I'm fine talking about it, just as long as we're removing the supremely ignorant idea of equity from the jump, and the idea that the goal is for everyone to have roughly the same amount of....anything.
It's a noble goal, and I bet it works well in Utopia. I hear the unicorns crap chocolate ice cream there.
I agree.
The problem, in my view, isn't at the top it is at the bottom. Demonizing billionaires is always a neat way to score cheap political points but most of them have created a LOT more wealth than they hold. They've also typically created a lot of "lower-order rich" people in the form of their employees and other stakeholders.
The problem, as I see it, is more that the working poor have been getting poorer for generations now. In the 1960's-1970's there were a lot of blue collar men who fully supported their families on ONLY their income and lived reasonably well. They weren't jet-set rich, but they could afford homes and cars and child-rearing on ONE blue-collar income.
That isn't even remotely possible today. Even after doubling the workers for those families by sending the wives into the workforce they are STILL worse off financially today than their equivalents were ~50 years ago with only ONE income.
Then, to make it MUCH worse, the reality today is that marriage is effectively a luxury. College educated white women are married at their first childbirth today at rates nearly equal to what those rates were when Leave it to Beaver was on TV. Ie, the reasonably well off get married and form families. The change has been to the lower classes. A female HS dropout is about as likely to be struck by lightning as she is to be married before she has kids (this is probably an exaggeration but not by nearly as much as you might think).
Also, people generally marry (or hook-up at lower classes) within socio-economic class.
Then this fuels the cycle. Looking at the above groups you have:
- Kid #1 has two college educated parents.
- Kid #2 has a HS dropout mom and may not even know who their father is.
This is also multi-generational now so in many cases:
- Kid #1 also has four college educated grandparents and a few college educated aunts and uncles.
- Kid #2 doesn't have any immediate family educated much beyond HS.
Also, intelligence is at least somewhat heritable so Kid #1 is, on average, smarter than Kid #2 to begin with.
To make this all worse, the "knowledge based economy" has dramatically increased the value of a strong mind relative to a strong back.
Then, in case Kid #2 didn't already get dealt a bad enough hand, we have imported literally MILLIONS of unskilled laborers to compete for the few remaining unskilled and low-skill jobs.