I define rich & poor by the money they make. Look at the tax returns of the US. If you don't consider someone "poor" because they can still live in a cave eating bugs, then that's your opinion I guess. The middle class is shrinking and we're becoming a nation of the "haves" and the "have-nots".
*** Fact Check ***
Unemployment is
not the lowest it's been in a decade.
Yearly averages according to the U.S. Department of Labor:
http://www.forecasts.org/data/data/UNRATE.htm2005- 5.12%
2004- 5.53%
2003- 5.99%
2002- 5.78%
2001- 4.75%
2000- 3.97%
1999- 4.22%
1998- 4.50%
1997- 4.94%
1996- 5.41%
Your 19th friend will be unemployed.
If Chinas economy was based on the US dollar (which it is not), how can they do so well while we're not?
www.marininstitute.org - buried in their site -
~7.4% of
full-time workers people between 18-49 years old are "problem drinkers" in the US.
Medical breakthroughs:
http://forum.arcadecontrols.com/index.php?topic=37077.0There's one arguement.
http://en.wikipedia.org/- The Sony U-matic system, introduced in Tokyo in September 1971, was the world's first commercial videocassette format.
- In 1970 the Dutch electronics company Philips developed a home videocassette format.
- Betamax was Sony (Japan) & VHS is JVC's (also Japan). Nothing to do with the US.
http://en.wikipedia.org/- The German student Paul Gottlieb Nipkow proposed and patented the first electromechanical television system in 1885.
- On March 25, 1925, Scottish inventor John Logie Baird gave a demonstration of televised silhouette images at Selfridge's Department Store in London.
- In 1928 Baird's company (Baird Television Development Company / Cinema Television) broadcast the first transatlantic television signal, between London and New York, and the first shore to ship transmission.
- Vladimir Kosma Zworykin is sometimes cited as the father of electronic television because of his invention of the iconoscope in 1923 and his invention of the kinescope in 1929. His design was one of the first to demonstrate a television system with all the features of modern picture tubes. [Zworykin was in Russia]
- A fully electronic system was first achieved by Philo Taylor Farnsworth on September 7, 1927, although the low-resolution, light-insensitive camera tube limited the image to a plate of glass painted black, with a straight line etched across it, rotated in front of a bright carbon arc lamp. Seven years later, on August 25, 1934, at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, Farnsworth gave the world's first public demonstration of a working, all-electronic television system, with 220 lines per picture, 30 pictures per second.
Look at the dates and find out who copied who.
*** End Fact Check ***
Take the USSR model. They had prisons and "rehabilitation centers". So does Cuba. You don't like Castro, you go to a "rehabilitation center".
China has a "standing army". Russia had a "standing army"
You didn't have the option of opting out of paying for them.
How is that any different than the US?
I swear that our schools are failing us in the US because they don't teach kids about investing, banking, insurance, taxes, and the stock market.
I agree with that 110%, but don't see it as the only way to profit from economic growth. Look at how much the average family is in debt. They don't have any money to invest. That's where the problem is. Not only do most people not know how to invest, the ones that do don't always have the money to do it.
That leads into my arguement about greed. If I come up with the next electronic widget and make a working prototype that will turn the world upside down, what do I do? Go into business right? Nope. I need money to protect my ideas, money to form the business, money to start production, etc. My choices are:
1- Don't make it.
2- Sell the idea.
3- Find investors.
In order for me to make "some" money, I need to make other people money too. That's stupid. The laws should be written so it's easy for the average person to protect their ideas. Patents are just too expensive. In my view, the laws are written so that the existing large corporations will make money off other peoples ideas and work. That's greed. Look at all the subsidiary companies of GE or 3M. It's out of control. It shouldn't be allowed to work that way. As an example, I'll tell you the business structure of a construction company I worked for.
- The company was not based in the US because taxes are too much here. They moved their "headquarters" to some island somewhere, but there were zero employees at that location (assuming it was even a real address).
- All their work was done in the US.
- The "Parent" company owned all the tools, desks, chairs, computers... everything. There sole "business" was renting these items to branch offices, and getting "paid back" for the investment they made by starting the subsidiary company.
- The branch offices worked out of buildings rented locally and all tools and stuff were shipped to that location.
Why you ask? Risk Management. If a building they constructed fell over and squished a child care facility in the middle of the day, the subsidiary company would be sued. What would they get sued for? Nothing. They own nothing. It's an empty shell company. What if the Parent company got sued? For what? All they did was rent stuff out. They are legally isolated.
That's how existing money can make more money with no risk. It's a top-heavy system. The average person can't compete. That's how large corporations are free to "try" something and bail out with virtually no risk to their existing "stuff". Meanwhile an entreprenuer has to mortgage his house and spend his kids college fund. Great if it works out, but it crushes them if it doesn't.
Summary: "Existing" money has waaaaay less risk than "new" money. It shouldn't be like that. The risk should be the same.