and greedy, despite those of us that fight against that nature, it’s still our nature.

      Climate change? You can’t make people wear masks in grocery stores or vaccinate, good luck with the climate.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      Two options, if you’re shilling for billionaires:

      They’re intrinsically 10,000x better than you and me and deserve to be 10,000x richer.

      It’s just theirs. It says so somewhere, no backsies.

      Pure trickle-down had it’s day too, but it’s it’s a joke again in modern times, for the most part. You may object that these are all weak arguments, but basically, you and what army?

      Edit: “We need a remote chance of becoming a billionaire for anyone to go to work” is kind of a blend of trickle-down and argument number one, but I suppose I should mention it, just for the sake of completeness

      • @friend_of_satan
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        42 months ago

        I guess even as a billionaire, the difference between your first 50 billion and your second 50 billion is that with your second you can make frivolous purchases of social media companies without going back to being poor.

        It’s still bullshit in the big picture of history.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          Yeah, it’s a continuous scale, which is something people miss sometimes. When you talk to people with millions of dollars they have a tendency to say they’re not that rich, and point to some guy they know with tens of millions. They’re not wrong per se even if they’re dangerously out of touch; that extra digit changes a lot.

          The bullshit is just that that scale goes way, way too high, as well as way too low. Human ability is normally distributed, and human worth is often held to be inalienably equal. Wealth follows a completely different distribution, for reasons.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      Honestly, I think a lot of it is just to support the idea that those who have more, deserve more.

      Useful idiots are in vogue. They live vicariously through their oppressors while working service jobs for scraps.

    • davel [he/him]
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      2 months ago

      This is either a boring rhetorical question or a very confused one.

    • @subtext
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      -62 months ago

      I mean, my wealth has more than doubled over the past decade. The stock market has been going absolutely bananas, and my retirement accounts have done well.

      • davel [he/him]
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        2 months ago

        I guess when corporate media told us the economy was doing great, it was you they were talking to, and not the other ~80–90% of Americans.