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MEOW
The reason for posting this article is not just to show the great disparity of wealth but to counter the frequent and bogus argument which goes something like this; "If we tax the rich we'll all end up poor."
As the article explains the majority of Americans have no idea how much money the wealthy actually have. This has a bearing on people making erroneous comments such as "The deficit is too high. We can't afford a medical plan. We can't tax the wealthy any more." The truth is we can tax the wealthy more. A lot more and they will still be wealthy.
The country can afford a medical plan. The country can afford to feed and house the needy. The money is there. Unfortunately, people don't know/understand that.
(Excerpt) In the poll, the vast majority of Americans across the political, gender and wealth spectrum displayed a markedly skewed understanding of how America's money is divided. On average, respondents though that the rich hold only 58% of the nation's wealth, 32% less than their actual holdings. They thought that the middle class controls 13% of the country's wealth, more than three times their actual holdings. As for the bottom 40% of the population, the assumption was that the lower class and poor own a measly 9% of the country's wealth. In reality, these two groups control about one thirtieth of that amount. (End)
http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/a...-wealth-redistribution/19684224/?ncid=webmail
As the article explains the majority of Americans have no idea how much money the wealthy actually have. This has a bearing on people making erroneous comments such as "The deficit is too high. We can't afford a medical plan. We can't tax the wealthy any more." The truth is we can tax the wealthy more. A lot more and they will still be wealthy.
The country can afford a medical plan. The country can afford to feed and house the needy. The money is there. Unfortunately, people don't know/understand that.
(Excerpt) In the poll, the vast majority of Americans across the political, gender and wealth spectrum displayed a markedly skewed understanding of how America's money is divided. On average, respondents though that the rich hold only 58% of the nation's wealth, 32% less than their actual holdings. They thought that the middle class controls 13% of the country's wealth, more than three times their actual holdings. As for the bottom 40% of the population, the assumption was that the lower class and poor own a measly 9% of the country's wealth. In reality, these two groups control about one thirtieth of that amount. (End)
http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/a...-wealth-redistribution/19684224/?ncid=webmail