Subject: He also doesn't do any work.
Author:
Posted on: 2022-08-24 04:42:22 UTC

However, that doesn't mean the government should effectively have the power to decide that they have too much. The government should not be able to tell an individual "You have enough money now, so the rest is ours". Even if Bezos is overpayed for his work, the government didn't do any work.

Who will determine whether or not Bezos has too much money, then? Since clearly Bezos does not believe he has too much money. Other people have already contextualised how much money he has in relation to the rest of us, and unless the Ghosts of Christmas exist, he's not going to suddenly decide he has too much money and give the excess away.

Second point: the rich will leave. If John Q. Billionaire will be taxed at 90%, what's to stop him from leaving the country before the bill that implements the 90% tax ecomes law? Why should he let the government takes his money?

Real estate holdings in the US are too valuable for them to leave. Most of the richest people in the world already hold vast swathes of their money in offshore accounts or in states without as stringent tax laws (South Dakota, Texas, Delaware, etc).

The United States' infrastructure is crumbling and its education system is failing. Teachers are underpaid and roads and bridges need updating (and don't get me started on building ventilation in light of the spread of COVID). Tax money goes to repairing these issues. Do I trust the current administration to allocate responsibly? No, not really. But I trust Bezos and friends with that money even less.

Also for your responses to me: Are you implying that he personally underpays Amazon workers? Because I honestly have no clue as to the statistics there. I don’t think Amazon has a workers’ union, but I don’t think the government needs to act as one. If he does run out of workers, then he’ll have no choice but to pay them higher (or outsource overseas). Or, customers could protest the unfair wages as well by boycotting.

Amazon workers are trying to unionize, and Bezos is pouring millions of dollars into union-busting efforts so that he can continue to exploit them. I have no faith in him deciding he'll pay his workers more. The labour in this case is for his fulfillment centres, which have to be on US soil since that's where the items are sorted to get to customers.

Boycotting Amazon is more difficult than you think, given Amazon also has web services that control a good deal of the Internet, not to mention all of its subsidiaries. If boycotting is your only line of defense against exploitative capitalism, you are going to run out of things to consume very quickly.

The government shouldn't have to be a worker's union, but capitalists putting profits over people means currently the only way for big corporations to play ball is legislating for regulation. I'm sceptical of the government, but at least I can have a say in who I put in charge of it.

By the way, what would you consider a “fair share” of taxes on a theoretical person who earns a billion dollars a year? In numbers.

hS has a point. Bezos could give away 90% of a billion and still have enough to live off of, considering he's making more money you and I will ever see in a year each minute.

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