$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '[')url=http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/income_wealth/005647.html]US Census Data 2004[/url]
Elijah, it sounds like you have been thinking about some important issues, but I cannot agree with some of your conclusions. You seem to suggest that because the world is not equal that it is unfair, and because the world is not fair it can be somehow changed to make it fair?
You recommend dismantling a system that has lifted millions of working poor out of the coal mines of Pennsylvania and given them a living wage. You liken having to work for a living to being a wage slave. Well, yes it is a fact of life that unless you're born rich & beautiful that you might have to work for your daily bread. I don't think that has changed much since the beginning of time. Get used to it.
You mention Bill Gates? A brilliant entrepreneur that changed the way we live, work & play. Warren Buffet? A man who knows how to spot value where others cannot see it. Both are success stories. But, why do you choose to compare the average worker with a median family income of $44.389 to the super rich and successful and not instead to those who live in extreme poverty elsewhere in the developing world? I would suggest that the first $40.000 buys a great deal less pain & suffering than any amount of money above $45.000. I call it the law of diminishing returns.
12.7% of Americans live in poverty and 15.7% of Americans have no healthcare, but they still live better in absolute terms than those Pennsylvanian coal miners did in the 1870's or better than the Oakies that picked fruit & vegetables for less than a living wage with no security. Poverty is defined as less than $19.300 median income for a family of four. Not a lot, but yet you advocate dismantling a system where even the poor do not starve, even if they have to rely on food banks and food stamps for what? No system? It is fine to have a hypothesis that says, this sucks! It is quite a different to make concrete proposals that may solve some of the problems you see with the existing system.
Although 15.7% of Americans have no healthcare they only paid approximately 15% of their own healthcare costs $26 billion. The rest nearly $171 billion was picked-up by the government, hospitals and private & public payers. That may not be perfect or ideal, but it is still a safety net and a huge subsidy despite programs exist like COBRA & Medicaid for the unemployed and the poor, so in many cases the choice not to have healthcare is a conscious choice. Healthy people may have other priorities than health insurance and once they get sick they may find themselves uninsurable. I have great sympathy for the working poor who are trying to make ends meet. However, food, shelter, heat & healthcare have to be basic expenditures before anything including Nikes, DVDs, cigarettes, booze and other consumerables.
We live in an age where the average family earning $44.389 per year spends just 10% on food and another 10% on energy. Not huge amounts. Housing should never consume more than 30% of net earnings. Owning a $400.000 home and an SUV are not rights confered from above. If you cannot afford them, you have to forgo consumption until you have saved enough to buy them. Anyone that starts borrowing to spend or spends before they can afford to is saving up trouble for the future. However, that is an individual responsibility. No government or corporation makes the masses spend themselves deeper into debt.
You say the powerful always rule over the weak? I am not sure that is an insight or just stating the obvious. The educated will always rule over the uneducated. The rich will always have more than the poor. Those that work hard will usually have more than those who will not or cannot work. What is your point? Are you disappointed that your career has not worked-out? That others have not recognized your potential? That others have been more successful? That others have larger houses or better autos? I think that most families who earn $44.389 have enough disposable income after basic needs to finance a nice quality of life. They do not have to consume, consume, consume. They can afford to anything they like, but they cannot afford to do everything they want. Pretty lucky place to be really.
It seems you have the luxury of being able to whine about the system while at the sametime sitting at your computer. You could add another obvious truism. Those that have computers will always blog more than those with no computers. Should we wage the class war of the digital divide next?

He recommends dismantling a system that lifted coal miners out of the mines? It was union wages driven by leftist forces that provided the miner with the funds to educate his children, and get them out of the coal mines. A purely capitalist system would have kept the miner's kids and their kids in the same mine.
The success of the US was based on wedding some of the best of socialism with the vibrancy of capitalism during a window of opportunity created, post war, by international conditions. In truth, what you have now is a form of fascist corporatism and militarization of the economy. It's a joke to refer to it as capitalism, it's so far gone.
Everything Elijah said is correct, particularly about science. Truth is not an issue. Status quo is. Science has always been dependant on political sensitivities and if you dare tread on anyone's toes, look out.