calberto
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2015
- Messages
- 446
- Display Name
Display name:
Calberto
My economics teacher was talking about how the percentage of poor people has increased and middle class has shrunk. He asked, "Does anyone have a problem with this?" I raised my hand and said yes, but I have a BIGGER problem with how we try to solve this.
The problem is not that rich people make money. Putting restrictions and higher taxes on rich folk will not do anything except maybe get the federal government more tax dollars to waste. These people are rich. Either they are smart enough to get around tax barriers or are rich enough to pay someone to figure it out. Once a new tax law is put into effect the rich are not going to say, "Oh, shoot, you got me. I give up. All the holes in the ship are sealed."
The real problem is that this country has embraced a culture of outsider validation. People have to ask permission from another source in order to have value. One must go through high school and get validation to say that he/she is valuable. In order to be successful, one must go through college and receive their validation via a degree.
In order to be worth more than $8/hr, one must receive validation from the government. People have become so ingrained to this thought of outsider validation, that they have to ask permission from the government to have any value.
Instead of teaching kids that Christopher Columbus sailed across the ocean to find the edge of the world (which is wrong), we need to be teaching kids how to teach themselves and have self value.
As a contractor I make $40/hr developing websites for people. I didn't learn how to make websites from a school. I haven't even graduated college. I taught myself. I'm not the best developer in the world, but I am learning. I'm getting better. The only proof people needed was past experience and confidence.
The point: there are opportunities outside of $8/hr. In order to do better than $8/hr you have to have confidence in yourself and disregard what others say you are worth. You dictate your worth and impact on the world, not the education system, not the federal government, and not I. The education system and government should teach people how to find new opportunities-- they shouldn't dictate people how much they are worth.
After this little rant in my class, I was asked to give a presentation about it. Idk if I'll do it or not.
What are your thoughts?
The problem is not that rich people make money. Putting restrictions and higher taxes on rich folk will not do anything except maybe get the federal government more tax dollars to waste. These people are rich. Either they are smart enough to get around tax barriers or are rich enough to pay someone to figure it out. Once a new tax law is put into effect the rich are not going to say, "Oh, shoot, you got me. I give up. All the holes in the ship are sealed."
The real problem is that this country has embraced a culture of outsider validation. People have to ask permission from another source in order to have value. One must go through high school and get validation to say that he/she is valuable. In order to be successful, one must go through college and receive their validation via a degree.
In order to be worth more than $8/hr, one must receive validation from the government. People have become so ingrained to this thought of outsider validation, that they have to ask permission from the government to have any value.
Instead of teaching kids that Christopher Columbus sailed across the ocean to find the edge of the world (which is wrong), we need to be teaching kids how to teach themselves and have self value.
As a contractor I make $40/hr developing websites for people. I didn't learn how to make websites from a school. I haven't even graduated college. I taught myself. I'm not the best developer in the world, but I am learning. I'm getting better. The only proof people needed was past experience and confidence.
The point: there are opportunities outside of $8/hr. In order to do better than $8/hr you have to have confidence in yourself and disregard what others say you are worth. You dictate your worth and impact on the world, not the education system, not the federal government, and not I. The education system and government should teach people how to find new opportunities-- they shouldn't dictate people how much they are worth.
After this little rant in my class, I was asked to give a presentation about it. Idk if I'll do it or not.
What are your thoughts?