Originally posted by: AreaCode707
Originally posted by: datalink7
Originally posted by: AreaCode707
If you believe or don't believe that, why? I'll post my thoughts a few posts down, so I don't contaminate people's answers right off the bat.
So you'd rather the first poster who gives an answer to "contaminate" people's answers?![]()
Eh, it's just basic survey rules. You don't hint in your question what you think the "right" answer is.
I think people should be able to earn whatever they can, through a combination of skill, education, effort and luck. Very few wind up making bank that way, but kudos to them if they do. Other people may not have a combination of those traits such that they ever make much in life, or may choose to invest their time and efforts in other ways; I see nothing wrong with either of those.
There are so many people outraged at the execs making tons of cash; I was just wondering how many of those same people truly think that all work really deserves about the same compensation, with limited variation.
To be clear, my own answer to my OP is: No, what a dumbass question.![]()
I'm tired and prone to sweet bait so here goes; I answer no, but only after we've met specific conditions.
Skills are learned and education is grotesquely unequal across the nation and even from community to community - many people have no opportunity, considering the demographics of poverty, to gain adequate skills or education. For these people there needs to be a floor that they can land on that allows them to live an adequate life - decent housing and food, access to adequate health care and transportation services. Extreme levels of poverty because someone grew up in a bad neighborhood is hardly conscionable for the 'greatest country in the world'. I'm not saying welfare, but programs like the earned income tax credit that lift them up to survivable levels. If/once they gain proper skills they wouldn't need the program - set limits to the duration to disallow lifetime welfare cases.
Effort should absolutely be rewarded, as should thriftiness and the ability to utilize talent. The market allows for such traits already for those competing in it... sweet, man.
Luck, as with my first point, is distributed unfairly and inequally. There should be systems in place (workers comp, disability pay, sick/maternal and other types of time off work) that allow those who fall on hard times, physically or otherwise, to get adequate time to recover.
We are not cogs for a capitalistic system. Just because labor is qualified and quantified by productivity doesn't mean compensation has to follow the same rules to the T. There needs to be a basic level of dignity to the quality of life for all Americans, and once established an efficient, regulated market system would be well supported from the bottom of the pyramid and we can stop hating on the rich bro's on top.
