• @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    There will always be a distribution of wealth. The key thing is how broad that distribution is.

    • R0cket_M00se
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      111 year ago

      Yeah, there’s no problem with a meritocracy as long as the top and the bottom of the gradient aren’t (literally can’t pay bills -> more money than you could ever spend.)

      Like in no sane world would people willingly become surgeons for the same pay as a sanitation worker, that’s just fucking stupid. Why spend a decade going through school to be a doctor when you could just go pick up trash and make the same money? We have to have some kind of variation in pay scale or society wouldnt function.

      Like you said, how much difference between the top and the bottom definitely doesn’t have to be what it is.

      • @dessel
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        61 year ago

        Yeah but in the current form of meritocracy both the surgeon and the sanitation worker are relatively poor compared to the upper class. And that exactly is the problem: you cant get rich just by working.

      • @benjiman
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        21 year ago

        Assuming that the education could be free, why wouldn’t you expect people to train as surgeons?

        • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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          21 year ago

          I think it’s funny that some people think that if they wouldn’t do it themselves then no one would.

      • @SCB
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        01 year ago

        I currently make more money than the average surgeon does in the UK, and it isn’t close. Top end is like 130k for them.

        People will still be doctors if you cut the pay doctors get, because they are, elsewhere, right now.

    • @bouh
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      11 year ago

      This is quite pessimistic.