fordy said:
Society are the consumers. Yes the wealth was collected through ingenuity, and as a reward, they live the rest of their life enjoying it. Does that mean their children deserve the same? Depends. What was their ingenuity? If they display ingenuity, what are they worrying about. That should be enough confidence that they could follow in their parent's footsteps. If they're particularly lazy and believe the world owes them, why should they get it? Society has most likely done more to get the parents where they were. Work itself is what generates wealth, not enabling the work. If the work wasn't there, people would use the incentive of being paid hansomely for ingenuity to work towards it. |
Let's focus on the bold for a moment. If their children do not deserve it, who does? And why does one deserve something when someone else doesn't? Further, if you take the inheritence and property away, then doesn't that make the child now poor and just as derserving of their share as anyone else? Lastely, how do you auction off a mansion, a yacht, a business? Esepecially if no one else is wealthy enough to afford it? And say a poor family buys a mansion at auction and then sells it off immdiately for several million. How did that balance things? That was a tranfer of wealth from rich, to poor, to rich in very short time.
I want to bring something else in now. Moral hazard. You saw that the rich create work and then enjoy the fruits of the labor of their employees. This is a moral hazard that breeds laziness and contempt to you. But if people are given a balance of wealth, does that not also breed laziness? Why strive to work hard if A) the government will take care of you anyway or B) your hard work gives very little to show for it?
The rEVOLution is not being televised







