thanks kicky, I appreciate your dismissiveness <3
Yes I know NPR is fair, at least overall, and makes a real effort to be fair and show all sides in its specific shows. But its regular broadcasting tends to be slanted to the left, or at least that's their reputation.
My point primarily is that poor today is not like poor 50 years ago. It's ironic that you equate sharing a television with 2 or 3 roommates with not having any television at all. Or not having indoor plumbing....
But you're right, I'm old, so who gives a ****. At your age, you have all the answers. But don't worry, you'll probably be my age someday.
And in case you missed it, I think the growing wealth and income disparity is a bad thing for our society.
Couldn't this logic be used in the reverse way as well?
Why have 12 Rolls Royce when you could get just as much enjoyment out of a 10 year old Ford Taurus?
I think we could use this logic of... "Don't complain, things were worse x amount of years ago in x country" to justify just about anything in life.
Why should we complain about religious freedom when people were being slaughtered in Spain a few hundred years ago depending on their religion?
Why should we complain about crime when you were lucky to not have your eyes gouged out by the Vandals?
The bottom line is,
#1 Americans will keep playing this game, as long as they feel like they have a chance to win. Winning is a broad description, which can be described simply as being able to provide for your family to becoming rich (climbing the ladder/earning enough to one day be able to invest into your own company). Unfortunately, for many Americans, this "American Dream" is disappearing. Many are angry at this, since the Dream of WS isn't if they're able to become rich. It's how much richer can one make oneself at any cost necessary?
#2 The biggest contribution to the disappearance of this dream? The rich/wall street/big corporations in bed (literally in some cases) with Congress. The "Corporations are People too" attitude is insulting to many of the OWS peeps. Through favorable tax laws to immigration policy to war mongering, the rich buy off Congress whose decisions have dire effects on the rest of us.
#3 How much longer can this country survive with so much of the nation's wealth owned by so few? This is a legit concern, as that the US wealth distribution looks more and more like a 3rd world country than an industrialized power house. How much longer can we maintain our standard of living with so much of the wealth shifting to the hands of the few?
But that's okay, lets not answer these questions. Lets focus, like LG has, on what's being served for dinner at the protests than any of these issues. Of course, being independent means biases cannot show.