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āā¦A group of about 400 EPA employees have signed a public letter sent Monday to Zeldin claiming the Trump administration is ignoring science to the benefit of corporate polluters. Zeldin is āfundamentally changing the mission of the EPA when he focuses on industry needs above human health and the environment,ā said Amelia Hertzberg, an environmental-protection specialist at the EPA who signed the letter. She said she was put on administrative leave in February.
Voter roles
Remember those personal data files stolen by Elonās thugs? Told yāall. Worse to come. Got us by the short hair.The Trump administration is building a national citizenship system
āThe Trump administration has built a searchable national citizenship data system. The tool is designed to be used by state and local election officials to ensure only citizens are voting. But it was developed rapidly without a public process, and some of those officials are already worrying about what else it could be used for.ā
Thatās where Iām at. Iām a firm believer in capitalism as a conduit of creation, innovation, entrepreneurship, business-building, etc., so Iām also a firm believer in the ability to make immense amounts of money as an incentive to the above.On a spiritual level, I agree that there shouldn't be billionaires. In my perspnal opinion, anyone with that kind of wealth should be furiously donating as their full time preoccupation. It's obscene to have that kind of money and not want to help as many people as possible.
Sounds as if youāre friends with Bill Gates.Thatās where Iām at. Iām a firm believer in capitalism as a conduit of creation, innovation, entrepreneurship, business-building, etc., so Iām also a firm believer in the ability to make immense amounts of money as an incentive to the above.
That said, I also think that wealth/assets/income above a certain high threshold (say, at a net worth or asset value of $1B) should be appropriately taxed at a high rate. Thereās no earthly need or reason for any human being to have $1B+. Itās just not necessary. You can still live one of the most lavish lifestyles in the history of humanity onā¦.several hundred millionā¦.all while getting the altruistic benefit of knowing that your immense wealth has made a major impact on society. This notion of billionaire assholes hoarding wealth and trying to destroy American democracy because they donāt want to pay taxes is, in my estimation, a relatively new phenomenon. Back in the day, comparative billionaires like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morgan, etc. etc. gifted things like libraries, hospitals, educational institutions, etc. instead of, you know, trying to dismantle on American democracy and establishing a technofeudal state.
In my line of work, I work with HNW to UHNW folks on financial planning, wealth management, estate planning, philanthropic planning, etc. and am always surprised at how much more naturally generous are the folks with the seven figure and low eight figure NWās are than the folks with the high-eight and nine figure net worths. Although I can share one feel-good anecdote about one guy I work with, who last year sold a biotechnology/pharmaceutical company he co-founded 20 years ago for $7B, and is now, by definition, a billionaire in his late 40ās (and fully retired, obviously). Heās got a house in Mexico and a house in Park City, and he and his family want to travel internationally a lot, but otherwise his mission for his money is to give the vast majority of it away in his lifetime.
What the fuck do they think this accomplishes? Other than kissing trumps ass? Are they really this scared of trump?
I thought your username was an indication of your billionaire status...Personally, Iām āa man of means by no meansā.
I've said it before. The enemy of capitalism Is greed. If you are expecting the wealthy to donate their money you're kidding yourself. Some do but that's because they only care about their legacy.Sounds as if youāre friends with Bill Gates.. Have no problem with billionaires⦠particularly if they earned it. But those who receive the most from the system should be willing to give more back to society that made their good fortune possible. Now days owning most of wealth is not enough⦠they want it all. Personally, Iām āa man of means by no meansā.
YesThe first thing we need to do is change the political campaigning system.
The system does changeā¦every time a red state legislature meets there are fewer eligible voters . Soon weāll have the Putin system and every general election will be a big beautiful landslide. Then the evangelicals can say amen.The first thing we need to do is change the political campaigning system.
Agree. I've got my own theory about these new-money billionaires:Thatās where Iām at. Iām a firm believer in capitalism as a conduit of creation, innovation, entrepreneurship, business-building, etc., so Iām also a firm believer in the ability to make immense amounts of money as an incentive to the above.
That said, I also think that wealth/assets/income above a certain high threshold (say, at a net worth or asset value of $1B) should be appropriately taxed at a high rate. Thereās no earthly need or reason for any human being to have $1B+. Itās just not necessary. You can still live one of the most lavish lifestyles in the history of humanity onā¦.several hundred millionā¦.all while getting the altruistic benefit of knowing that your immense wealth has made a major impact on society. This notion of billionaire assholes hoarding wealth and trying to destroy American democracy because they donāt want to pay taxes is, in my estimation, a relatively new phenomenon. Back in the day, comparative billionaires like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morgan, etc. etc. gifted things like libraries, hospitals, educational institutions, etc. instead of, you know, trying to dismantle on American democracy and establishing a technofeudal state.
In my line of work, I work with HNW to UHNW folks on financial planning, wealth management, estate planning, philanthropic planning, etc. and am always surprised at how much more naturally generous are the folks with the seven figure and low eight figure NWās are than the folks with the high-eight and nine figure net worths. Although I can share one feel-good anecdote about one guy I work with, who last year sold a biotechnology/pharmaceutical company he co-founded 20 years ago for $7B, and is now, by definition, a billionaire in his late 40ās (and fully retired, obviously). Heās got a house in Mexico and a house in Park City, and he and his family want to travel internationally a lot, but otherwise his mission for his money is to give the vast majority of it away in his lifetime.