There is boundless evidence of wrongdoing.
By whom? And what exactly was the wrongdoing, what laws did they break? Or are just wild generalizations or allegations sufficient?
Sheer nonsense, and a perfect example of acting as an apologist for wealth. (By the way, "apologist" does not mean one who apologizes. It means one who defends or makes excuses.) The fact of the matter is that the wealthy have an army of apologists who do defend them. It is part of the foundation of today's GOP, that anyone who questions wealth must be attacked, and all questions raised must be dismissed.
As I said, it speaks volumes that you think wealth
needs any apology or defending at all. I guess anyone who dares say that there's nothing wrong with having or accumulating wealth is now an "apologist".
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What also speaks volumes is that you deleted three key words between the fragment you quoted above and the rest of the sentence below: "ignore that issue," i.e., that "earn" is an ambiguous word that covers a whole spectrum of methods from pure to corrupt. That is my point, and true to my words, you've ignored that in favor of tangents.
Whether it's ambiguous or not doesn't matter. Unless someone broke the law to gain wealth, how you define 'earn' doesn't matter. It's theirs, they came by it legally.
The issue, as seen in this thread, is whenever someone mentions anything related to wealth concentration, taxes, etc., there's always a phalanx of apologists who rush to defend the wealthy as "earning" their money.
Again, unless someone did something illegal, they did something to earn their wealth. It doesn't come falling out of the sky. Defining anyone who doesn't believe in simply taking things away from people as an "apologist" is stupid. There's nothing to apologize for, nor is there anything wrong with wealth so it needs no defense.
They never want to discuss what "earn" really means or how we distinguish between earned wealth and wealth gained through questionable means.
Because it does not matter. At all. How you or anyone else feels about how something was earned is completely irrelevant. If it's within the laws, it is legal, and it is theirs.
Care to address this? Does a poker player who stacks the deck earn his winnings?
That would be cheating (ie, breaking the law). Unless wealth was accumulated as a result of illegal activity, what people feel about how it was earned is not relevant. They earned it legally, end of story.
Personally, I do believe extreme concentration of wealth is a bad thing for the country. However, I don't see any particularly good way of "fixing" that issue. You can see from the statistics that this trend has continued and accelerated regardless of which party has political power (congress, white house). That shows that neither party really wants to address the concentration of wealth, but rather redistribute the wealth to those they approve of.