Misfortune?

The Poor in the U.S. Live in better conditions than the AVERAGE
European...

Imagine that.


On Sep 12, 2:17 pm, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nothing to gloat over here, and less you like gloating over the
> misfortune of your own people.
>
> On Sep 13, 6:37 am, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > He is very jealous, obviously...
>
> > On Sep 12, 1:36 pm, mark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > jealous?
>
> > > On Sep 12, 4:35 pm, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > WSWS : News & Analysis : North America
> > > > The very rich in America: “The kind of money you cannot comprehend”
> > > > By David Walsh
> > > > 19 April 2006
>
> > > > Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author
>
> > > > “Let me tell you about the very rich,” F. Scott Fitzgerald famously
> > > > wrote in a 1926 story, “They are different from you and me.” But even
> > > > Fitzgerald could not have imagined how different “from you and me” the
> > > > very rich would become in America eight decades later.
>
> > > > The sums that the very wealthy have at their disposal in the US are
> > > > almost unimaginable: Oil executive Lee Raymond receiving some $400
> > > > million in a retirement package; the 2005 compensation of bank
> > > > chairman Richard Fairbank totaling some $280 million; Omid Korestani,
> > > > head of Google’s global sales, exercising stock options providing him
> > > > with $288 million last year.
>
> > > > The accumulation is brazen. What once would have been considered a
> > > > somewhat discreditable fact of social life, the proliferation of
> > > > billionaires, is now hailed as a sign of America’s success. The demise
> > > > of the Soviet Union and the supposed absence of any alternative to
> > > > capitalism, the putrefaction of the AFL-CIO trade unions, the
> > > > ignominious collapse of American liberalism and the lack to this point
> > > > of broad-based, organized political opposition to the ruling elite and
> > > > its two parties have rendered the American financial aristocracy
> > > > “dizzy with success.” These people have lost their heads.
>
> > > > In the face of public outrage over oil company profits and soaring
> > > > gasoline prices, Exxon arrogantly defended Raymond’s hundreds of
> > > > millions, arguing that they were rewarding the executive’s
> > > > “outstanding leadership of the business, continued strengthening of
> > > > our worldwide competitive position, and continuing progress toward
> > > > achieving long-range strategic goals.” The company added that it
> > > > considered Raymond’s compensation package “appropriately positioned.”
>
> > > > In a study published in October 2005, three accounting professors
> > > > reported that negative, even occasionally scathing press coverage,
> > > > “does not substantively change corporate behaviour with regard to pay
> > > > packages.” The American establishment is all but impervious to the
> > > > sentiments of the broad masses of the population. In response to a
> > > > recent report detailing the immense and growing social gap, a
> > > > spokesman for New York state’s Business Council told a reporter that
> > > > the incomes earned by his state’s rich were “something that everybody
> > > > who cares about New York should be pleased about.”
>
> > > > An insulated world of immense wealth exists as never before, at least
> > > > in modern US history. The number of Americans with assets of $1
> > > > million or more reached 7.5 million in 2004, according to a survey
> > > > conducted by the Spectrem Group. Beyond that, however, are those who
> > > > possess “Ultra High Net Worth” (a mellifluous term invented by Merrill
> > > > Lynch circa 2001): individuals in households with $5 million or more
> > > > in net worth. In a country of 300 million people, the UHNW form a very
> > > > small percentage of the population, but a not insignificant number in
> > > > absolute terms. Economic, political and cultural life in America is to
> > > > an enormous extent organized for their benefit.
>
> > > > This is not simply obscene or unjust, it is socially irrational and
> > > > immensely destructive. How is it possible to allocate resources,
> > > > repair and renew the infrastructure, carry out any type of long-term
> > > > economic planning, cure any social ills, when the official guiding
> > > > principle is the ability of an oligarchic elite to accumulate ever-
> > > > greater personal wealth? The gravitational pull of such wealth asserts
> > > > itself in every aspect of life.
>
> > > > The New York Times reported last year on a relatively new phenomenon,
> > > > magazines oriented entirely toward the very wealthy. Absolute
> > > > Publishing, the Times noted, had just started up a publication called
> > > > Absolute, “for distribution to New Yorkers with an estimated annual
> > > > household income of at least $500,000.”
>
> > > > The editor of Absolute, Ernest J, Renzulli, is aiming for an audience
> > > > of only 60,000 New York residents. He found his target readership “by
> > > > winnowing databases of the most affluent New York ZIP codes with
> > > > people who have bought houses for more than $2 million and people who
> > > > have registered cars, boats or planes that cost more than $75,000.”
>
> > > > “It’s a small number,” the Times quoted Mr. Renzulli as saying. “But
> > > > this is not a magazine that’s about mass reach. It’s about reaching
> > > > the tip of the pyramid.”
>
> > > > The Times take note of Michael Silverstein, an executive with the
> > > > Boston Consulting Group and co-author of Trading Up: The New American
> > > > Luxury. Silverstein estimates that by 2010 Americans will spend $1
> > > > trillion on luxury goods. The Times continues: “In an ever more
> > > > fragmented media world, the rich are becoming their own niche. They
> > > > may be diverse connoisseurs of fashion, yachting or jewelry, but they
> > > > share one important trait: a seemingly bottomless supply of disposable
> > > > income.”
>
> > > > It must indeed be a predicament to be saddled with tens of millions or
> > > > hundreds of millions of dollars, or more—how is one to spend such
> > > > sums? Those “awash in cash” (the Times’ phrase) must rack their brains
> > > > and devote hours to the problem. How could one ever rest? Would not a
> > > > person require a certain degree of inventiveness to come up with ways
> > > > of spending such a fortune?
>
> > > > Judging by the results in published reports—no, not particularly. By
> > > > and large, the fabulously wealthy have derived their fortunes from
> > > > inheritance, the stock market, the real estate bubble, fortunate
> > > > investments in technology or, perhaps, American militarism: in short,
> > > > from semi-automatic economic and social processes associated with the
> > > > lowering of living standards for millions in the US and the super-
> > > > exploitation of masses of people in impoverished countries in other
> > > > parts of the world. They are not startling or outstanding in any
> > > > fashion, except perhaps in the depth of their greed and
> > > > shortsightedness.
>
> > > > So we learn that Microsoft’s Paul Allen owns a $250-million, 414-foot
> > > > “gigayacht,” with seven decks, two helicopter landing pads, a swimming
> > > > pool, a basketball court, an infirmary, a garage for Land Rovers, a
> > > > movie theater, a concert space for 260 and a recording studio. Not to
> > > > be outdone, Larry Ellison of software giant Oracle had his giant yacht
> > > > built 452 feet long. Ellison’s vessel has five stories, 82 rooms, “a
> > > > wine cellar the size of most beach bungalows, a dozen yacht-length
> > > > tenders, and a generator capable of providing enough electricity for a
> > > > small town in Idaho or Maine... Final cost: $377 million.” (Associated
> > > > Press)
>
> > > > The wealthy elite are also purchasing their own widebody airplanes,
> > > > reports Business Week—Airbus A340s and Boeing 777s, which list for
> > > > over $100 million—as “airborne penthouses.” Customized outfitting may
> > > > add $25 to $30 million to the cost.
>
> > > > The “supercar” business is also thriving. Ocean Drive, one of the new
> > > > magazines aimed at the affluent, carries a piece on Michael Fux, whose
> > > > Sleep Innovations manufactures Memory Foam products. Fux has collected
> > > > some 50 luxury cars. He recently took possession of a $2 million
> > > > Ferrari FXX, one of only 20 in the world.
>
> > > > USA Today, in a piece describing the new “super-rich supercar
> > > > fanatics” who collect Ferraris and Maseratis and Bugattis, cites the
> > > > comments of one auto broker in southern California, “There’s a whole
> > > > new breed of collector that has emerged in the last three-four years.
> > > > Almost all make the kind of money you cannot comprehend.”
>
> > > > Yet great unease persists in these circles. A yacht broker told
> > > > Associated Press that “a sea change in attitude among America’s
> > > > superrich” has taken place in the wake of September 11. “Clients are
> > > > telling me, ‘Hey, I could have been in the Twin Towers. That could
> > > > have been me jumping out a window.’ The thinking among wealthy people
> > > > now is, you can die anytime. Nobody can protect you. So you might as
> > > > well spend your money now and enjoy it.”
>
> > > > Likewise, in its analysis of the trends driving the purchase of jumbo
> > > > jets by wealthy individuals, Business Week notes: “Because of
> > > > increased concern over security, especially post-September 11, some
> > > > businesspeople now use their aircraft as a base of operations on
> > > > overseas business trips. Rather than going to a hotel or office after
> > > > landing, they just stay onboard... “
>
> > > > The term “conspicuous consumption,” coined by Thorstein Veblen in The
> > > > Theory of the Leisure Class (1899), hardly does justice to the current
> > > > situation. There is a considerable element of recklessness, even
> > > > desperation, in the obsessive spending. Throwing money to the
>
> ...
>
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>
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