I'm all for incentive, and I'm a capitalist. However, the flaw I refer to nags at me, and it should you as well.
But it's not a FLAW, it's a perfectly natural occurrence. Even if we had a way to take all the wealth in the world and equally distribute it between every man, woman, and child on the planet, so that everyone has exactly the same amount of wealth... within a matter of MONTHS there would again be a disparity between the 'rich' and 'poor'. As soon as you divided all the resources, the people who are more motivated to earn money and create wealth, would go to work doing just that, while those who were not motivated, would squander their money and again be in the same boat they are now. This is human nature. If there is ANY 'flaw' it is that some humans are less motivated to be successful, and I don't know how that can ever be fixed.
What you are failing to do is to extrapolate out the current trend - whether policies you advocate are implemented or not. History has never seen a sequestering of wealth on this scale, not even close. What we are going to end up with is a society where very, very few people have a lot of money - and the rest are basically poor or middle class.
Again, why is the wealth being sequestered? It's because capitalists would rather sequester wealth than render it vulnerable to confiscatory policy. I want you to think about this for a moment, just set aside politics for a sec, and think... Do you really believe capitalists want consumers who are broke? All of these companies who are making "record-setting profits" and socking away all this wealth.... do you honestly believe they want their consumers to be broke and poor? Do you think those "rich people" who don't produce jobs, and just sit there hoarding their wealth, actually want to see the economy collapse and the dollar to be devalued to nothing? Can you even find any imaginable reason they would desire this?
So we can agree, most people don't want that to happen. Most people don't want people to be poor or unsuccessful. Those are not reasons to destroy a system that allows people to become as successful as they want. You see, in your jealous envy of "the rich" you don't comprehend your solution is to have the rich be no different than someone living in poverty, in fact, you want a system where we
all live in poverty, and no one has wealth or can obtain it. In your mind, such a system might be unfortunate and hard, but it would be 'fair' and everyone would have 'equality' in wealth.
It's not a system that really works for everyone, whether you like it or not. You can say it's a great system, because there is a chance you can get rich - but as time goes by, that chance will look more & more like winning the lottery. As it stands today, only 4% of Americans who start out in the lower classes become wealthy.
Oh but it
IS a system that really works for everyone! That's the whole difference between my thinking and yours, and I am so glad you pointed this out! Do you remember 'Stories4U' from a few years back? Awesome conservative poster, who had some of the most amazing ways of making a point with a story... One day, he posted a thread, I can't recall the title, but it was about how ANYONE could make $100k a year legally, with no college, no unusual talent, no particular skill, and only work a few hours a day, several days a week. For days, he had pinheads snarking comments of ridicule going, piquing their curiosity for what seemed forever... then he finally disclosed what this miracle job was... Story-telling! Going around to libraries and civic groups, telling stories of heritage, cultures, whatever you are interested in or connected with... his was Native American history. He made up to $200 an appearance, and did about 500 or so per year. His point was absolutely brilliant, and it's the point I like to make as well... We are fortunate enough to live in a country where anyone CAN become a success. (Note: Not "everyone" is
capable of becoming a success, this system doesn't exist in reality.)
And let's talk about your 4% figure... seems to me, that's 4x higher than the 1%... they are doing pretty well at keeping up!
Again... people are all different. We have rich people who are unmotivated to earn wealth and become more wealthy. (I am one.) We also have poor people who are very motivated to earn wealth. Not everyone who is rich is getting richer, not everyone who is poor will remain in poverty. Regardless of what socioeconomic background you come from, or what race you are, or what hardships you face in life, you either HAVE the motivation to succeed or you DON'T. Those who do have this motivation, VERY OFTEN succeed in America. In fact, it's almost a given. This is impossible in the type of system you advocate for. What you desire, is a system that takes from the successful and gives to the unmotivated. The result: The motivated become unmotivated.