• GladiusB@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      We did it for a hundred years without the gap being that big. I credit greed as the problem.

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        Society is driven by material conditions, not people and ideas. Capitalism’s competitive nature drove itself to increasingly exploitative measures.

        • Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Which can only happen when markets and corporations are deregulated.

          A 20% increase in worked productivity should result in a 20% increase in employee compensation under the force of law.

          Executive compensation should be limited to 3-5x the average or median employee compensation (whichever is lower) under the force of law.

          Corporations are not people and should not be given the same rights as people, such as the right to free speech. If we are going to treat them as people, then any action that would result in a person going to jail for 5 years should result in a 5 year ban on doing business. Crimes like…oh, I don’t know… killing 1000s of people or causing millions to lose their homes should be punished by permanent dissolution.

          All workers, from janitors to executives, should be compensated via the same medium. If the exec gets paid in stock them everyone does. If the janitor is paid hourly/salary, then everyone is. Again, all under the force of law.

          The highest marginal tax rate should be 100%. No individual should have access to $1 billion. That last penny in the millions and every cent afterward is totally taxed. You won capitalism. Congratulations.

          I really do think that humanity is innately both cooperative and competitive l. Harnessing that cooperation is a proven and highly effective means of sriving society forward. Harnessing that competitiveness is a proven and highly effective means of improving material conditions within thay society, AS LONG AS THE PLAYING FIELD IS LEVEL.

          Nobody wants to watch a sporting event where 1 team has to play handcuffed. That might be a bad analogy. The more I think about it that could be funny. But if it was always the same team that had to wear them, it’d get old pretty fast.

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            9 months ago

            Everything you’ve said assumes the playing field was at one point fair to begin with, really.

            Don’t get me wrong, I would much prefer a more regulated Capitalism than what we have now. However, what we have now is a result of Capitalism and the power of accumulation it has, as those in power stack the deck in their favor. To rely on good people in government fighting back against Capitalists is to rely on hopes, not plans.

            Workers should share ownership, without a Capitalist. Plain and simple.