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Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Bill Murchison :: Townhall.com Columnist
Money, Money, Money
by Bill Murchison
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


It's beat-up-on-the-rich time in America: a cheap alternative to paying a veterinarian's bill for the dog you just kicked violently upon checking your 401(k) statement.

This, too, will pass, along with the recession, that's to say. The sun will break through the clouds, and we'll return to being a nation of strivers, with a built-in delight in acquisition, and in enjoyment of the fruits thereof.

Meanwhile President Obama denounces "shameful" bonuses doled out to Wall Street ex-geniuses, sets a half-million-limit on executive compensation at companies taking federal handouts. Street corner conversation turns -- inevitably, I would venture -- to the sheer tactlessness represented by jaunts in corporate jets (Chrysler, Ford and GM executives), $1.2 million office remodels (Bank of America's John Thain), and everything Bernie Madoff said or did while running his alleged Ponzi scheme.

All the ranting and raging have their healthy side, so long as we, the people, don't take it too far -- the way they did, say, in the French Revolution. (Not that the Revolution put a stop to wealth creation in France, or anywhere else!) Reminders of wealth's excesses -- and of the peculiar stupidities of particular rich people -- belong up front in public discourse. It would be an awful thing to forget that virtue neither comes with big money nor can be purchased at any price. All this we learn from daily living.

The thing is, we can't ever do without the rich, bitterly as we may despise them. Wealth, proportionate or disproportionate to effort and merit, is what comes of exertion. If you want to abolish wealth, abolish exertion, but you probably wouldn't want to, because then life would stop. Everything would run down. "Let us then be up and doing," Longfellow urged. He knew whereof he spoke. To be up and doing is to be inventing and creating. For invention and creation there have to be rewards. If the rewards are so great they make some spectators wrinkle their noses in disgust, so what? Let them be up and doing.

The reason capitalism displeases (bonuses, jets, etc.) is that it's such a human enterprise. Humans tend to overreach, and to preen. On the other hand, their preening can do the rest of us good if they invent or offer something that conduces to the general good: from a better mousetrap to a car than runs on electricity or a five-course dinner so filling, and fulfilling, you hate to rise from the table. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Murchison is a senior columns writer for The Dallas Morning News and author of There's More to Life Than Politics.
 
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Now wait a minute
Besides the democrats endless lying about their own superwealth centers and millions spilling out of their designer wear, and their endless pretending that only republicans schmooze with the deep pockets, there has been a continuing problem.
The problem has been the absolute losers that have run companies into the ground, while lying to all about how well they were doing, and after the debacle becomes apparent, rewarded with gigantic bonuses and options, and some kind of rear end kissing send off, party, speeches, lies and all.
One certainly doesn't have to hate any rich person to instantly dislike that sort of oft recurring situation. We are all aware at this point is standard operating procedure. It smacks of an elitist, snooty, polite society, a delusory social order, whereby "taking care of your own greater lot", above all the chattle, is the "rule".
They somehow pretend they are all wonderful no matter what.
In any case, the sane people realize if you utterly blow it for the team while lying in every way to avoid anyone outside the inner circle finding out, and then when exposed get some sort of endless praise and a gigantic bonus to boot, why it's just plain WRONG.
See, that's the real problem.
The next DISGUSTING spew we all have had to put up with is the same sordid crew of apparent criminal minds, wince and whine that if such trainfuls of cash aren't continuously doled out, we just won't get quality people.( They therefore seem to use the undeserved golden parachute bonuses to brainwash themselves into forgetting the just passed disastrous incompetence of company governance. )
The final conclusion of course is, not a bit of integrity and not an ounce of shame, or restraint.
That, perhaps, is the REAL CORE of "hating the rich".
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