Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else (Full Session)

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2024
  • There has always been some gap between rich and poor in this country, but in the last few decades, what it means to be rich has changed dramatically. Alarmingly, the greatest income gap is not between the 1 percent and the 99 percent, but within the wealthiest 1 percent of our nation-as the merely wealthy are left behind by the rapidly expanding fortunes of the new global super-rich. Chrystia Freeland, an acclaimed business journalist who has spent nearly two decades reporting on the new trans-global elite, cracks open the tight-knit world of the new global super rich and proves that it is the wealthiest 0.1 percent who are outpacing the rest of us at breakneck speed.

Komentáře • 502

  • @bobcornwell403
    @bobcornwell403 Před 2 lety +23

    Too little competition makes people lazy. Too much makes them desperate.
    Enough money is good. More money is better. But too much money is pure poison for the soul. It brings about dangerous sense of entitlement along with a grotesque over estimation of one's true accomplishments.

    • @1984Skynet
      @1984Skynet Před rokem +4

      Great analysis. Excess corrupts

  • @tigerphoenix5
    @tigerphoenix5 Před 8 lety +44

    She's too kind to the 1%. None of them merit their billions even if some them are brilliant. I think the real problem is that so many of us simply can't imagine a kinder, gentler, fairer, more honest world. It's possible. It already happens in small patches around the world. When we collectively decide that we've had enough we can reboot the system. Imagine, people...imagine a better world.

    • @ianbevan40
      @ianbevan40 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm considering going state to state and try to get it into people's minds that it's a class struggle. Something we can all, no matter political alignment, unite on. We are divided in so many ways. Menticide has already been committed. We should be within whats previously been called "the awakening" in our society. But nobody acts as far as I've seen.

    • @cliftonwayne3968
      @cliftonwayne3968 Před rokem

      You forget that man is an animal , you can take the lion out of the jungle but you cannot take the jungle out of a lion. Yours , is a communist dream , always winds up bad . Look for the happy medium as its the best ya can do .

    • @Larez121
      @Larez121 Před rokem

      @@ianbevan40 More people need to see the truth. It's class war that matters, not petty left vs right.

    • @garrettpatten6312
      @garrettpatten6312 Před 4 měsíci

      It's the psychopaths vs everyone else

  • @randy109
    @randy109 Před 10 lety +51

    Think of a Nation like a Family. If you had a Family, and the Father ate an entire fowl, and a 1/2 pound of fried potatoes and two pints of Ale for dinner and the smallest, sickliest child went to bed hungry, with one dry biscuit and a small glass of water for his dinner, wouldn't we charge the well sated Father with Abuse and Misuse of his station in Life?? Our "Family" is highly dysfunctional.
    When you live in a 'Dog Eat Dog' society let us not forget the Dogs that were 'eaten'...

  • @xxxwindsor
    @xxxwindsor Před 3 lety +29

    Update: As of August 2020, in the year of MyCorona, she has been elevated to Minister of Everything Plus the Piggy Bank and Trough of Canada...

    • @lovesilk1
      @lovesilk1 Před 2 lety +4

      She's a WEF fluffer

    • @dancingdark4527
      @dancingdark4527 Před 2 lety +3

      She also pushed through the emergencies act against government dissent. This is creepy to say the least

    • @ButcherKC
      @ButcherKC Před 2 lety

      @@willzimjohn She pushed legislation to give her the power to freeze peoples bank accounts for speaking against her politics (dissent)

    • @trevorcarlson6134
      @trevorcarlson6134 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@willzimjohn she froze bank accounts of ppl doanting 50 dollars to ottawa convoy

  • @okzoia
    @okzoia Před 9 lety +92

    As per the bailouts, socialism for the rich, bootstrap-capitalism for the rest of us!

    • @paulmatters2641
      @paulmatters2641 Před 8 lety +2

      +truth seeker Liar

    • @anon2030
      @anon2030 Před 4 lety +3

      U got it right! Whatch out for their trolls in every comment section lashing out at communism which is another of their con.

    • @dancingdark4527
      @dancingdark4527 Před 2 lety

      Their pronouns are commie/comrade

    • @Steph_7d7
      @Steph_7d7 Před rokem

      Hey there bud, she's a fascist of the wef sort. Nazis never propped up the people but the corporations. Freeland is no different on any level.

  • @albohn3997
    @albohn3997 Před 3 lety +21

    I think their attitudes towards the other and taxation is disgusting. So you want to pay zero tax, and it’s justifiable because you’ll give money to your favourite museum or pet project?
    How does that in anyway help the people below you?
    They’re so disconnected from reality, isolated and insulated in their solid gold castles.

    • @JONCOOK61420
      @JONCOOK61420 Před rokem +2

      I came to this video because of the now famous ‘middle class should take a pay cut clip’ but MY WORD… this is full of insane quotes.
      You are right she is so far out of touch with reality it’s ridiculous.
      Im still listening but she just said that Bill Gates told her daughter it’s not about the money he hasn’t found a better burger than McDonald’s. So McD is the peak of quality no matter how much you spend.
      Then proceeded to say once you have a few million it’s all the same being a billionaire is NBD.

    • @JONCOOK61420
      @JONCOOK61420 Před rokem

      I’m actually speechless. The WEF is outrageous & needs to be stopped
      ‘The low skilled American worker is the most overpaid worker in the entire world’
      She’s so far out of touch she might as well live at the North Pole. I can’t even believe this is real

    • @garrettpatten6312
      @garrettpatten6312 Před 4 měsíci

      Im sure nothing compares to eating bats and children or whatever he does in his free time. Notice he wont give his billions away.

  • @rymillar8126
    @rymillar8126 Před rokem +5

    What do you think happens when you print the money into worthlessness? The rich aren't paid in dollars. They're paid in appreciating assets. You're paid in deprecating dollars.

    • @garrettpatten6312
      @garrettpatten6312 Před 4 měsíci +1

      They get the money and get to spend it before it's devalued. The further you are from the money printer the less your dollar is worth.

  • @john-lenin
    @john-lenin Před 9 lety +13

    The only thing worse than globalization is no globalization. The problem is unregulated globalization.

    • @flowerfairybird
      @flowerfairybird Před 9 lety +8

      John Kantor I'm sure you get this already by your comment but some people (maybe most) need spelled out... There are two kinds of globalization. Free Trade & Fair Trade. Fair Trade regulates against slave wages, child labor, fire trap factories, sweat shops, raping the land (clear-cutting forests, even old growth) and unfettered pollution virtually everywhere, on & on...... Free Trade allows for all those (that is unregulated) atrocities. I am assuming the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) is the Free Trade variety. That would explain the campaign to Rush it though Legislation without a chance for congress, the public or the press to examine or debate & also why it was negotiated in Private (secret). This is not wealth envy I'm pointing to... but for the well being of EVERYONE on this planet long term. Before it's too late, I hope people soon start to pay attention to this & vote & consume accordingly. Where you shop & spend your $, & also where you work is far more relative & effective in stopping this kind of abuse rather than who we vote for since most all Politicians are very beholden to their financial sponsors.

    • @wendellfitzgerald2
      @wendellfitzgerald2 Před 8 lety +2

      +John Kantor The little understood phenomenon that accompanies free trade is that land values are increased everywhere and since land and natural resources are highly concentrated in ownership historically the wealthy are further enriched at the expense of everyone else. The irony of this two fold: first because income from ownership of land and natural resources is unearned and second although everyone is benefitted by cheaper goods provided by free trade the benefit is sucked up in rising cost of access to land which is involved in everything and especially the cost of housing. Henry George pointed this out in the 19th century suggesting that free trade only benefitted everyone when taxation was shifted off of earned incomes from labor and capital onto land values. Unearned income from assets that give rise to it is estimated to be 40+% of GNP mostly owned by the wealthy. A shift in tax policy that would bring not only economic justice but a new land ethic honoring the earth rather than speculating with it is in order.

    • @garrettpatten6312
      @garrettpatten6312 Před 4 měsíci

      right because globalization isn't highly regulated.....

  • @indrinita
    @indrinita Před 9 lety +64

    Do the CEOs who get (not make!) 400x the income of an average worker produce 400x the value in their work? Somehow I doubt it...

    • @xenazon9731
      @xenazon9731 Před 9 lety +9

      Exactly. The people stuck cleaning the toilets and raising the kids of the Plutocrats work just as hard. They deserve the same compensation, yet they are paid minimum wage and often live in the projects. How is that an equitable distribution?

    • @DucksDeLucks
      @DucksDeLucks Před 9 lety +6

      Xena Zon The value of labor is not -- contra Marx -- determined by how long and how hard one works. If we rewarded the toilet scrubber as well as the heart surgeon there might not be a very good heart surgeon available when the toilet scrubber has a heart attack. Don't be envious of others. But do insist that people come by their wealth honestly and set money aside to help the needy or unlucky.

    • @marcusmattern
      @marcusmattern Před 9 lety +14

      indrinita This is the problem with the word "value." Capitalism rewards people through marginal value, i.e. the addition to value already present. Marginal Value is the reason a liter of diamonds is worth more than a liter of water, even if diamonds contribute nothing to human survival. This makes it so all pre-existing value is taken completely for granted. We now have massive water crises because most of our society is busy chasing diamonds and not paying attention to the water supply.
      That same ignorance is going to lead to the destruction of the rest of our society if we let it.

    • @DucksDeLucks
      @DucksDeLucks Před 9 lety +6

      They do contribute 400x the value as judged by the market, else the shareholders would vote to pay them less. The superior productivity of capitalism is undisputed and it does trickle down, or gush down. Cronyism and oligopoly is the main problem. Where water is concerned, the problem is that it is free or underpriced by the government. Privatize the water works and the price would go up and people would use less of it.

    • @MsBritLowe
      @MsBritLowe Před 9 lety +9

      DucksDeLucks
      You are the most ridiculous brain washed moron. Regan's Trickle Down Economics is a farce. If it worked we would all be well off financially. Its been since 1980! that this insane premise by the idiot Melton Friedman was adopted by the political and economic maniacs in America. The entire world is poised on the brink of mass revolution and the we people who are the real power will cause the super rich to crumble. You live your life as if its real. Wake up. The pitchforks are coming.

  • @Jardine687
    @Jardine687 Před 9 lety +10

    This talk is an insult to all hard-working people ripped off by the corporate plutocracy.

  • @allenkreymborg7492
    @allenkreymborg7492 Před 9 lety +14

    NO BODY IS SELF MADE ! THATS NONSENSE , SHE LOST ME AT GLOBALIZATION.

  • @seanzibonanzi64
    @seanzibonanzi64 Před 2 lety +4

    As she said, American workers are already paid least of the G7 yet all the CEOs can talk about is how overpaid they are as CEO pay has risen nearly 1000%

  • @chrisclassical7
    @chrisclassical7 Před 2 lety +7

    as the late great sage george carlin would say: it's a club and you ain't in it.

  • @itsmatt2105
    @itsmatt2105 Před 8 lety +5

    I'm still trying to figure out why the "wealth gap" has any relevance to me. How does it impact me if the richest people are 500 times wealthier than I am or 5,000 times wealthier than I am? I'm still in the same place in relation to starvation and poverty which is of much more importance and interest to me. Besides, at what point is enough, enough? I can walk into a hospital and get routine medical procedures that even President Reagan couldn't get when he was in the oval office. Basic food and clothing is really cheap, (in the US) cars frequently last for 200,000 miles, for a few pennies worth of electricity I can get my cloths washed, run power tools, light my house. The list of things even the very poor enjoy in this country is endless. The poor in the US are probably better off than than the middle or upper middle class in most of the rest of the world. Why are they complaining just because some one else has more, even if it's a lot more? World wide the poor of the US are in the 1%. Should we tax them and give it to the poor in other countries? It would only be fair!!
    It typically takes a large aggregation of capital(and risk) to take the technological leaps forward that benefit us all and it takes large businesses to produce an economy of scale that makes all our products cheaper. I'm ok with the super rich getting richer. What I'm not ok with is their too sharp business practices and manipulation of the government that negatively impacts the rest of us. This is a problem with all people in any position of power, no matter what their wealth, they use that power to secure and defend their holding of that position. (Like a company selling a product with a high profit margin. They will use that profit to protect their turf and keep others out of the market. The higher the profit margin, the greater their ability and motivation to squash the competition)
    I would like to see all companies that produce pollution pay the cost of remediating the damage to the environment (partly as an incentive for them to find a cleaner way to do what they do) and I do think management's compensation shouldn't be so out of proportion to the worker's pay (if a company makes a good profit, give the employees a small share of that profit in the form of stock?) the gate keepers, the CEO's and such, shouldn't be allowed to use their position of control to enrich only themselves if their company is doing well but I am very opposed to much of an increase in the minimum wage. That will only hurt the people in poverty. (most of whom would very shortly be poor again even if they won the lottery. The issue isn't usually with how much money they make, it's the poor life decisions they make that keeps them in poverty)
    Anyone with a reason why I should care about the wealth gap, please drop me a line.

    • @justgivemethetruth
      @justgivemethetruth Před 8 lety

      +Matt Obermiller
      Because pretty soon you and the group they see you in get in their way.
      I can only think the solution is a minimum wage and a maximum wage, and all compensation is mediated through some kind of algorthmic accounting AI machine bounded by people's basic needs on the low end, and the point where people become dangerous on the high end.

    • @itsmatt2105
      @itsmatt2105 Před 8 lety

      justgivemethetruth Interesting and plausible distopic wage scale.
      I would like like to see the people in control of a business not abuse their control of the purse strings by maximizing their own pay at the expense of the employees but I'm very against unions. Not sure what the solution is. I do know that ambition is one of the main driving forces of our economy and we mess with the harnessing of it at our peril.
      It just occured to me that if a CEO gets paid $50 million for a years work, how much of that will they keep, how much will go to taxes? Maybe the government likes big CEO paychecks because of the ultra high taxes they get off of them. Taxes that would be lower if some of that money went to the workers. I know the ultra rich are able to pay little or no tax, but maybe if it's from a paycheck or windfall from stock options, they can't avoid them very well.

    • @CSILogic
      @CSILogic Před 8 lety

      +Matt Obermiller - What kind of question is that. If you pay bills and you are not well off, then it definitely has to do with you. It is a part a matter of what they see you are worth. You work, put in your hours, you help the company turn a profit. Then the CEO and board of directors take the lions share of it, take hidden bonuses and stock options, and low ball you as much as possible, even though you PHYSICALLY and DIRECTLY created the product or assisted the client. They make you "grateful" to just have a job make as little as you do, instead of the company being grateful of your hard work and going to bat for them and making their rich. So while you are struggling to make ends meet and they are increasing the percentage of their wealth off of your back, off of your sweat, this doesn't make you a little angry? What about when the company has a bad quarter and you get laid off while the person making $10 million keep their salary, making 500 times more than you did.

  • @toddl7305
    @toddl7305 Před 2 lety +4

    The comments that she agrees with from Glen at around the 12:30 mark discusts me. She is saying that the world should be divided by economic class rather than geographical. Sort of a great reset isn't it Chrysta?

  • @lauriemayne7436
    @lauriemayne7436 Před rokem +4

    Eckhart Tolle said that “the greatest achievement of humanity is not its works of art, science or technology but the recognition of its own dysfunction, its own madness.” It's our failure to recognise our failure as human beings that's taking us back (as Charles Handy says) to medieval times.

  • @CrazyScaryHair
    @CrazyScaryHair Před 9 lety +20

    "The wealth of the average Canadian is higher than the wealth of the average American"
    Time to learn how to ride a moose.

    • @shadow3brigade3SBX3
      @shadow3brigade3SBX3 Před 7 lety +3

      I am very sure, riding a moose is illegal in Canada;)
      But, you can always ride a Freight Train Hopping Across Canada.

    • @bobbart4198
      @bobbart4198 Před 4 lety +3

      @@shadow3brigade3SBX3 Riding a moose probably is illegal in Canada, but if you've ever seen one up close, you would probably think twice before trying it. They stand about Six Feet at the shoulder, and they are not particularly friendly. I was chased by one a few years ago, trying to get a close up shot without a telephoto lens. - I didn't know I could run that fast ...

    • @xxxwindsor
      @xxxwindsor Před 3 lety +2

      Since she took over the Govt. here, the "Middle Class" has been effectively crushed out of existence.

    • @johnrumley9570
      @johnrumley9570 Před 3 lety +2

      @@xxxwindsor exactly

  • @stevendavis1243
    @stevendavis1243 Před rokem +2

    I find it striking that a Canadian who comes to the U.S. boasts in the open of her speech that Canadian income is slightly hirer then the U.S. for the first time then finishes her speech by proposing for the sake of global equity that the U.S. middle class should be willing to make due with less.

  • @jusrarsh4109
    @jusrarsh4109 Před 2 lety +3

    *What we fail to understand is that this is a system “by design”. It’s no mistake you have high levels of income inequality. It’s a global corporate elite beast system. There will be little difference between middle class & a peasant by 2030.

  • @markteague8889
    @markteague8889 Před 5 lety +6

    So much history that Ms. Freeland omits in her summary at the end. Not only a Great Depression and 2 world wars; but also, a century of struggle between labor and capital. Such horrific events as the Ludlow Massacre, the Johnstown Flood, the Homestead Strike, the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, etc., etc., etc. We decided nearly 100 years ago in Western Society that allowing anticompetitive practices by powerful corporate interests (or trusts) was a bad idea and passed laws to limit those abuses of power. We also decided that labor standards which treated people as individual human beings rather than chattel were a good thing. It required a colossal struggle on the part of the working class, assassination attempts on wealthy / powerful capitalists like Henry Clay Frick, the assassination of William Mckinley, and countless other pivotal events to create a peaceful and prosperous society that benefited most many so than the few. Through globalization, nearly all of that work and sacrifice has been lost by giving monumental economic power to an elite who are not so nearly educated (nor intelligent) as they believe themselves to be. Less than a decade ago we saw workers in China (where the totalitarian hand of the state can be used to enforce labor policy) commit suicide en masse rather than suffer the conditions to which Western Capital, either directly or indirectly, subjected them. Overnight, individuals in China with authority over others (i.e. members of the CCP) became billionaire partners with Western Capitalists who had the connections to exploit low cost labor in China. It is complete and utter BS that automation is the cause of the great economic divide in the West. As Tesla discovered with their highly roboticized factory when they could not meet production goals, humans (and human intelligence) are not so easily replaced as those who are smitten with technology would like to believe. In many measurable ways, globalization has been a step backwards into the mistakes of the past with exploitative labor practices, environmental pollution, etc. Sure, when Western “Captains of Industry” such as George Eastman, Andrew Carnegie, Nelson Rockefeller, Howard Hughes, et. al., matured, discovered their mortality and began to realize that they couldn’t take their wealth with them ... they indulged their consciences with humanitarian projects like building hospitals or libraries or creating foundations for medical research (although, I’m not sure Rockefeller ever developed any altruistic tendencies). How much more stable (i.e. better) would human society be if we just simply did not allow individuals to accumulate so much wealth? Bill Gates only decided to commit a portion of his wealth to humanitarian endeavors after an ugly anti-trust investigation and having been deposed by the US Dept. of Justice. This problem with human nature isn’t new. It was expressed by Jesus in his answer when asked whether or not it was possible for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. And also, by Lord Baron Acton in the expression, “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Should we not structure our economy, laws and society such that it prevents the accumulation of so much wealth and power into so few hands that will ultimately succumb to temptation and be corrupted?

    • @dallimamma
      @dallimamma Před 2 lety

      ::: Written well, but sadly, after 3 or 4 sentences, without paragraphs delineating your points, interest in continuing to read is lost.

  • @LeeMulcahyForSenate
    @LeeMulcahyForSenate Před 3 lety +7

    31:10 " If you're born at the bottom, you have a better chance in a place like Denmark or Sweden or Canada than the United States. That's pretty terrifying.

    • @dancingdark4527
      @dancingdark4527 Před 2 lety +2

      But if you are an illegal immigrant, USA is the best place for you atm

  • @matthewjackson9615
    @matthewjackson9615 Před 6 lety +4

    It is remarkable that among all the preachers there are so few moral teachers. The prophets are employed in excusing the ways of men
    ~Henry David Thoreau
    I think what Thoreau said above applies in the case of Chrystia Freeland. She decries the injustices and deprivations that are the manifestations of globalism and crony capitalism while at the same time seems to excuse the ways of these men. In short, I see her as more of a prophet rather than a moral crusader.
    I say either preach or get off the pulpit. She’s only interpreted the coming world, the point, however, is to change it
    The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it.
    ― Karl Marx, Eleven Theses on Feuerbach

  • @mikehenderson560
    @mikehenderson560 Před 5 lety +6

    The economic system that we have been using for 200 years has not been able to adjust to the fact that we have over 7 billion people on the planet.

  • @cyberserfer2000
    @cyberserfer2000 Před 4 lety +2

    Survival of the fittest monopolies and the leverage applied by them is the reason why the gap has grown so much.The American people are not supporting working class America anymore.That needs to change

  • @summondadrummin2868
    @summondadrummin2868 Před 4 lety +7

    Compound interest is probably enough to explain the phenomena. The macro pattern is we allowed money to rule the world and not surprisingly it has done just that.

    • @xxxwindsor
      @xxxwindsor Před 3 lety +1

      You should see how she spends our tax dollars...

  • @angiewright1954
    @angiewright1954 Před 5 lety +7

    Oh dear it's such a 'really really hard problem'; a lot of things left out it seems to me, like, oh, privately owned central banking, debt slavery, too big to fail banks, multi-trillion debt bubbles; the fact that those being squeezed in the middle and lower down are not totally stupid and will inevitably push back...….

    • @manufacturedreality8706
      @manufacturedreality8706 Před 5 lety

      By push back, what exactly do you mean? What are they going to do?

    • @DaDoubleDee
      @DaDoubleDee Před 2 lety +2

      @@manufacturedreality8706 late comment, but any revolution has been bloody and violent. take a look at the anti-communist revolutions of the late 80's in Europe for example

  • @ivanoriono3306
    @ivanoriono3306 Před 9 lety +7

    She herself is one of those at the very top-top1%

    • @indrinita
      @indrinita Před 9 lety +2

      @Ivan Oriono I'd like to know how you think a writer and journalist is part of the 1%... You do realize these professions are some of the least profitable endeavours for the amount of education and work you need to be good at them right?

    • @ivanoriono3306
      @ivanoriono3306 Před 9 lety +2

      indrinita to be in the top 1% u have to earn more than 300k a yr so wat do u think her hubby bring in a yr

    • @xenazon9731
      @xenazon9731 Před 9 lety +2

      Ivan Oriono: First of all, she's not American. She's Canadian. For the first time in memory, the wealth of the average Canadian is actually higher than the wealth of the average American.
      Either you didn't bother to watch the video or you completely missed her point.... Either way, typical behavior by someone who doesn't get the problem with such a wide income gap.

    • @johnrumley9570
      @johnrumley9570 Před 3 lety +2

      @@xenazon9731 look where this batch is now and what she's promoting... she's riding the coattails of the 1%

  • @CSILogic
    @CSILogic Před 10 lety +6

    The richest 1%, or 10% for have become richer was because the crash scared them like a lot of other people, but the had and used their power and leverage to control their overall outcome. Then did whatever it took to hoard more money than before. That is why more companies are sitting on a greater amount of cash than ever before, while not hiring or raising wages. That is also why some companies have been the most profitable than they have ever been.
    But at some point, you have to think it is unsustainable, as they eventually need customers with money to spend. That will only happen if more workers are paid more, which means the richest will have to take paycuts. But being less rich shouldn't be an issue, as much of the money will come back from the new customers with money to spend. But there seems to be a lot of resistance to such and economic model, of paying more and getting it back.

    • @luciatilyard2827
      @luciatilyard2827 Před 8 lety

      CSILogic You're wrong, they do it by buying governments.

  • @skylanderdadandskylanderbo8327

    I think when people work out they have nothing is the time when they will realize they have nothing to lose by revolting against inequality and greed.

  • @D3adPo3tsSociety
    @D3adPo3tsSociety Před 2 lety +2

    This makes the tesla gigafactory in Shanghai and their 996 movement sound like it's okay, long as it provides new toys for consumers to further fuel consumption

  • @michaelberta3153
    @michaelberta3153 Před 5 lety +11

    It's a system created by the privileged to benefit the privileged.

  • @karstensorensen1736
    @karstensorensen1736 Před 5 lety +1

    There is a problem that I rarely see addressed. I have to reference a comment in NYT by Jack Walsh of Lexington who wrote that "he would ask his economist friends to consider what an economy where one person could produce all the goods for that economy would look like". In an economy we have sellers (makers) and buyers (consumers). In order for this to work the sellers have to have something that the buyers could buy which means that buyers need to have money.
    Most consumers earn their money through labor (W2 money in the U.S.). When companies press to minimize expenses on labor, they are also reducing the amount of money in the economy used to purchase goods. With concentration of money, less money is available for purchasing. The upper 0.1 percent may have many times the money of the rest of society and may buy more expensive cars, etc but they only eat three meals a day and do not buy as many cars as in proportion to their wealth to the median person.
    The result can be seen in the current economy. Wages are stagnate and companies are not hiring many people because of lack of demand. As was asked in one anecdote "How many Chevys do the robots buy?".

  • @terrymiller5028
    @terrymiller5028 Před 6 měsíci +1

    She wrote/told about the inequality and then used it to create more inequality for herself above everyone else at everyone else’s expense!

    • @garrettpatten6312
      @garrettpatten6312 Před 4 měsíci

      She's a cheerleader, the plebs assume she must be talking about this in a pejorative way, but the elites know she's singing their praises. She comes from literal nazis.

  • @louisdzialo9990
    @louisdzialo9990 Před 3 lety +3

    July 2013: says Carlos Slim is the richest man in history (net worth of $50 billion+ with family)
    August 2020: Jeff Bezos estimated net worth over $200 billion

    • @dancingdark4527
      @dancingdark4527 Před 2 lety +1

      Jeff Besos went to space and then thanked all the sheeple for paying for it

  • @luciatilyard2827
    @luciatilyard2827 Před 8 lety +6

    Mmmmm.... just a tiny bit one-sided... She thinks that it's unfair that those damn, poor people just refuse to employ people, while the rich are just soooo generous..... Sort of reminds me of Marie Antoinette saying "Go and eat cake", to the revolting peasants in France. Marie Antoinette was one of the first for the guillotine Ms Freeland. Did you really study history?

    • @jimreily7538
      @jimreily7538 Před 8 lety +1

      +Lucia Tilyard You might need to brush up on your history yourself there Lucia. Marie Antoinette never said anything of the sort, although the phrase is often attributed to her.
      Rousseau is the source of the quote, when describing the ignorance of a 'great princess' to the suffering of the peasantry (his own suffering in particular). When informed that the peasants had no bread, the princess said words to the effect of, "well, if they have no bread, let them eat cake." The point being that the princess is so ignorant of the people's suffering that she thinks they have as much and as easy access to cake, as she does. She has no idea that cake is a luxury since she is so disconnected from the people.

    • @luciatilyard2827
      @luciatilyard2827 Před 8 lety +1

      ***** Well, I knew she hadn't actually said it. The point being, that it's fairly apt.

    • @jimreily7538
      @jimreily7538 Před 8 lety +2

      Lucia Tilyard I really, honestly don't mean to be contentious - there's enough of that on CZcams as it is - but think the point of the "then let them eat cake" quote is more to highlight the rich's IGNORANCE of the suffering of the poor. So the idea is that the fabulously wealthy, who eat cake all the time, are sort of befuddled by this idea that the poor are starving because they have no bread. Okay, the rich person thinks, so they don't have bread - why don't they just eat cake ? That's what I would do, the rich person thinks, if I didn't have any bread ! I would go and eat cake.
      They just cannot conceive that cake is a luxury, not available to the poor.
      So the quote demonstrates the rich person's utter ignorance of the poor, rather than their malevolence.
      They're not saying, "fuck the poor", they're exhibiting a total lack of empathy and understanding as to what it even means to live a lifestyle that is defined and ravaged by poverty.
      Anyway, blah blah blah, I am sure you understand what I am saying. I understand what you're saying. So, at this point, all I can really say is thanks for reading :)

    • @TheTomBevis
      @TheTomBevis Před 8 lety +1

      +Lucia Tilyard That was a face-palm moment for me, too. My view is: A ditch-digger gets $50 for digging a ditch. The rich guy who hired him to dig it profits from that ditch for the rest of his life. Minus a little for maintenance, of course. Creating something through your labor creates wealth. Moving numbers around does not.

    • @luciatilyard2827
      @luciatilyard2827 Před 8 lety

      TheTomBevis Exactly!

  • @johndunning9
    @johndunning9 Před 8 hodinami

    Wealthy people are not just a person, but a result. You could say poster childs. A network of bankers' lawyers' investors and so on. The old money just changes hands and names and gets richer.

  • @fototripper
    @fototripper Před rokem +3

    And then she became the 1%

  • @wjtwjt1889
    @wjtwjt1889 Před 5 měsíci

    in Dec 2023 when reporter asks Freeland about poor disabled Canadians receiving proper financial support "It's not fiscally responsible"

  • @caracrabtree715
    @caracrabtree715 Před 2 lety +2

    On the percentage of “self made”, what percentage of them came from a start with many opportunities like a well off family elite education and elite family background whom will only attain a business loan to start, if needed, because most had started with money given or loaned by family whom many don’t have those opportunities to start with and today can’t attain with all the hard work and saving in the world. Banks don’t do that anymore. Also many people that came up through the 50’s & 60’s had free & cheap college many well paying jobs with benefits and retirement, affordable housing and medical care. They thrived and their offspring got a decent start. That’s long gone for a regular person. And if people continue to want their bathrooms cleaned or eat fast food, those jobs to keep these companies and services are important and should not be treated subhuman and not get paid enough for minimum needs or ability to spend in the economy. All productive jobs should be respected, not just jobs that are not productive & only make a few $ in the financial markets. Even in Denmark a McDonalds worker makes $20/hr. We should live in a society where you can make a living doing what you want to, or have to, being able to realistically reaching a modest goal and not be squashed and eaten - &/ or enslaved.

  • @peaceandlove1436
    @peaceandlove1436 Před 9 lety +27

    She is an agent fir the 1%

  • @amac5455
    @amac5455 Před 7 lety +1

    So true! Few years ago while many construction's company had to close business, one grabbed all serious clients in my country. Just because they have really good marketing managers, who made fantastic deals with government to build new highways. The company is so popular that opened businesses around all the EU. The same is in every field: even writers these days can make good money. But they must be really the best.

    • @dancingdark4527
      @dancingdark4527 Před 2 lety

      They have a monopoly because governments have given them the contracts. It’s a I’ll rub your back if you rub mine but only for the Uber elite.

  • @richardburt9812
    @richardburt9812 Před 6 lety +1

    amazing this was almost 5 years ago.

  • @salvadorlucar773
    @salvadorlucar773 Před 3 lety +1

    It is not what you know but who you know

  • @canada1st
    @canada1st Před rokem +1

    She’s one to talk. 25% raise or more is what these Liberals gave themselves.

  • @fantastikfanatic1900
    @fantastikfanatic1900 Před rokem +3

    If you can't beat em join em!

  • @wendellfitzgerald2
    @wendellfitzgerald2 Před 8 lety +3

    Is it not the case that the great disparity of wealth is due to private collection of what economists call "economic rent" which is their polite way of saying "unearned income". Economic rent/unearned income is estimated at 40+% of GNP and ownership of assets land land, natural resources, patents, copyrights and the right to create money out of thin air and charge interest for borrowing it residing with banks, subsidies and much more is concentrated over the centuries in the hands of the top 10% and increasingly the top 1%. Taxing it and untaxing earned income from labor called wages and the earned income from investment of unmobopolized capital in the real capital would change everything for the good. Klein does mention the term rentier rich which is the term given to those who own and pursue economic rent but she does not specifically speak the distinction between earned and unearned income and the focused tax option.

  • @tonycommisso4096
    @tonycommisso4096 Před rokem +1

    Canada is in trouble having her as a finance minister

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 Před 4 lety +3

    ☼ she's coming for our money, get her!

    • @SharonPiano8
      @SharonPiano8 Před 2 lety

      How prophetic considering she announced the freezing of Canadian bank accounts in 2022 of people who donated to the trucker convoy.

  • @discotatoco
    @discotatoco Před 6 lety +3

    There are superstar lawyers, there are superstar bankers, there are superstar cooks, there are superstar farmers, there are even superstar dentists.
    Help! I'm drowning! I'm totally lost in her logic as it meanders through the meadows of the confused human brain.
    If you listen long enough, however, you'll find she figured out the inner workings of Russian oligarchs! I spent years trying to understand how the Russian economy works.

  • @1Skeptik1
    @1Skeptik1 Před 9 lety +6

    I am puzzled, fail to make a connection with some ones wealth and my living standard. Would we not be better off with far more wealthy Americans? I do NOT see it as a zero sum game. I w2as a manufacturing engineer in my youth, watched millions of good jobs FORCED off shore. The playing field is NOT level and I see our bureaucrats and exchange rate as central to middle America's strife.

    • @CrazyScaryHair
      @CrazyScaryHair Před 9 lety +1

      1Skeptik1 "I w2as a manufacturing engineer in my youth" And what is it you do now?

    • @1Skeptik1
      @1Skeptik1 Před 9 lety +3

      I was self employed for 20 yrs., now "retired" excluding managing and maintaining a few rental property investments. IMHO: Our youth though better educated are working longer and harder for less, situation will only get worse. Far to many seniors are forced to compete for entry level jobs with their grand children. A legacy I am not proud of, this not the land of opportunity I knew 50 yrs. ago. Our economic strife does not end at Detroit's city limits. Regards

    • @CrazyScaryHair
      @CrazyScaryHair Před 9 lety +1

      1Skeptik1 Thanks for the reply and the info. x2 I agree and am/have seen what you have just described. It's pretty awful to go into a corner store and see a 60+ woman working by herself and you can see she is struggling.

    • @1Skeptik1
      @1Skeptik1 Před 9 lety +1

      Regards

    • @jamesmancuso2916
      @jamesmancuso2916 Před 4 lety +2

      We need to bring back the middle class, families. Pay better wages so my family can on a home, Car, put their kids through college, savings. They just give enough for you to get bye. And with that you are far more likely to become ill And lose the rest to doctors bills. American dream is dead!

  • @renriley66
    @renriley66 Před rokem +3

    Congrats Christie by implementing all those hints your elbow rubbing cronnies made you who you are today in Canada

  • @billykobilca6321
    @billykobilca6321 Před 6 lety +2

    Money has been de valued.
    1980 dollar doesn't have purchasing power in 2018.
    Cartel banker dependency enslaved populations.

  • @mothergoose6087
    @mothergoose6087 Před 8 lety +2

    How do we know whether the plutocrats can fund the right things better than the government? it's not just making money it's how you spend it too. After all they get so much money they can't even spend it all in their lifetime. They must have to have a lot of help, so who helps and who helps themselves. All the money just piles up and isn't really used any more. So many people just get more desperate.

  • @Masterhughesproductions
    @Masterhughesproductions Před 9 lety +4

    Talk , Talk ,Talk , I haven't seen one of you marching on Washington.

    • @Atombender
      @Atombender Před 8 lety +2

      +Master Hughes All the poor idiots were marching on Wall Street lol.

    • @archvaldor
      @archvaldor Před 8 lety

      +Master Hughes Why would you march on Washington? That's not where the power is. If you are going to troll people get it right.

  • @MackDeville
    @MackDeville Před 7 lety +3

    Probably the most important video I've ever Watched regarding Finances!!
    Amazing information!!

    • @xxxwindsor
      @xxxwindsor Před 3 lety +9

      Not really, she's one of them and represents their interests.

  • @NowPleaseReadThis
    @NowPleaseReadThis Před 3 lety +1

    Corporate Socialism vs Democratic Socialism: a primer
    We are all socialists. Humans require society for survival. Socialism is all governance. Governance is the type of gov. tax appropriations, gov. regulations and the direction of gov. agencies. It is a spectrum. It goes from democratic socialism which is spending tax monies and having policies for the benefit of all those who actually contribute to the tax pool and represent the vast majority of the population, to corporate socialism which is spending tax monies and making gov. policies for the benefit of the corporate interests of the 2%, all while they pay as little in taxes as they can.
    Biden is a corporate socialist as is Rump who is even more corporate being a Repugnican. The lobbyists for the 2% have control of both parties now. People know there is something wrong but don't understand this and voted for the Rumpster because they knew he would be a radical change and because they knew radical change is needed, and he was their only option. Sanders and Warren as his VP would have won 2016 because they are democratic socialists, and would have offered the positive change needed, but the DNC is controlled by the interests of the corporate socialists and so they refused to have democratic socialists as their candidates. The democratic socialists in 2016 would have given the positive change that our sick political system needed. Sadly our sickness is now manifested worse after 4 years of Rump. He is the symptom, the pustule if you will, not the cause. He is the logical conclusion as our community deteriorates under the insatiable greed machine of the 2% as they dominate our political system.
    Ladies and Gentlemen we are screwed. Our country is becoming like the socioeconomic structure of Brazil.
    With an ever shrinking middle class and a swelling class of working poor, all dominated by the exponential growth of the money and control of society by the corporate socialist top 2%.
    Gated communities here we come.

  • @MrSG3A
    @MrSG3A Před 8 lety +1

    None of this should surprise to anyone. The system is structured in their (the rich) favor, and when it needs to be further tweaked in their favor, they simply pay off the people needed to do it. When things go wrong its always a matter of privatize the profits and socialize the losses.
    This is not a conspiracy, but a "convergence of interest" that allows this to go on. Always keep the masses arguing with themselves while the rich run off with the money.
    While the rest of you get into heated emotional debates over really pointless and stupid things, the rich are still playing the game and getting everything. This is why we now have the sports fan mentality in our politics. Us vs. Them.
    Remember something, the rich feel that they should not pay any taxes because they are not part of the society which they rule over. They don't need them, nor do they use them, so why should they pay them?
    Wake up people, you are all fighting the wrong enemy.

  • @lizliz4186
    @lizliz4186 Před 2 lety +1

    So, is she now working as the finance Minister to increase the divide?
    Before she was finance Minister the average Canadian could save and earned enough to get a mortgage for a home.
    After a few years with her as finance Minister the housing market has increased over 200% and the average Canadian can't buy a house any longer. The median income can't get a mortgage high enough anymore. .
    Housing costs increased over 200% while she's been finance Minister. The minimum wage (Federal minimum wage) did not increase.

  • @renebarendse2864
    @renebarendse2864 Před 8 lety +1

    Thomas Piketty recently showed this 1% is not meritocratic and has by and large inherited their wealth. Wonder whether this girl has meanwhile adjusted her view to take the latest scientific research into account or whether she is still arguing the 1% own their wealth to hard work in which case her views are to be taken as seriously as people who deny the earth is round as that accords with their faith or hopes.

  • @randy109
    @randy109 Před 10 lety +3

    'There is a Chinese proverb that if one man lives in laziness another will
    die of hunger; and Montesquieu has said, "The fact that many men are
    occupied in making clothes for one individual is the cause of there being
    many people without clothes." So one explains the other.'
    From "People of the Abyss" by Jack London (1902)

  • @ethelbramston4882
    @ethelbramston4882 Před rokem +1

    OMG it's JT'S yes sir, no sir bobble head. " it's easier to fool people than it is to convince them that they have been fooled " ...... Mark Twain

    • @davidrockefeller2007
      @davidrockefeller2007 Před rokem

      JT is the bobble head, she runs Canada. Definitely worth listening to so we can understand her better.

  • @kerrigrandmaison2474
    @kerrigrandmaison2474 Před 2 lety

    What are we going to do about it? I wish you had spoke on this

  • @andrewnorris7642
    @andrewnorris7642 Před 2 lety +1

    And they'll die before they give up their ways, as the old adage goes : "purple dyes the noblest of shrouds"

  • @kkallebb
    @kkallebb Před 8 lety +1

    5:02 -- "There wasn't going to be that profound shift": Yes.. Some reasons are set out in Colin Crouch's book, _The Strange Non-Death of Neoliberalism." See also some of the reviews of Crouch's book on line.

  • @12thpanzer
    @12thpanzer Před 9 lety +1

    Brought to you by Democrats
    1. Make it a law that you must have health insurance.
    2. The money goes to insurance companies that are owned by the super rich.
    3. When a person files an insurance claim, the insurance company (that is owned by the super rich) pays the hospitals (that are owned by the super rich). And while you are in the hospital, you get drugs and when you get out of the hospital you may get a prescription. Warren Buffet has stock in many insurance companies AND many hospital corporations AND many pharmaceutical companies. See how that works? So who is the primary owners of such companies? Warren Buffet - Democrat. Bill Gates - Democrat. Who owns the media that doesn't tell you such things? George Soros - Democrat. Ted Turner - Democrat.....and so on….
    Like GMO's in your food? - Bill Gates (democrat) has stock in Monsanto. Who drafted the Monsanto Protection Act? Democrats. Why did the Keystone pipeline get shot down? Warren Buffet owns Norfolk Southern, Burlington Northern and Santa Fe railroads that transports most of the oil in the US. Cant have a pipeline cutting into a democrat's profits now can we. I thought democrat loved the environment. Locomotives use millions of gallons of diesel fuel every year - a pipeline uses no fuel.

  • @sciWraith
    @sciWraith Před 9 lety +5

    I know I'm late to the game here, as this was posted in 2013, but I must say this is a pretty good piece. I like how she presents both sides of the issue, and has no qualms with ceding strong points on either side whilst trying to lead us to some form of possible progressive conclusion.
    It is her conclusion that I must disagree with however. I can at most agree that we need proper capitalist reforms at the same scale enterprise has grown to (global rather than national), but I do not think any amount of reform can legitimately fix a system that is flawed at its core. It is merely a bandage to help stop the bleeding while we build a better system. Perhaps this is where we differ, she seems to think capitalism is still a good system, and while it has its merits I do not share this perspective.
    In a different direction, I think people who make ridiculous claims about elites leading the populace as if they are some how carrying the weight and being rewarded properly for it is just a completely absurd to nearly psychopathic perspective. A simple proof for you is science. There have been incredible leaps and gains for everyone in the form of knowledge from various scientists, many of which do not see a dime of their knowledge coming back to them. There is no way to properly reward information, there never will be. Science leads us forward, engineers find practical uses for our knowledge and _neither_ of these groups of people make the Forbes top 100 list. Figure out what that means to the capitalist ideology.
    .. And what about artists? What about all of the best poets, writers and musicians in our era that are pushing the envelope of what we find socially acceptable? Where is their rewards? Instead of so many quality underground bands getting the rewards they deserve, we see people like Justin Bieber making all the money. Let's just think about what THAT is doing to our collective unconscious....

    • @noelbecker7002
      @noelbecker7002 Před 2 lety

      Well said!

    • @renriley66
      @renriley66 Před rokem +1

      If only canadians knew this side of her....maybe our canada would be better than it is ..perfect storm freeland/Trudeau

  • @benjaminbuttons8358
    @benjaminbuttons8358 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant talk

  • @tomormiston6592
    @tomormiston6592 Před 8 lety

    For 2014, Facebook paid corporation tax of £4,327 or $6,643 (six thousand six hundred and forty three dollars) less than one single individual typically pays in tax when they have an average wage of around £25K but _"the firm also paid its 362 UK staff a total of £35.4m in share bonuses."_ (www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-34510263)

  • @mothergoose6087
    @mothergoose6087 Před 8 lety

    All this politics and economics should remember where everything and everyone came from, which is the environment. We still have to think about the children and what the children will inherit. Even more when we think policy we we should think something about the still unborn, after all....

  • @thomasd2444
    @thomasd2444 Před 5 lety

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  • @JB-vb6dh
    @JB-vb6dh Před 3 lety +1

    40:20 How we imagine rich people really think 😦

  • @luciatilyard2827
    @luciatilyard2827 Před 8 lety +3

    New Title, _ "THE SMUGNESS OF THE RICH."

  • @gibsalisbury
    @gibsalisbury Před rokem

    Thank goodness my sound quit.

  • @artbytravissmith
    @artbytravissmith Před 2 lety

    Update: From speeches like this, to voting against the NDP and Green's motion to add a 1% tax on fortunes over 1 billion, which she and the rest of the Liberals, Conservatives, and Bloc voted against.

  • @chanpol321
    @chanpol321 Před 7 lety

    Wealth in the United States is commonly measured in terms of net worth, which is the sum of all assets, including the market value of real estate, like a home, minus all liabilities.[1]
    The total net worth of US households and nonprofit organizations 1945-2009, unadjusted for inflation or population change.
    For example, a household in possession of an $800,000 house, $5,000 in mutual funds, $30,000 in cars, $20,000 worth of stock in their own company, and a $45,000 IRA would have assets totaling $900,000. Assuming that this household would have a $250,000 mortgage, $40,000 in car loans, and $10,000 in credit card debt, its debts would total $300,000. Subtracting the debts from the worth of this household's assets (900,000 − $300,000 = $600,000), this household would have a net worth of $600,000. Net worth can vary with fluctuations in value of the underlying assets.
    The wealth-more specifically, the median net worth-of households in the United States is varied with relation to race and education. As one would expect, households with greater income feature the highest net worths, though high income cannot be taken as an always accurate indicator of net worth. Overall the number of wealthier households is on the rise, with baby boomers hitting the highs of their careers.[1] In addition, wealth is unevenly distributed, with the wealthiest 25% of US households owning 87%[2] of the wealth in the United States, which was $54.2 trillion in 2009.[3][4]
    U.S. household and non-profit organization net worth rose from $44.2 trillion in Q1 2000 to a pre-recession peak of $67.7 trillion in Q3 2007. It then fell $13.1 trillion to $54.6 trillion in Q1 2009 due to the subprime mortgage crisis. It then recovered, rising consistently to $86.8 trillion by Q4 2015. This is nearly double the 2000 level.[5]
    1% get all..

  • @Spectrum_Aerospacejet_Lab

    Is free enterprise; as long if they keep the labour laws there is nothing we can do to get higher wages for the poor.

  • @georgehiotis
    @georgehiotis Před 8 měsíci

    If income inequality is an injustice that needs to be corrected rather than a fact of life then we should ask ourselves as finance minister what has she done to correct this trend? Nothing. Plus, her measures to abate high mortgage rates and the cost of living crisis are meager at best which begs another question, why bother writing any books?

  • @Mnesterus
    @Mnesterus Před 8 lety +1

    i stopped watching at 2:50 when she said something about getting her news from the john steward show

  • @bernardscheidle5679
    @bernardscheidle5679 Před 2 lety +7

    But the rich that added value to society, also often started with an ill gotten head start, a built-in privileged advantage, provided by an unfair system that became more unfair as time went on, and the rich fortified their privileged position. The winner writes the history.

    • @SL-up5qh
      @SL-up5qh Před rokem +3

      And the winners create the laws that make it easier for them to build their wealth while hindering the poor.

  • @eroceanos
    @eroceanos Před 4 lety +1

    What do you expect when intrest on all money is a wealth transfer to the most rich… the game is rigged.

  • @JackBeNimble-fb1fn
    @JackBeNimble-fb1fn Před 3 lety

    Focus on the real wages, worker wages relative to inflation on a historical basis, then add in the increased standard of living given lowered cost of the average basket of goods. IGNORE the income of business owners, it is irrelevant because it's wealth creation above and beyond the wealth business distributes to all workers.

  • @Larez121
    @Larez121 Před rokem +1

    Here from Jimmy Dore?! 38:34

  • @Andre_XX
    @Andre_XX Před 10 měsíci

    23:21 What's not to like about globalisation? (1) Try asking the people whose jobs have been outsourced to China and (2) what happens when you realise you have made a gigantic strategic blunder by outsourcing your economy to your biggest enemy? Come, come now people, you are supposed to be deep thinkers, but it seems that the pursuit of quick and easy money dulls the mind to quite an extreme extent.
    FYI She is now deputy prime minister of Canada.

  • @dianeliu4483
    @dianeliu4483 Před 2 lety

    yea,,, unfortunately the bunch of people who lives in four seasons all over the world didn't do a good job at all in global economy equality

  • @Maltcider
    @Maltcider Před 9 lety +2

    Dismantling the unjust policies written by and for Plutocrats could be more easily handled with Republics that use Liquid Democracy since the people would be better represented in policy writing. Introducing a Universal Basic Income could solve the biggest problem of inequality, which is poverty, once and for all.

  • @maudlewis8536
    @maudlewis8536 Před 2 měsíci

    Ohhhh the foreshadowing in some of her words

  • @psychicspy
    @psychicspy Před 2 lety

    Stop worrying about other people and focus your energy on improving your own life.
    Effort isn't equal, why should income be?

  • @cobblerwillorange
    @cobblerwillorange Před 3 lety +2

    So, If I collect 100 anecdotes can I give a speech on economics too? O_o

  • @zackeryzackery9381
    @zackeryzackery9381 Před 2 lety

    I don't think this is accurate. Wealth is not income. Income is a specific tax term. If I bought a million shares of Apply 20 years ago and never sold them, the increase in share price is NOT income and should not be taxed until the gain is realized.

  • @piezoification
    @piezoification Před 3 lety +1

    This is insane how is an anti social individualistic society any good in the long term? Those who are not into data or derivatives trading, or investing trying to do what they are good at and talented for can rot while these assholes pay no taxes GTH.

  • @Phys1905
    @Phys1905 Před 10 lety +1

    Great Video!

  • @RedFlagSaid
    @RedFlagSaid Před 7 lety +3

    So superficial on such an important issue.

  • @rosiethebear300
    @rosiethebear300 Před 8 lety

    Well no one questioned the trade agreements starting with NAFTA.Wait till they start micro chipping us!

    • @bobbart4198
      @bobbart4198 Před 4 lety

      I'm Canadian, and I questioned it. I remember when the original Free Trade Agreement came in, - Canada lost something like Four-Hundred-Thousand manufacturing jobs in the first year. There were ups and downs after that, but with wage-stagnation multiplied by Inflation, things were never the same. - Not here, and not in the States.

  • @ToddRickey
    @ToddRickey Před 8 lety +1

    At Aspen, no less!

  • @mirekchance
    @mirekchance Před 6 lety +1

    Well one thing, the wealthy invest in so sort of generate economy. And its just common sense that if u have more extra income u can invest, hence u can make more profit.
    To boot, those with most money can lobby to get government to do certain things.
    The system in its core in a way favours the wealthy.
    Anything based on greed, exploitation will have number of negative issues.
    Personally,my hope is in the kingdom under Jesus.

  • @conniewalker-carter5835
    @conniewalker-carter5835 Před 9 lety +2

    Outstanding!

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno Před 7 lety +1

    A discussion about the repulsive gap between rich and poor, from Aspen, Colorado... You couldn't make it up.

  • @78DELTADELTA78
    @78DELTADELTA78 Před 4 lety +3

    People should understand that living a good life is their basic right.

  • @nephilimshammer9567
    @nephilimshammer9567 Před rokem

    38:38 folks says it all

  • @cullenrush1857
    @cullenrush1857 Před rokem

    How is a dentist getting rich taking care of Russian oligarch’s teeth benefiting all of us? Down with the machine..