The values of the Declaration of Independence are profoundly humanitarian: All men are created equal, with inalienable rights (given by God) to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The values of trickle-down hyper-capitalistic economics are values-neutral, acknowledging no ethical responsibility to people or planet but only fiduciary responsibility to corporate stockholders.
Our generation is confronted by the need to decide between the two.
Tax cuts to the very wealthy are given under the canard that those people will then create more jobs and add to the economy.
Evidence is clearly otherwise. The 2017 tax cut - where 83 cents of every dollar went into the hands of the wealthiest Individuals and corporations - will never pay for itself. Giving tax cuts to companies already making billions in profit did not make them invest; the money mainly went to stock buybacks etc.
When corporatists talk about reducing the deficit, they are only willing to do so on the backs of the middle class and poor. They are never willing to spend money on catching wealthy tax cheats, repealing unfair tax cuts to the very wealthy, or increasing investment in things that actually support the average person in creating more wealth.
The problem is not one individual policy here or there. The problem is big picture: a state of aristocracy and corporate entitlement now baked into the cake in America - the very opposite of a free democratic society in which everyone is supposed to have a fair shot.
The current system makes a mockery of the very idea of "unalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."
As the late Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said, "We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both."
#Disruptthesystem
I don’t follow your logic. If no one applies for the role - doing so in order to change the plot - then the theatre company continues to clone itself and nothing will ever change.
You’re saying the work of a wealthy person is more inherently valuable than the work of someone who is not wealthy. I disagree. And your vision of a country in which the very very wealthy are constantly giving back to society is like a fairytale - some fanciful version of what is actually happening. That trickle down delusion has led us to where we are: the largest income inequality in over 100 years. It certainly did not lift all boats; it has left millions and millions of people without even a life vest.