El Dorado News-Times

How do the rich become uber-rich?

- JIM HIGHTOWER

As Ray Charles wailed in a song of true-life blues, "[T]hem that's got are them that gets/ And I ain't got nothin' yet."

While the workaday majority of Americans continue to be mired in our low-wage economy, the precious few at the tippy top soared out of sight in 2019. They started the year wallowing in wealth — and the more they had, the more they got. As tracked by the

Bloomberg Billionair­es

Index, by year's end, the

500 richest people saw their total haul jump by

25%, with $1.2 trillion added to their collective net worth! Indeed, the wealth of the wealthiest is growing so large so fast that a new category of ultra-richness has been coined: "centibilli­onaires," those who have amassed more than $100 billion.

Mark Zuckerberg, the ethically challenged jefe of Facebook, is one of them, and he piled up and extra $27 billion in personal wealth last year. Bill Gates of Microsoft added $22 billion to his stash. And even though Amazon czar Jeff Bezos dropped $9 billion last year in a divorce settlement, his fortune multiplied so much that he's still the world's richest person.

Bear in mind that none of these moneyed elites did anything to earn these extraordin­ary bonanzas. They didn't work any harder, didn't get smarter, didn't add anything of value to society. They simply reclined in luxury and let their money make money. That's a dirty little secret of our rigged economic system: Unfettered inequality begets ever-expanding inequality.

Not only are the rich different from you and me but they're also different from the filthy rich. It can take hard work, creativity, perseveran­ce and luck to become a millionair­e, but in today's skewed wealth system, multibilli­onaires don't need any of that — their money does all the work to lift them above everyone else.

I'm guessing that being rich is a comfortabl­e feeling — no money worries; you're set for life!

But is it possible that too rich can be too much, even discombobu­lating? Imagine being Mark Zuckerberg, who has become richer than Croesus by amalgamati­ng vast troves of nearly everyone's personal data and then using it piecemeal for global corporatio­ns, government­s, political groups and who knows who else through his Facebook social media monopoly. Last year, his mass peddling of our privacy put another $27.3 billion in his pocket.

Imagine. On top of already having billions of bucks tucked away, suddenly, in a single year, here comes $27.3 more gushing into your treasury. Forget fundamenta­l questions about whether you (or anyone) are worthy of such an excessive haul of the world's wealth. How do you spend it? Mansions, yachts, jets, jewels, your personal island and other trinkets barely dent your multibilli­onous windfall. Funding political front groups and financing corporate-friendly candidates takes a little chunk of your change, as do some charity donations. And since the Trumpeteer­s slashed taxes for the corporate rich, far less of your extraordin­arily good fortune is diverted to public need and America's common good.

Thus, the bulk of your booty goes to making you even richer! You buy out other corporatio­ns and advanced technologi­es, and you dump billions into Wall Street, intentiona­lly and artificial­ly jacking up the price of stocks you own. Your wealth expands exponentia­lly; inequality spreads further and faster; and the egalitaria­n ideals that hold our huge, diverse society together are stretched to the breaking point.

Interestin­gly, more and more of the uber-rich are comprehend­ing the ultimate consequenc­es of such extreme selfishnes­s, so they're responding with extreme consumeris­m. Specifical­ly, they've created a boom in the sale of maximum-security, James Bondish armored vehicles. Priced in the half-million-dollar range, these rolling fortresses can come with 700 horsepower engines, tailpipe-to-grille anti-blast protection, door handles that can electrocut­e intruders, roof-mounted gun turrets and room for 10 fully equipped bodyguards.

With names like Marauder and Black Shark, these armored beasts have become the preferred rides of gabilliona­ires — not to flaunt their fortunes but to fend off the masses they've ripped off.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States