Not that I’m particularly against that - quite the opposite, in fact. But I’m wondering if anyone sees, or had seen a path to social and climate recovery/progress that could occur without first eradicating the class of people who most enjoy the present status quo.

  • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Demand money be removed from politics and follow through to make it happen. Make laws that no longer favor the rich.

    It’ll never happen, but it’s what it would take.

    • riverjig@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’ll add that we can now remove the tax exempt status for religious organizations. Only problem is it puts more money in the hands of the government so they mismanage that as well.

      I wish we could get full transparency of where literally every dollar is spent. We shouldn’t have to ask for that.

  • palebluethought@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So, let’s put aside for a moment the rather shocking number of people casually advocating for murder in this thread.

    I want to talk instead about how everyone here is just talking for granted the notion that removing the billionaires, Republican politicians, or whatever “they” you care to think of, would be a solution, or even a positive step, for modern social ills.

    There’s a big undercurrent in almost any political discussion online, this implication that every one of the world’s problems actually has a super simple solution, that The Powerful could just snap their fingers and make it happen if they wanted to, and it’s only because of their greed etc that we have any problems that all. Obviously we live in a time of huge inequity and we’d be a lot better off if we found a good way to improve it.

    But many (most?) of our biggest problems are inherent to the challenge of keeping 8 billion people alive and happy in a hostile universe, and in fact nobody has ever had a perfect solution. Throwing the entire planet into chaos by causally throwing away human beings’ rights and leaving an enormous portion of the world’s capital in uncertain hands, ready to be seized by some other set of psychopathic opportunists who happen to be in a position to do so, certainly ain’t it.

    • Borg286@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The problem isn’t the exact rate, it is their ability to pay for tax experts so they can avoid having most of their wealth taxed at all. This is why Biden wanted to beef up the IRS and sic them on billionaires. Scrutinize the cracks they slip through.

      • lhx@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That’s part of the problem; but, increasing tax rates (income, capital gains, depreciation recapture, 1031 exchanges etc) is needed even more than enforcement of existing. You’d be surprised how much of what the rich do to reduce their tax burden is perfectly legal and IRS enforcement would just be an annoyance.

  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Adjust our economic system to disallow inherited wealth beyond a lavish amount. I don’t mind a person getting rich for starting and succeeding with a massive company. I do mind the 100B being passed to their children, who will never have done anything to earn it.

    Let the kids have $10 million each or something, the government should take the rest. If they try to “leave” the country the same thing should apply.

    This will also adjust the incentive for billionaires to just make more money since they know they won’t be able to pass it on maybe they will start actually spending it to keep the

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Japan solved the overpaid corporate culture nonsense. Australia has the most wealth equality, without the parasitic billionaire problem. The solutions have existed for a long time.

    The real issue in the USA is the lack of effective legislation. There is no political accountability. This is all due to a two party system. All it takes to fix the USA is outlawing gerrymandering, rejecting the electoral college, and institute tiered voting where everyone votes for the candidates based upon their preferred priority order. Popular votes is the only Democratic method. Representative republics are a corruption of democracy that was a necessity with the travel and communication limitations of 300 years ago but not now. Voting for candidates by priority would make party affiliation nearly meaningless and force accountability and substance because the difference between candidates would drastically decrease. It would eliminate the polarized nonsense that all the billionaires want. It isn’t about the ridiculous nonsense, it is about ensuring very little productive legislation is possible. No laws means do anything you want. The US has a tenth of the laws and protections of any other western country.

  • GodHimself@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve always interpreted that idea as “make it so billionaires can’t exist” change the system so that people can’t actually make all that money.

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    1 year ago

    Raise taxes on people making billions of dollars a year. Redo the tax code to make it impossible for them to avoid paying a fair share.

    Also while were at it, I’d be in favor of a maximum allowed compensation (for hot shots) based off the salary of rank and file employees.

    • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Raise taxes on people making billions of dollars a year.

      I believe higher taxation on the wealthy is necessary, but how do we actually implement that?

      Our tax code is base upon “realized gains”. Most of these billionaires aren’t actually getting deposits into their checking accounts for a billion dollars a year. Most their wealth and their gains come in the value of their assets increasing (stock is one example of an asset). The tax code does tax them when they sell the stock to get money to deposit in their checking accounts, and the billionaires do that, but just not with very much money. Certainly nothing even close to a billion dollars in a single year.

      So how do you tax them? Do you tax them on the value of their assets? If the value of their assets goes down, do you give the tax money back? All of these questions and more would need to be answered for a coherent tax code that could be enforced. I don’t have the answers, but I’m very open to those that do.

      • csm10495
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        1 year ago

        When I get stock from work, I have to pay tax on the value at the time as if it was just regular cash coming in (even if i don’t immediately sell). It gets added into my W2. It’s really annoying since it leads to a bigger tax bill come tax season … why doesn’t that happen for them?

    • Talaraine@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      While I know this is silly and would never work, I can’t help but fantasize about giving anyone that makes a billion dollars a beautiful fancy trophy…

      And then forbid them from making a dollar more until they spend it all.

  • Bread
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    1 year ago

    Does eating the billionaires count as murder?/s

    But seriously though, eliminating bad actors should be the first step. Otherwise they will just drag their heels into the ground preventing any real progress for whatever reason they have. Whether it be greed, malice, or just plain old stupidity.

    Death will likely be involved at some point realistically. Either by people refusing to go peacefully, or by a lack of action by the people resulting in groups dying for things like heat stroke/freezing to death, starvation, general unrest.

    I wish that things like that wouldn’t happen, but I won’t be surprised if it does.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍@social.fossware.space
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    There are relatively few steps that would go a long way toward stopping the accumulation of obscene amounts of wealth.

    • Make tax rates similar to what we had in the 50s (conservatives love the 50s), with the brackets adjusted for inflation.
    • Make all types of income tax at those rates.
    • Eliminate taxable income caps including social security withholding.
    • Make inheritance and gift taxes equivalent.
    • End Citizens United through congressional action.
    • Use that tax money on social programs, small business development programs, and infrastructure.

    If you want to really jump start things we should also make all campaigns publicly funded.

  • Candelestine@lemmy.world
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    Yes, you’re supposed to eat them too. This helps reduce world hunger.

    In all seriousness, we’ve dealt with this problem before. We had a time we call the era of the robber barons if you want to read a little about it.

  • Amputret@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    You don’t have to eradicate all of them, just each year have the richest person in the world executed. Only one. Watch all these billionaires race to give their money away and put it into philanthropic endeavours.

    Of course, if any of them are found to be evading or hiding the true extent of their wealth, execution. And money invested in their own organisations/businesses would also of course be counted as theirs.

  • GatoB@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The problem with some of them is that they can do whatever they want for just a little more money and they do it all the time, thats why regulation is a must if the people is what matters, CMV