by Byron100 » Mon 15 Oct 2007, 17:39:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'M')oney doesn't buy happiness if you're surrounded by people wealthier than you.
Equality of opportunity, equal rights, etc. bring happiness.
But if people feel as though they can't move up in society, they will be unhappy.
Mind you, most of America's struggling middle class are considered wealthy by modern global standards and downright rich compared to historical examples.
In America, we are constantly exposed to the lifestyles of the rich and famous. This leads to a feeling of jealousy and inadequacy for those not in the top 1%.
Also, middle and upper middle class Americans never come into contact with the truly needy. They complain when they have to put in a few hours a week of overtime to pay the credit card bills...but have they ever gone to bed hungry? Have they ever been on the verge of homelessness? Have they had to eat nothing but peanut butter sandwiches and hamburger helper because they can't afford real food?
The irony is that as America has gotten wealthier, its citizens feel poorer.
The Great Depression felt horrible because Americans suddenly had to live with the horror of having the same standard of living as their parents generation.
If the economic does in fact enter another depression, we might be knocked down to 1997, 1987, or who knows, maybe even 1977.
If people feel deprived now, just wait until the average standard of living falls by 50% or more. The rich would be "hurting", but they will still be able to do the vast majority of things they did before - perhaps making such "sacrifices" as taking the 7-day Med cruise as opposed to the 21-day Antarctic Excursion cruise.

But the former middle class will have to make sacrifices such as giving up their ability to drive at all, barely having enough to eat each night, let alone ever going out, no weekend entertainment / vacations / cross-country trips to visit Grandma and Grandpa. And those would be the lucky ones. A lot of the middle class will fall into true poverty, with no home nor job, totally dependent on the generosity of family and/or relatives, who may be hard-pressed to support themselves, let along taking on the burden of others.
So imagine this kind of backdrop against the lifestyles of the rich and famous...I really don't think that's going to go over too well with the new poor. Socialism anyone?

I'd be all for a system that "hammers down the nail that sticks up", as that would at least limit the class resentment that would be sure to exist in future depressionary times. Having things such as max income limits, severe luxury taxes, wealth taxes, sharply progressive tax rates and even outright limits to excessive consumption would go a long ways to at least ease the pain of falling living standards, not to mention it'd make people feel better (except for the rich, and who cares about them...LOL

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