holy shit, you’re not going to believe this, but I met the author at a hostel in Mexico City. He’s a really cool dude, friendly, funny, and pretty interesting overall. I actually totally forgot about this and glad to see the book is out!
Take it from a former banker: the budget is for ordinary people. The mega-rich look on and laugh
Submitted 9 months ago by mozz@mbin.grits.dev to workreform@lemmy.world
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/mar/05/banker-budget-mega-rich-traders-jeremy-hunt
Comments
RagingHungryPanda@lemm.ee 9 months ago
fizzyvelcro@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Gary’s interview with Novara Media blew my mind a while back. I can highly recommend it.
This one is from a year ago, way before he blew up with his book. They also interviewed him again two ago, here.
Shadywack@lemmy.world 9 months ago
That’s pretty damn sobering, and accurate. We’re so use to being told what to think, and my whole takeaway from this, apart from “Eat The Rich”, is to look for yourself. What he wrote after that paragraph is something we all should be doing. Looking at housing prices, looking at where real people are squeezed, and to act based on that. We’re just cattle.
I look at the US primaries and caucuses and I see nothing but bullshit, “cute moments” as described in this article that won’t help us at all. I look at Bernie Sanders’ bill about the 32 hour workweek and I think about the weak willed moderate Democrats who won’t vote for it, and all the scumbag Republicans who are not even hiding that they’re part of this exact problem of enriching the rich while removing wealth from everyone beneath them.
Capitalism can work, when its heavily regulated with active oversight and robust enforcement. We haven’t had a free market in many decades, the joke is on all the BS Republicans are peddling.
Nemo@midwest.social 9 months ago
“I walked away and now I’m telling you about it. Incidentally, buy my book for $40!”
ja o k
isles@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Right after he bragged about being paid millions of dollars to bet against the people.
jlou@mastodon.social 9 months ago
What do you mean by work in the statement, "Capitalism can work?" @workreform
Shadywack@lemmy.world 9 months ago
What I mean specifically is the Gilded Age, vs the period of middle class growth during and post WW2. Concepts such as the Public Trust became important during these periods due to the Gilded Age itself and the postwar priorities emphasizing we lift up the nation instead of just the rich. I mean that capitalism is just the tool, albeit with heavy regulations, that generated a great deal of prosperity from the late 50’s through to the 70’s.
That’s the time period a person could graduate from High School and then earn enough to purchase a home and viably support a whole family.