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[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 13 points 9 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (2 children)

To spend a billion dollars in the lifetime of the average human being (80 years) you'd have to spend $34,246 a day.

If you spent $1000 a day it would take you 2,740 years.

If you gained 1% interest on a billion dollars every YEAR (not monthly), that would net you a passive income of $10,000,000 per year.

A guy named Dennis Kozlowski (embezzled $62 million from tyco) spent $15000 on an umbrella stand in 2002. That thing would be worth over $25,000 in today's money.

I'm trying to illustrate a couple of points here. When you do accrue all that money (I'm not talking about ethics here because we have established that some ethical boundaries have to be crossed and most everyone agrees with that), that money, even just sitting still accrues more money. And spending it isn't as easy as people seem to think.

Neither is giving it away. McKenzie Bezos is a good example. She managed it and the complaint then became that she did so irresponsibly. And even when people who come into this type of wealth manage it, there's no pleasing some people. Because even Chuck Feeny still gets a whole lot of flak from the eat the rich people just for becoming a billionaire in the first place. (I'm not on the side of the rich people. So don't even start).

Giving it away irresponsibly compounds the problem and can cause catastrophic economic events for the poor and working class.

Can we actually educate ourselves on the difference between assets, cash, investments, and net worth? Because net worth doesn't mean ready cash.

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 27 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

But so much of this money is being spent. Its being spent doing insane vanity projects, like Bezos's personal space program or Elon Musk's Twitter buyout. It goes towards massive ideological projects, such as the Koch Bros / Peter Thiel campaign to turn everyone into libertarians. Or towards ostentatious religious icons, like the Crystal Cathedral or the Joel Osteen Church.

It goes towards lobbying. Sooooo much lobbying. Hundreds of millions spent to influence government bureaucrats on everything from who can get an abortion to which country we're at war with today. Gates threwa big chunk of his fortune towards a project of education privatization and school voucherization during the Obama term, and the consequences are still echoing through my school district in the form of these obnoxious and pointless high stakes standardized tests.

We see these astronomical bank accounts turn towards reckless misuse of natural resources - Bitcoin mining consumed 110 Terrawatt Hours in 2022. Whole swaths of the airline industry exist to cater to this fraction of a fraction of mega-wealthy people who indulge in short-hop air travel. They sink fortunes on competitions to own the largest yacht or the most creepy sex island. Human trafficking as an enterprise is by and for the mega-rich, both for personal use and increased corporate profits.

You want to see a real act of billionaire (closer to trillionaire) hubris? Look at the Saudi's quixotic quest to build their supercity of Neom. How much money have we pissed away clinging to fossil fuels, so MBS can create a five mile long Mall of America?

The problem is not simply whether they can spend these enormous pots of wealth, but how they reshape the economy as a whole in the attempt. So much of the world exists to meet the whims of these plutocrats. We pay in our time, our health, and our political autonomy, so a handful of elites can have their every whim indulged.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 4 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Spent by being traded amongst rich people which does nothing at all to the economy. It's hoarding with extra steps.

Don't take my comment as excusing the wealthy. It wasn't intended to be critical of them, but it was intended to give an idea of the scale of the problem. It's not just rich people who are the problem. It's the system (which my comment is intended to be critical of). It's designed to make the rich richer. That's what needs to be dismantled.

Spending the money at the rate they would need to to put back into circulation would crash markets. It would make things worse for poor people.

[–] UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 11 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

The "spending" isn't nearly so much the issue as "what its being spent on".

We've got billions of dollars flowing into the media market so that Libs-of-TikTok and TurningPointUSA dorks can churn out reaction videos at an industrial scale. Meanwhile, we're privatizing PBS/NPR and downsizing all the journalist departments at the national news agencies, because its more important to generate profit for stakeholders than to do the thing these organizations ostensibly exist to do.

The material that's being produced - consumer ready mass media - is being degraded thanks to the sheer volume of money that's redirected from large publicly accountable news organs to independent vanity projects with ultra-wealthy sugar daddies.

You can play the same game with the education system, the energy grid, mass transit, fucking groceries. The very price of an egg is dictated by whether or not some fuckwads at Tyson want to pocket a fatter dividend by downsizing the department that monitors for bird flu outbreaks.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago

What money is spent on matters quite a lot. Spending $300 a week on groceries, and $2000 a month on rent or a mortgage is a lot different than paying $2000 for a new watch, and $300 for new shoes just because they're designer. But I do agree with your point. There's a lot of money changing hands behind the scenes to the detriment of poor people as well. My comments weren't a disparagement of or dismissal of this problem, it just didn't acknowledge that because I see a lot of people who want to blame a chosen few individuals, ignore a chosen few individuals who are just as problematic for the same reasons, and never come close to recognising that the system is rigged or understanding that the system is extremely broken.

[–] aesthelete@lemmy.world 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

It’s the system (which my comment is intended to be critical of). It’s designed to make the rich richer. That’s what needs to be dismantled.

But it is a system setup by and for them. They're the very people that make the system what it is.

And it's this way in implementation. If you hand more money over to 12 people than the other 299,999,988 people in the country combined...you're going to wind up with those 12 people having a lot more control and power over the country's resources regardless of what else you do. (EDIT: this is just hyperbole, I know it's not in actuality this bad, but it's pretty close with the exact figures being slightly different)

They designed the system in the first place, the founding fathers were tax evasive slaveholders.

If you don't have an actual conversation with them and keep blowing smoke up their ass, how is anything ever going to change? How do you dismantle the system that supports their wealth while propping up their throne and kissing their ring?

If we can't criticize these people, how are we supposed to "dismantle" anything? Critique and changing the discourse is a less drastic reaction than "eating the rich"...so if you're saying you're pro "eat the rich" but not pro "ask the rich pointed questions" how is that even possible?

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I think mostly by using their tactics against them. There are more of us than there are of them. Withholding Labor, lobbying, pushing for more pay and benefits. I think there's a lot we can do that doesn't involve just pointing out that so and so is a billionaire. What are we doing currently? Because I don't feel like most people are doing much of anything.

Pointing out the problems and how things work so that people have a better understanding is at least a step in the right direction. Hence my wish for people to get educated about finances and my offer of examples to show the scale.

[–] aesthelete@lemmy.world 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

There are more of us than there are of them. Withholding Labor, lobbying, pushing for more pay and benefits.

Sure there are more of us than there are of them, but the entire economy is oriented around their existence and continued support. We can strike and organize (and must) but it takes messaging to organize, and it takes messaging to win support from the public at large. It takes people pointing out just how absurd the current system and how morally and intellectually bankrupt its winners are in order for people to understand the need for change.

Also, "lobbying" involves money. We may have the pure numbers, but we do not have the money...and that's an important part of why you can't get there without being able to criticize the people who created and get the most benefits from the current status quo and shifting the mindset from "these people are smarter / work harder / are more innovative than everyone else" to something more akin to "these people are greedier and often times more morally bankrupt than everyone else".

EDIT: There's another thread here that's a messaging thing that I think is important: billionaires are often miserable themselves...the end game of this shit doesn't serve anyone...including the rich.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

When poor people stop spending money, the economy goes into recession. We have buying power. Collectively we have enough money to make waves. We aren't organised and part of that has to do with the fact that we aren't all on the same page. Because we don't all understand what's going on. I know it takes more than just one or two of those things. But we had power and regulations once.

Worst case scenario is we burn it all to the ground. Because that's an ultimate equaliser. But it will absolutely have a detrimental effect both on the number of people dedicated to change, and their lives. Doing so has to be a last resort because it will cannibalize any movement that attempts it. Poor people will fight not to make their lot in life worse if push comes to shove.

[–] aesthelete@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

When poor people stop spending money, the economy goes into recession. We have buying power.

Poor peoples' spending is less optional...you cannot exactly just stop buying groceries or clothing in hopes that the system changes. "Vote with your dollars" is essentially meaningless...especially when the very same billionaires we're talking about have conglomerated the goods in the essential economies. The food systems and the medical systems are practically cartels at this point. (i.e. Boycott Goya all you want, are you really sure that they aren't still producing your beans anyway under the store brand?)

I also think that the above is a gross oversimplification of what a recession is. The poor have been mostly buying only essentials for a while now (because it's all they can afford with the recent inflation) and we still aren't technically in a recession.

EDIT: I personally think a better means to protest monetarily for the non-well off is actually debt strikes. Most people don't have a lot of spare cash, but they sure do have a lot of debt. Unfortunately, it's another one of those things that only works if a whole lot of people do it at once.

[–] aesthelete@lemmy.world 3 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

Look at the Saudi’s quixotic quest to build their supercity of Neom.

For some reason the answer is never to fix existing towns that actually have people in them for a variety of reasons (resource availability, locations adjacent to ports, etc.) but to build a new city with no infrastructure or reason for being in the middle of nowhere.

I think it's because with existing areas you can't be ideologically pure...homeless people are already there, inequality is already evident, decay is already visible...but when you build a new "utopian city" and it'll just be empty so you can pretend that the same societal ills that plague everything else will not show up somehow magically when (or if) the people arrive.

[–] Facebones@reddthat.com 1 points 9 months ago

The whole point of them is that anyone with a net worth of <X million would never be allowed within 50 miles of the place.

[–] ohitsbreadley@discuss.tchncs.de 4 points 9 months ago (2 children)

I dunno man, you say you're on the side of "eat the rich," but it sounds like you're making a case for the billionaires.

They're just modern day royalty.

Neither should exist, because both require a hierarchical system that ranks people by worth (however it's measured). No single human life is more valuable than another.

[–] Telodzrum@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago

No single human life is more valuable than another.

That's just factually incorrect.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

If you don't understand the scale of them problem and what pitfalls you can potentially fall into while trying to fix it, you will absolutely make things worse. I don't give a fuck about any individuals. I do see a lot of people giving "daily reminders" that "tswift is a billionaire". But nobody says that about Oprah or Jay Z or Rhianna. Nobody mentions them as if they are also problematic and they are. Because wealth hoarding is bad no matter who does it. Money needs to circulate and it needs to do so without crashing markets and further compounding the problems of the poor and working classes. Which means there is a responsibility to understand the system before we can dismantle it.

[–] ohitsbreadley@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Don't conflate the concept of currency with the concept of capitalism.

One is a tool to enable abstraction of trading the value generated by labor, whereas the other is a system of exploiting labor to concentrate wealth to a minority class.

We can eat the rich via wholesale transfer of their value as currency to a democratic cooperative that uses it to fund a better society.

Maybe that's an idealist's view, but isn't it better than the current reality, Where we let schmucks like Bezos have little yachts to take them to their bigger yachts to their mega platinum plated ultra yachts, while a good portion of his employees aren't given sufficient break time and end up pissing in empty bottles in trucks on the side of the road.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Why do you assume I do conflate the two. Currency in a capitalist society does exactly what I said and is the reality for the vast majority of people the world over. We aren't talking about the abstract here.

And We can't actually. Not without either changing the value (diminishing it), or tanking economies. Is it better for tomorrow's dollar to be worth a quarter what it is today? A tenth? Because the commodities we use currency to buy will hold or increase their value. A slice of bread and some bananas will cost what they cost and the money won't be enough to buy them anymore. We are already seeing that without that money in circulation.

Eating the rich will not stop that fallout. Also. Who distributes that wealth? Why do you trust them? What makes them qualified to do so? And how are you planning to have that wealth distributed? A coop fund that doles out UBI? Like. I want to be realistic about the problems we're facing here. Focusing on the mega yachts and BS and being angry about that isn't constructive.

[–] ohitsbreadley@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

You're conflating the two concepts by asserting the value of money (currency) will be somehow diminished, if the system and mechanisms designed to concentrate it into the hands of the individuals (capitalism) were dismantled.

Why are you so certain that converting a company like Amazon from Private ownership to employee owned would necessarily tank the economy?

Focusing on making apologies for the system, saying "it's hard," and tearing down alternatives because "ItS jUsT nOt ReAlIsTiC" is neoliberal and not constructive either.

[–] atrielienz@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

No. I am saying that if and when we get around to dismantling those systems to concentrate wealth into the hands of a few, we will see real world consequences for those actions because money/currency only has value if we agree it does.

We have seen the devaluing of different currencies world wide and the effect on the people using them before. Value remains the same in commodities which are necessary.

You insist I'm trying to make excuses for the rich or for the system. What I am saying is that if done incorrectly we will see fallout that will detrimentally affect us.

First and foremost because people are not educated in economics, the nature of currency, or the systems they are rooting to dismantle.

Second because it will take a concerted effort from the majority to make this happen at all, and most of the people in this thread can't even see past "eat the rich" which will not get the result we want.

Can you stop assuming I'm just making excuses for like 5 seconds and consider the rest of the comments in this thread and others like it? If we are dismantling the financial economic systems that make up our capitalist society we are gonna need to have our ducks in a row and nobody even agrees on what that looks like.

This right here is why people always manage to take advantage of socialist or communist society. Because people don't want to actually learn what it means and what the pitfalls other societies that have tried it have run into. There's always gonna be someone trying to take advantage. There's always gonna be selfish people.

What alternatives did you recommend? Because none have been brought to me in this thread. I have brought up several ideas that can work in concert, but I think they would fail if done one by one.

Nobody suggested to me that we should "convert Amazon to private ownership" but even if they had, nobody has explained how we do that. Have you got a plan?