“Income Inequality”: A Crisis of Stupidity

DGS49

Diamond Member
Apr 12, 2012
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Unless you have been living in a cave with no internet access for a couple years, you have undoubtedly heard scores of Democrat politicians and pundits whining about “income inequality.” Many have deemed Income Inequality to be the defining crisis of this Age.

But the expression itself is insidious and stupid.

The actual problem in the U.S. – from a public policy standpoint – is the phenomenon of persistent, generational poverty (“PGP”). Occasional poverty, temporary poverty, and the poverty that people experience at the beginning of their working lives, are problems that are already addressed in one way or another, and they are arguably more a “personal” issue than one that requires a Government solution.

But PGP is growing and, from a societal economic standpoint, is a cancer that can eventually consume so many resources that it will bring Government to its knees (along with public pensions and CSO).

But the Left is unable to even address PGP.

It’s causes are broadly and unquestionably known, as are its solutions. The cause is illegitimacy, and the solution is three-fold: (1) finish school, (2) get a job – any job, and (3) don’t have kids until/unless you are married. Living according to those simple, easy guidelines reduces one’s chances of living in poverty by 80%. But a Leftist government is powerless to broadly publish that message, because to do so would be tantamount to being judgmental about the lifestyle of millions of people now living in poverty. And the Cardinal Sin of the Left is being judgmental – even when the data are incontrovertible proving that the judgment is correct. They simply cannot be judgmental about anything (except smoking).

So they made up the expression, “Income Inequality.” Income Inequality takes the focus OFF of poverty and the obvious causes thereof, and places it on people who are SUCCESSFUL, as though the reasons for PGP were the success of others – which is economic nonsense. So the Left abandons the possibility of a united campaign to fight PGP – one which both ends of the political spectrum could support, each in their own way, and in its place they construct a shining monument to Envy of The Rich! That monument being the expression, "Income Inequality."

The next time you hear a politician bemoaning the “crisis” of Income Inequality, ask yourself why they have chosen NOT to address it as “fighting poverty.” There is only one reason: they want to use the expression as a means of blame Rich Republicans for the real problem of persistent generational poverty. (Parenthetically, it is quite perverse that the Left and the MSM have been able to sell the B.S. narrative that it is the Right where all the rich people are; this is provably false).

Imagine a teacher who is confronted by a small group of students who decide at the beginning of the school year that they will refuse to do anything the teacher says, and will do their best to fail utterly, just to see what the school will do to them. What would you think of the teacher who presented this issue to her Principal as a problem of “an unacceptable gap between the grades of the best students and the worst”? Delusional? Stupid?
 
Where the 1%'ers live...

3 Wealthiest U.S. Counties Are Virginia Suburbs of D.C.
December 9, 2015 | Five of the nation's Top Ten wealthiest counties--when measured by median household income in 2014--are suburbs of Washington, D.C.; and the three wealthiest are all in suburban Virginia, according to data released today by the Census Bureau.
Falls Church, Va.--an independent city which the Census counts as a county--led the nation with a median household income of $125,635 in 2014. Loudon County, Va., was second with a median household income of $122,641. Fairfax County, Va., was third with a median household income of $110,507. The two other Washington, D.C., suburbs that made it into the Top Ten were Arlington County, Va., which finished sixth with a median household income of $107,143; and Howard County, Md., which finished seventh with a median household income of $106,871.

20_wealthiest_counties-chart.jpg

The only two non-Washington, D.C., suburbs to make it into the top seven were Los Alamos County, N.M., which had the fourth highest median household income ($108,477) and Douglas County, Colo., which had the fifth highest median household income ($107,250.) Also in the Top Ten were Hunterdon County, N.J, which placed eighth with a median household income of $103,876; San Mateo County, Calif., which placed ninth with a median household income of $100,806; and Morris County, N.J., which placed tenth with a median household income of $100,511.

Counties in the Virginia suburbs outside of Washington, D.C., have dominated the top of the Census Bureau’s list of wealthiest counties for years. In 2013, Loudoun was Number 1, Falls Church was Number 2, Fairfax was Number 4 and Howard was Number 5. That year, Los Alamos County, New Mexico, at Number 3, was the only non-D.C. suburb to make it into the Top Five. In 2012 the same five counties made the Top Five. However, that year, Falls Church was Number 1, Loudoun was Number 2, Los Alamos was Number 3, Howard was Number 4 and Fairfax was Number 5.

3 Wealthiest U.S. Counties Are Virginia Suburbs of D.C.
 
publish that message, because to do so would be tantamount to being judgmental about the lifestyle of millions of people now living in poverty.

Very true and it would also be suicidal because liberals created the lifestyle of the intergenerational poor with their near genocidal welfare programs.

Combating income inequality would be combating the liberal programs that caused it.
 
Go ahead complainers; vote in another corporatist!

we vote for Republicans and Democrats. Republicans want capitalism while liberals want socialism( eg obamacare) wherein govt and business is closely tied. Do you have the IQ to understand?
 

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