I verified the number because it doesn't sound quite right. Walmart makes profit of roughly $20B yearly, per day that is $55M, the family owns around half.
So they make like $25M per day.
That is still insane amount of money, and probably also they do some tricks to lower the profit and hide the money through some loopholes, like all the millionaires/billionaires.
Nobody needs that kind of money, so they should be taxed like hell, but not in this world
Most people on earth will never see $100,000 a year, and almost all Americans will never see $200,000 a year.
Even making $1,000,000 a year is fucking incredible and life-changing and lets you go anywhere and do almost anything you want.
Anything over that is just dick measuring money.
They are making $25,000,000 PER DAY.
A million dollars is chump change to them.
More money than we’ll ever see in our lives is chump change to them.
Currency is just quantified social power.
If someone has essentially infinite social power compared to everyone around them, there is no world in which their interests don’t directly and explicitly involve (at the very least) keeping that power.
While Walton inherited a 1.9% stake in Walmart following her husband's 2005 death, according to Forbes, a spokesperson for Walmart told Snopes via email that Walton has no involvement in the business.
All those 'protests' are coordinated by the oligarchy as pressure release values because they know the public is at a tipping point for rejecting both right wing parties and their policies, preventing organic protests from rising and creating a threat to their existence. They allow voters to blow some steam while giving the illusion they are participating in democracy.
This reminds me of a government scheme some ten years ago or so. Workfair it was called, or something.
In short, someone claiming job seekers allowance would be required to work something like 10 hours a week for a company such as Tesco, or Poundland in order to be eligible for their welfare payments. On the face of it, fair enough. The person gets some work experience and the possibility of being hired.
Except all it really did was provide free labour to companies whose profits were in the billions. And that labour was paid by the tax payer.
And no one in the government at the time either saw how bad that might look, or more likely, cared.
Trickle down economics ... give more money to the ultra rich and eventually some money goes down to the people at the bottom of the economic system
The problem they've discovered after 50 years of this system is that there just isn't enough money in the universe to send to the top and allow enough of it to flow down to the bottom.
A billion dollars only allows a dollar to get to a person living on the street ... so we have to send billions, trillions, gajillions of dollars to the super-ultra-giga rich to get enough money to average people.
This is the problem of trickle down economics .... we just haven't given enough money to the top yet
We have to give the rich more! ... in order to save the poor ... do it for the poor!
I heard that recently and thought to myself 'yea I don't have a fucking boat' and realized that is the true meaning of this phrase. People who own boats already are gonna do great. People who don't will drown.
Libertarians don't, and it's one of the few things Neoliberals are actually right about.
"A rising tide lifts all boats" refers to the fact that giving money to the people on the bottom of the financial pyramid who needs it the most will benefit everybody. Unlike just shoveling it at the already rich, which is what capitalism is designed for.
Infuriatingly, almost none of the Dem leadership actually follow through on this mantra with actual policy, beholden to the rich capitalists as they are.
My coworkers do. Somehow the reason things suck is because of immigrants. Despite being immigrants. It's the lazy people who don't work as hard as them. Mathematically removed if you look at how things work. Not to mention that all these systems are artificial ... why shouldn't we build a system that benefits everyone instead of the few?
Capitalism can end poverty for sure and was definitely a step up from feudalism.. it just happens to also birth a whole slew of contradictions within the social fabric.
it's a good approximate. the reason their wealth score increases is because there is more wealth in the world being generated to go around. Disproportionately, it's landing on their already obscene pile, instead of being fairly distributed. And fairly doesn't necessarily mean everyone gets the same, but everyone actually profits from it.
if I had a pile of gold, it would increase in value without taking from anyone. Generalized statements don't help your agenda when it's generalizing hatred towards others.
This is whats called a breakdown... if their yearly income is X, then you can find out what their hourly and daily incomes are through rather basic math.
I don’t mean it as acceptance of the massive wealth disparity, about which I agree fully.
I meant that “per hour” implies a wage paid by somebody/ some company, and the uber wealthy don’t really collect a wage.
It’s fair enough to say that a person’s wealth went up *x *last year, or y the year before that. But whatever the increase (or decrease) in net worth was, it’s not dependent on the number of hours they worked in the same way it does with a wage.
I think my point isn’t being well taken, or perhaps I phrased it incorrectly. I certainly agree with the sentiment that wealth disparity is maybe the biggest problem we face.
The vast vast vast majority of the wealth of the uber wealthy come from the assets they own. If they can be said to “make” money over the course of the year, it’s as a result of those assets increasing in value and not directly tied to the “work” they put in.
My problem with these comparisons are two-fold. One, they usually conflate an individuals net worth with income. If Elon has 365 billion dollars, he doesn’t “make” 1 billion per day. Two, phrasing it as “making” “per hour” implies their income is tied to the hours they work, and that’s just not true. It puts value on their labor I think isn’t justified.