xfire
New Twitter/X @cxffreeman
Most of the time, I like where your head is at, mah dood. But this is where you go off the rails. Let's not get toooooo carried away. A little carried away...fine. I'm just sayin'.....not toooooo carried away.
It's true. Think about it, greed has enabled fewer people to concentrate more wealth. Ask yourself this, why has the value of the dollar decreased so much over time?
http://www.dollartimes.com/calculators/inflation.htm
Powerful corporations coupled with decreased regulation has given us what we have today. Now they want to go after unions. So ok, Mayhem, maybe I should have taken the time to be more precise with my words.
Here's an article by Paul Craig Roberts, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration and one of the authors of Reaganomics-
http://real-agenda.com/2010/08/13/unregulated-greed-has-destroyed-the-capitalist-system/
Here's a snip-
What deregulation did was to permit Wall Street to push the deregulated industries– phone service, airlines, trucking, and later Wall Street itself– to focus on profits and not on service. Profits were increased by curtailing service, by pushing up prices and by Wall Street creating fraudulent financial instruments, which the banksters used America’s reputation to market to the gullible at home and abroad.
...
Conservatives and especially libertarians romanticize “free market unregulated capitalism.” They regard it as the best of all economic orders. However, with deregulated capitalism, every decision is a bottom-line decision that screws everyone except the shareholders and management.
In America today there is no longer a connection between profits and the welfare of the people. Unregulated greed has destroyed the capitalist system, which now distributes excessive rewards to the few at the expense of the many.
If Marx and Lenin were alive today, the extraordinary greed with which Wall Street has infected capitalism would provide Marx and Lenin with a better case than they had in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
One of the architects of Reaganomics wrote that. Well worth reading the whole article.