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Try Obama's Redistribution of Wealth for Yourself
Message
From
06/11/2008 11:32:46
 
 
To
06/11/2008 09:21:11
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01358923
Message ID:
01360230
Views:
16
>>>>On the other hand, $200K combined income is about 4-5X as much as the national average.
>>>>
>>>>If most people get by on a small fraction of that, it is no major stretch of the imagination to consider that a lot of money.

>>>>
>>>>And this means that other people who don't work as hard a I do are entitled to a piece of what I have earned because?????????
>>>
>>>I'm not sure of the logic that says that anyone who earns less than you (or I) doesn't work as hard. There are jobs where people work very hard for much lower salaries. There are people out there who work more than one job to make ends meet and still earn less than you or I.
>>
>>Few exceptions do not abolish the rule: one should work harder to earn more. Would you agree that this rule exists?
>
>Sometimes. The relationship between working harder and earning more is only valid if you are comparing like jobs. My guess (and I admit it's only a guess) is that there are far more people working at jobs that pay less than software development than the other way around. That's not to say there aren't low paying software jobs too, but there is a lot of work out there that pays minimum wage or a little above. Many people work hard at those jobs. How do we compare who is working harder than whom. How about a lawyer, for example who works maybe around the same hours as Marcia, but earns far more. Is he/she really working so much harder than Marcia? Probably not, but the lawyer is in a much more lucrative area.
>
>I enjoy my work in software. I can work long hours sometimes, but do I consider it 'harder' work than the coal miner who works fewer hours, earns less and destroys his lungs in the process?
>
>I'm not convinced that the exceptions are as few as you are, and I have no way to guage who is working harder than whom. I don't believe that simply counting hours is a valid way to look at it.

Has this discussion morphed into how people make more money? Or is it still a discussion on how much of one's earnings should be given to others? Or is it an entirely different discussion now? I've lost track... :o)

What I fail to see is why a portion of her income should go to the coal miner, the waitress, the plumber, or the seamstress? If she was smart enough and motivated enough to earn a good salary for herself and her family, why should she be penalized by having a portion of it taken away? Is there a new rule that states that everyone in this country deserves the same salary regardless of their efforts or their interests?
.·*´¨)
.·`TCH
(..·*

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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
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"De omnibus dubitandum"
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