Fears over the state of the labor market hurt consumer confidence in February, according to the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index.
I think this is a combination of inflation and employers wanting people to return to the office.
I am excited for people to return to the office as it means I can earn a lot more money.
There is nothing in the article that supports the headline. As far as I can tell, it's just another way of saying 'Americans are worry about the economy'.
I'm specifically worried about jobs, though. We need more jobs with better conditions and higher taxes on them. That sounds like a recipe for disaster, but that's only true if we continue to allow the 1% to own more than the entire middle class. An excess of private wealth necessarily leads to an excess of public squalor.
That isn’t true at all. The ultra-wealth, like Elon or Bezos, is not the reason you are poor. Their wealth is paper wealth.
For private individuals who cannot print money and cannot effect the rate that a government prints money, the economy is a zero sum game. So the rich hoarding wealth directly impacts and impoverishes the rest of us.
Do you think Elon could convert his stock to that much cash? He can’t.
Peepin made the claim, and supported it saying that the 1% own more than the entire middle class. You dismissed that, and demanded a high level of evidence for a different claim, the claim that [all the]* stock can be converted to cash.
But that wasn't the original claim. Owning stock is still a form of owning wealth, even if it isn't perfectly liquid. Peepin's claims of the 1% owning more than the middle class is true.
Cite. That goes against every economic theory I have seen.
I already supported that claim:
For private individuals who cannot print money and cannot effect the rate that a government prints money, the economy is a zero sum game.
You can't just magic a few zeros onto your bank account. Wealth has to come from somewhere. Every dollar you make selling car tires (assuming you even own said production) means that a dollar of potential sales has been used. There is a limit to how many car tires can be sold. It is for the most part a zero sum game.
That's my point. There is a limit to how many car tires can be sold. So when the rich sell more, that necessarily takes away potential sales from others. It's basically a zero sum game.
And the rich own all the factories and production. So every dollar of product they sell is a dollar of sales that goes to them. That leaves not enough for the rest of us, making us impoverished.
It is but it’s not cash
But it's wealth. And the original claim was about wealth, not cash. You are moving the goal posts, which is fallacious.
So when the rich sell more, that necessarily takes away potential sales from others
Not sure you understand how companies work. When they sell something. It doesn’t go into the pocket of Elon. It does into the funds of the company. For every Tesla sold. Elon receives zero dollars.
And the rich own all the factories and production
Elon owns zero factories. Same with bezos. Neither own any of those items.
So every dollar of product they sell is a dollar of sales that goes to them
Zero dollar goes to either one. I’m starting to see why you make the rants you make. You don’t understand shareholders or companies well.
If I buy ten teslas. Elon received zero dollars. If I spend a million dollars at Amazon bezos receives zero dollars.
When they sell something. It doesn’t go into the pocket of Elon. It does into the funds of the company. For every Tesla sold. Elon receives zero dollars.
Again, you're getting hung up on literal cash. Cash is not the only form of wealth. And the rich get their wealth from these companies. Sometimes it is literal cash, but most often it is in the form of stocks.
And the wealth these companies earn disproportionately goes to the rich, the stock holders, upper management, etc.
Elon owns zero factories. Same with bezos. Neither own any of those items.
The rich own the companies that own the production. I know you're more intelligent than this.
Zero dollar goes to either one
Again, you're getting hung up on the distinction between cash, stock, and wealth.
And the wealth these companies earn disproportionately goes to the rich, the stock holders, upper management, etc.
You mean the employee. Pension funds. 401k. I get stock as part of my job.
Also you are confusing earnings with dividends. The two are not the same. Earning go the company. They don’t go to the list you created. Earnings only go to the company.
Again, you’re getting hung up on the distinction between cash, stock, and wealth.
You mean facts and logic. The differences are important. It’s why you struggle with these topics because it’s all magic and unicorns. You don’t get why Elon is wealthy or how he became wealthy. You just want to feel he took your money but you never bought a Tesla. It’s strange thinking.
I never mentioned either of them, because i am not talking about the literal specifics of how the wealth is distributed. You have no point here.
You mean facts and logic.
No. You are getting hung up on the actual methods of how the wealth is distributed, cherrypicking the ways in which it is not as a means to say that the rich aren't extracting wealth.
Your argument relies on fallacies the whole way through.