Rodelyne Samule – Capitalist in America

  1. Which statistic on wealth inequality in the US (discussed on p. 29) made the biggest impression on you? Explain why?

I think all of the statistics made big impression on me. However, the one that made the biggest one is the one of the U.S Census Bureau income studies. They said these studies refer to the “richest 20 percent” who earn thirteen times more than the poorest 20 percent. The author stated that if you made $350K ore more you are not considered as be part of the richest people. Per the author this income does not represent great wealth. First of all, I thought that someone with this yearly income was rich. I am surprised that 350K is part of the working class. Secondly, I did not think the 1 percent richest people were only 145,000 individuals or the 400 richest Americans were only billionaires and also the gap between rich and poor was so enormous. I always knew Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk were the richest people. Nevertheless, I thought there was a scale in a descending order of thousands multi billionaires, single billionaires, thousands multi millionaires, thousands of single millionaires etc. This makes me review my idea about some people that I thought who were rich and they are not. And it makes me think that percentage of chance for someone in the working class to move up to that 1% is very difficult, even impossible.

  1. What could be some of the implications of living in a society that has such huge wealth inequalities? Do you see this dynamic getting played out in everyday life in our society? How so? Example?

The implications due such huge wealth inequalities in a society are really important. The inequalities in wealth caused a lot of issues that can be destructive for a society. Because for people that are low paid, they cannot afford what they need to survive. As financial power is only on a small percentage hand, prices of all essentials tend to be manipulated. Those essentials are: Food, fuel, housing and health care. In this inflation time for example, since the pandemic a lot of people were lay off and went on unemployment. While most of them, did not get back to work or are not working as part time. All of those essentials price went up. Rent, food, gas costs are rising. Those who own the wealth of this country manipulates the elections in their benefits. They fund campaign of who they think will be in their favor and most the time, these people get to the governmental office head. One example is, when Trump got the presidential office, the wealthy, banks, and other corporations, the tax reform package was considered a victory given its significant and permanent tax cuts to corporate profits, investment income, estate tax, and more. Financial services companies stood to see huge gains based on the new, lower corporate rate, as well as the more preferable tax treatment of some companies. Additionally, the poorest are the ones with most debts such as, credit card, student loans. Income is being spent just to pay interest on accumulated debt.

Example: If I take like 100k for nursing studies, after obtaining my bachelor, I will work to pay these loan. It will be impossible to get out the working class and can even being considered in the poor class.

Destiny Balbi

Which statistic on wealth inequality in the US (discussed on p. 29) made the biggest impression on you? Explain why?

The surplus value notion as a whole was the statistic that had the biggest impression on me. It is astounding that people, or capitalists, essentially slave their labor until they are exhausted in order to keep practically all of the profit for themselves. According to the article, capitalists can even raise surplus value by cutting the amount of time that work takes. Due to the creation of “relative surplus value,” the owner is able to earn even more money, leaving the workers with the small change and the struggle to make ends meet while the owners invest the money in bonds and investments.But the most malicious part is that the capitalists know what they are doing. They are aware that a rise in labor productivity without a corresponding rise in pay leads to a strengthening of the exploitation of workers. And they are also aware that without surplus value in general, they will lose and have nothing.

What could be some of the implications of living in a society that has such huge wealth inequalities? Do you see this dynamic getting played out in everyday life in our society? How so? Example?

Living in a society with such stark wealth disparities has some consequences, including the fact that the poor will only stay and continue to remain poor. Homelessness will increase, illnesses will spread, it will be difficult for people to get food, and people will forever continue to struggle. I believe it is obvious that the income disparity has a significant impact on how social issues are addressed in America. The growing prevalence of homelessness as a result of the wealth divide is a practical illustration of this phenomenon. Instead of using their wealth to address the issue of homelessness, many wealthy people choose to pretend that the destitute and homeless don’t exist. In our society, there are many people who must make some compromises in order to pay for necessities like bills so that they may keep leading stable lives.

Tristan Flinn 5.3

  1. The one statistic that caught me off guard was that 90 percent of Americans have little to no assets. It just makes you realize how many people are in similar lifestyles, yet every one of those lives is also completely different…
  2. I see it every day, homeless people in the subway, homeless people on drugs, outside. Not everyone is to the point where they’re homeless but it really affects me when I do see a homeless person because i see them not getting the help they deserve. Some don’t have money to pay for the medicines they need, which would cause us to be scared because they act differently. Not only are there a lot of issues with homelessness but people with low money income live meal to meal check to check, it is scary. And then there are people like Elon musk and Jeff Bezos who have enough money to help everyone, and still make money, as we learned in today’s readings.

Joseph Paige – Discussion Board 5.3

1 . To me, the most shocking statistic in the reading was the growth of the richest 400 Americans’ wealth during 2001-2008, which went from $700 billion to $1.6 Trillion. Shortly after that, the author revealed that about 145,000 Americans are “thousands of times richer than the poorest quintile.” I did some quick google searches to find what those stats look like now, and found that at the end of 2021 the 1% owned $45.9 trillion in wealth. I knew that the wealth gap was large, but I had no idea how extreme it was.

2. I think its clear that the wealth gap plays a huge role in how social issues are treated (or ignored) in America. The reading even mentioned this. Because of the donations by corporations and billionaires to political campaigns, their interests are often given much higher priority, to the point where many normal people feel that there isn’t a truly effect way to have their voices heard.

A real world example of the wealth gap’s dynamic is the increase in anti-homeless architecture in New York City, especially in wealthy areas. Many wealthy people like to pretend that the poor and homeless don’t exist rather than use their money to help fix the problem of homelessness. The increased number of homeless people being forcibly removed from subway stations where they sleep is another example of this.

Discussion Board 5.3

  1. Which statistic on wealth inequality in the US (discussed on p. 29) made the biggest impression on you? Explain why?
  2. What could be some of the implications of living in a society that has such huge wealth inequalities? Do you see this dynamic getting played out in everyday life in our society? How so? Example?