I don't know what the climate is in your country between left and right.
It's the UK. We don't really have a viable left, since the "Labour" party have reinvented themselves once again. The Green party is probably our main left-wing party, but they only tend to gather a few percentage points of the vote. Our future prime minsters are generally drawn from
a small subset of children. But I won't expand on all of this here, or it will turn into an essay.
Sort of except that godliness (or our human nature) within each of us would be the unseen force: an invisible hand ----the observable market is the externality.
Maybe to explain what it is not: it is not an ominous controlling hand above us, it is us.
Yes, but centuries of evidence show that the invisible hand either doesn't exist or, if it does, then its effect is almost nothing.
Stop letting corporations make their own rules and get big money interests the hell out of politics---just those 2 tweaks could go a long way
Yes, agreed.
It's disappointing to see the "tax the rich" rhetoric going on [...] we are attacking (as usual) people on the individual level.
If pure capitalism leads to excess and abuse, and there needs to be some mechanism to reduce this effect, as you seem to agree in your point above, then why should we not tax the rich? If a corporation exploits the system to the detriment of others by making its own rules, then why should the CEO and directors of that company be perceived as having acquired their wealth by fair and legitimate means? If there are people who exploit the system, then why would it be disappointing if we sought to prevent this exploitation? Is it okay that Jeff Bezos has $200 billion, but his employees have to sh*t in plastic bags in their vans because they'd
lose their job if they took a toilet break?
Previously I have compared these two facts:
1. This $5 billion yacht exists.the History Supreme, owned by Robert Knok, is the most expensive, largest superyacht in the whole world. At 100 feet in length, History Supreme took three years to build, using 10,000 kilograms of solid gold and platinum, both of which adorn the dining area, deck, rails, staircases, and anchor. If that weren’t luxurious enough, the master suite features a meteorite rock wall, a statue made of Tyrannosaurus Rex bones, a 68 kg 24-carat gold Aquavista Panoramic Wall Aquarium, and a liquor bottle adorned with a rare 18.5-carat diamond.
https://www.atlasmarinesystems.com/most-expensive-yachts/2. 1 in 3 people globally do not have access to safe drinking water.2.2 billion people around the world do not have safely managed drinking water services, 4.2 billion people do not have safely managed sanitation services, and 3 billion lack basic handwashing facilities.
https://www.who.int/news/item/18-06-2019-1-in-3-people-globally-do-not-have-access-to-safe-drinking-water-unicef-whoWhilst, as I say, I am in favour of equality of opportunity, and against
absolute equality of outcome, I do believe in progressive taxation. And income tax alone is insufficient when the elite draw most of their wealth from returns on existing capital. (Yes, I am a fan of Thomas Piketty, and read Capital in the Twenty-First Century when it was first published.)
I believe that existing inequality of outcome is obscene. I am not talking about someone who is talented and worked hard and made themselves say $10 million. Numbers become difficult to fully comprehend once we move past the scale for which the human brain evolved. I am fond of the visualisation below. Scroll through this and tell me that existing tax on the wealthy is sufficient (there is plenty of additional information if you scroll far enough).
https://mkorostoff.github.io/1-pixel-wealth/