Yes, Joni Ernst is an extremist, thank you - Hullabaloo

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Bill Moyers on The Lives of the Very Very Rich, by @Gaius_Publius

Posted on 9:00 AM by kitkat boom
Bill Moyers on The Lives of the Very Very Rich

by Gaius Publius

Near the bottom of this piece is one of those videos I mentioned a bit ago, ones I've been saving to show. This is about the very very rich. Most people don't have any idea what the very very rich — the "billionaire class" as Bernie Sanders calls them — actually live like. Consider this chart, starting from the bottom:


The bottom line shows what people think is the ideal wealth distribution. But since they know the distribution is out of whack, they take their best guess at how out of whack things are, shown in the middle line. No one has a clue, it seems, that the top line is what's really going on. In other words (rounding slightly):
  • Ideal: Top 20% owns 30% of all American wealth.
  • Best guess: Top 20% owns 60% of all American wealth.
  • In reality: Top 20% owns 85% of all American wealth.
Now look at the top 1% and you see vast differences in the various strata, the layers. For example, this is from 2011 data (again slightly rounded):
  • Average income of Top 0.01% — $23,800,000
  • Average income of the rest of the Top 0.1% —  $2,800,000
  • Average income of the rest of the Top 1% — $1,020,000
  • Average income of the rest of the Top 10% — $161,000
If you just looked at the top 1% as a whole, that huge gap between the 0.01% (the "1% of the 1%") and everyone else really skews the averages. You have to look at the segments individually to see them properly.

To show that in another way, if there were only 100 total people in the Top 1%, the top one person in that group would take in almost $24 million per year. The next nine would average only $2.8 million. The remaining 90 people would average just $1 million each. That one person is a king.

The Wealth Disparity at the Top is Huge and Belongs to Just a Few

Keep that income gap of nearly 10-to-1 between the Top 0.01% and the rest of the One-Percent in mind. Now let's look at the population size. If there are 150 million individual (non-corporate) IRS returns filed each year (very close; see Table 2; pdf), there are 1.5 million in the 1%, and 15,000 in the 0.01%. Of these, roughly 500 are already billionaires by wealth.

Five hundred billionaires, 15,000 people all averaging nearly $24,000,000 per year, and every group below them averages about a tenth or less in earnings. Look at that list above, and notice the bottom bullet. Everyone from the top 2% through the top 10% averages less than $200,000 per year — 1/120th of our lucky 15,000.

Why point this out? Because people have no idea what life for the 15,000 is actually like, much less life for someone in the David Koch class. When we think of the wealthy, we imagine MacMansions blown big; we conjure pictures we've seen from wealthier neighborhoods, and we just ... scale up a bit. We see monster Cadillac SUVs and say, "Ah, the very rich." People who live like us, but with more stuff.

We know that this can't be true, quite, but it can't be off by too much, right? And then we go on with our lives.

One Reason We Don't Have Revolutions

Our image of the very very rich — MacMansions, only scaled up; nice cars, only pricier; like us, but with more toys — is very very wrong. It's also one reason we haven't had a class revolt since the New Deal era. Chris Rock talked about it in the context of Ferguson:
[Q] For all the current conversation about income inequality, class is still sort of the elephant in the room. 

[Rock] Oh, people don’t even know. If poor people knew how rich rich people are, there would be riots in the streets. If the average person could see the Virgin Airlines first-class lounge, they’d go, “What? What? This is food, and it’s free, and they … what? Massage? Are you kidding me?”
Except even he doesn't scale up enough. These people never ride first class because they never fly commercial. He rides first class; they own airplanes. They don't own homes, they own estates — so many of them in fact that not one is "home" in the normal sense. Now extend that — for most of these people, not one country is home either.

You and me, we live in a city. Chris Rock, he lives in a city and travels a lot. Real Money lives in the world, everywhere, all of it. And most are loyal to none of it.

Bill Moyers Shows How "Real Money" Lives — In Their "Private Snow Globe"

Now the film. It's about the lives of the very very rich, the places they buy to rarely live in, and how they're transforming cities like New York. Enjoy.



From the transcript, a tease (italics mine):
BILL MOYERS: A private city in the sky for the rich -- the very, very rich. As Goldberger wrote: “if you seek a symbol of income inequality, look no farther than 57th Street.”

PAUL GOLDBERGER: They’re mostly the international super-rich. It’s a whole category of people. Most people are living there part time and have other residences either in this region, or elsewhere in the US or elsewhere in the world, or all of the above. And they’re people who can afford to spend l0, 15, 20, 30 million dollars on an apartment. ...

BILL MOYERS: The penthouse apartment is under contract for a reported $90 million. The hedge fund tycoon behind the deal told The New York Times he thought “it would be fun” to own “the Mona Lisa of apartments,” although he has no intention of living there. ...

PAUL GOLDBERGER: There’s a prominent real estate appraiser in New York who referred to these buildings as safe deposit boxes in the sky. Places where people put cash and they rarely visit themselves.

BILL MOYERS: So think of them as plush Swiss banks, with maid service, for people who, as one critic wrote, “see the city as their private snow globe.” When this building, 432 Park Avenue, is finished next year, it will surpass even One57, climbing 150 feet taller than the Empire State Building before its spire.

No pharaoh ever dreamed on so grand a scale. Each tower is a feat of technological, economic and political engineering. Promoted to the very rich as the very best.
Note the amazing images; the text can't do them justice. Note also the hubris, the mark of the billionaire class.

These people control most aspects of public life. Whether you live poorly or well, you work so they can be richer. You're fired when they want you fired. You're killed — in their wars; by their poisons; by their unaffordable health care system; by your poverty; by their police — when they want you to die.

Like fish in water, you live with their greed every day. You watch their propaganda (we call it "entertainment"). You vote for their candidates. Their touch and reach is everywhere, yet they're invisible to us. The key to their destruction is to expose their lives to view.

I've talked about "collapse" — social, political, climatological — most recently on Virtually Speaking. When collapses come, they usually come fast. The last time we came close was the Depression. If we're poised on the cusp of another, god help us ... no one will have fun then, not us, not them. But if things do break apart, it won't be for lack of patience on our side, but hubris on theirs. They will have forced it themselves ... unless they're stopped.

GP

.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • QOTD: "I obviously did not mean what I clearly said"
    QOTD: "I obviously did not mean what I clearly said" by digby Oh wait, he didn't mean that either: Charles Krauthammer had a ...
  • QOTD: Bob Corker
    QOTD: Bob Corker by digby Let's forget about all that oversight nonsense, shall we? "To me, Congress having oversight certainly is ...
  • QOTD: Wingnut hysterics
    QOTD: Wingnut hysterics by digby I've got your freedom loving, anti-government tyranny patriots for you right here : On a long and inter...
  • Why we still fight
    This post will stay at the top of the page for a while.  Please scroll down for new material. Why we still fight by digby Since it's Hol...
  • Why not hire a professional liar to tell the "truth"?
    Why not hire a professional liar to tell the "truth"? by digby   So, I'm watching Wolf Blitzer chat up former CIA honcho Bill ...
  • Why what we saw was totally not torture by @BloggersRUs
    Why what we saw was totally not torture by Tom Sullivan All the news about the CIA torture program reminded me of those batches of FBI email...
  • A little sunshine burns the suits
    A little sunshine burns the suits by digby Think Progress reports: After leaked emails in the Sony hack showed unequal pay between male and ...
  • Why you ... you want to punish success! by @BloggersRUs
    Why you ... you want to punish success! by Tom Sullivan I wanted to follow up on Steve Fraser's comments to Bill Moyers . Fraser is wo...
  • QOTD: Chris Matthews
    QOTD: Chris Matthews by digby Today on Chris Christie: I sort of liked his style in the beginning before I realized it was for real, you kno...
  • What can possibly excuse the police abusing a blind man?
    What can possibly excuse the police abusing a blind man? by digby Does it get any more callous that this? On August 27th at approximately 8...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2015 (157)
    • ►  January (157)
  • ▼  2014 (343)
    • ▼  December (217)
      • Biggest scandal of 2015?
      • Conservative strategery, feature not bug edition
      • I have no idea what I'm doing so put me in charge
      • It looks as though the big, bad gummint has some f...
      • A turning point?
      • What's left of our schools once the Midas cult mov...
      • All too predictable
      • Dispatch from torture nation, year end wrap up
      • "Law and Order" gets renewed for another season #I...
      • An NYPD work stoppage?
      • Education: Testing the testers by @BloggersRUs
      • So you don't have to ...
      • It's time to play Guess The Village Scion
      • A quote from a presidential candidate
      • And they have a different word for everything too!
      • The revolutionaries of evunthelibrul you-know-what
      • Protesters aren't giving up
      • Accountability and obeisance by @BloggersRUs
      • The GOP crazy train left the station long ago
      • When is Giuliani time going to be over?
      • QOTD: crazy lefty edition
      • Sunday Funnies
      • There's no need to parse race and class and inequa...
      • 2015: Imagine greater by @BloggersRUs
      • Saturday Night at the Movies: Dennis Hartley's Top...
      • Don't lose your nerve
      • Is the GOP coming around or just changing strategies?
      • Insults fly across the continents
      • What was that they were saying about "the tree of ...
      • No biggie
      • Addicted to fear by @BloggersRUs
      • Who's the real Scrooge here?
      • Don't tell Rush, but his favorite heroes aren't real
      • Does Bedford Falls need an armored vehicle?
      • 10 years ago today
      • More police professionalism
      • What's in a racial label? by @BloggersRUs
      • If we want it ...
      • "Get the kid his peaches"
      • I found Zuzu's petals
      • Christmas monsters
      • They said there'd be snow at Christmas
      • We love a good redemption story by @BloggersRUs
      • A little Christmas Eve treat
      • "Let the children enjoy this night tonight. Tomor...
      • There are acts of patriotism and then there's this
      • Trump-l'œil
      • A Huckleberry Christmas Question
      • Rewarding failure by design? by @BloggersRUs
      • I'm not sure I agree with you a hundred percent on...
      • Reflexively whining at criticism doesn't breed res...
      • QOTD: Rand Paul
      • They've got a prince, a couple of doctors and a bu...
      • I try not to sing out of key
      • Human sacrifice economics
      • Rolling boxcars
      • Why you ... you want to punish success! by @Blogge...
      • The mayor's mistake
      • FYI: no criticizing of the government allowed
      • I happen to have the founders right here ...
      • Hateful talk in glass houses
      • Guns, cops and freedom
      • Fables of freedom by @BloggersRUs
      • With a secret service elf in tow
      • Learning from Gitmo
      • When the authorities get hysterical they make them...
      • Sam Brownback's supply-side snake oil continues to...
      • Your little darlings are their cash cows by @Blogg...
      • Saturday Night at the Movies by Dennis Hartley: Cu...
      • Daddy, may I? #forcedchildbirthedition
      • So the "I was only following orders" defense now o...
      • Why we still fight
      • Merry Christmas, punk
      • Glenn Greenwald on independent blogging
      • Whistling towards Dixie by @BloggersRUs
      • Baby please come home (for the last time)
      • Don't fool with Mother Nature
      • And yet they insist that America never executed an...
      • It's that time again --- Holiday Fundraiser at Hul...
      • The sanctimonious hypocrisy is almost too much to ...
      • Teaching and Table-Waiting by tristero
      • Why what we saw was totally not torture by @Blogge...
      • Stevie we hardly knew ye
      • The torture queen and the black muslim plot
      • Doctors without boundaries. When will the medical ...
      • The 50 caliber nutcracker
      • America didn't cave. Hollywood didn't cave. Capita...
      • Obama Can Restore Overtime Pay to 1975 Levels With...
      • In this corner, wearing blue, Elizabeth Warren by ...
      • Historic speeches on the way out the door
      • Down the rabbit hole again
      • If we don't defend the torturers, the terrorists w...
      • QOTD: St Ronnie
      • My take on Jebbie
      • Cuba libre
      • Colbert: Going out on a slab? @BloggersRUs
      • Oh mom
      • QOTD: The first president
      • Panchito's back and Jebbie's happy
      • A gestation vessel mistakenly thinks it is human
    • ►  November (126)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

kitkat boom
View my complete profile