0
0

What Rich People Admire


 invite response                
2013 Aug 27, 8:57am   23,951 views  78 comments

by Honest Abe   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

Rich people admire other successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people, the so called evil 1%'rs. If you view wealthy people as bad in any way, you can never be wealthy. How can you be something you don't like?

In other words, if you don't like rich people, don't be one.

Comments 1 - 40 of 78       Last »     Search these comments

1   HydroCabron   2013 Aug 27, 9:07am  

I love rich people.

Roasted, au jus.

2   Ceffer   2013 Aug 27, 9:11am  

The rich are very concerned about saving face......especially during cannibal anarchy!

3   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 27, 9:43am  

Honest Abe says

Rich people admire other successful people

Yep... Are you ready to abandon all morals and dignity?
Are you ready to become a parasite of society?
Do you admire it?
Because, you know, you can earn money, lots of it, if you do.
And if you don't, you're a loser.
Because money is all that matters.
Money is the only thing worth admiring, and the only thing that ultimately defines you.
It's well known Euclid, Mozart, Einstein, Leonardo and St Augustin were all particularly wealthy men.
Remember success can only be measured in dollars.

What a moronic philosophy!

4   Dan8267   2013 Aug 27, 11:09am  

Honest Abe says

In other words, if you don't like rich people, don't be one.

It's not whether or not a person is rich, it's how he got rich that counts.

People like Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, should be billionaires, for he created trillions of dollars of wealth. Unfortunately, Tim Berners-Lee isn't a billionaire, but he did get a substantial financial reward just this year. Of course, if capitalism worked like its advocates say, by rewarding innovation and wealth creation, then Tim Berners-Lee would be the richest man in the world.

People like Henry Paulson, former CEO of Goldman Sachs and former Secretary of the Treasury who was largely responsible for the fraud that cause the Second Great Depression, should not be a billionaire or even a millionaire. He played zero-sum games that siphoned off a multitude of wealth from people and destroyed exponentially more wealth in the process of that siphoning. He did not make the world better or create wealth. He destroyed wealth and opportunity in the process of exploiting others through zero-sum games.

I can admire rich people like Tim Berners-Lee and despise rich people like Henry Paulson. Do I want to be rich? Yes, but only the ethical kind of rich. I would not be willing to kill a person to become rich, and that includes killing a person by dumping pollution in the environment that causes a death but saves a corporation a few billion dollars. Yes, I want to be rich, but I'm not willing to do anything to become rich. There are more important things in life like being a decent person.

I don't think the multitudes of commoners hate all rich people, just the assholes that got rich fucking over other people.

5   MershedPerturders   2013 Aug 27, 12:01pm  

Honest Abe says

Rich people admire other successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people, the so called evil 1%'rs. If you view wealthy people as bad in any way, you can never be wealthy. How can you be something you don't like?

wait until the economy corrects itself and all these liberal communist nouveau riche idiots will find out where they really stand. Then lets hear you talk about 'the rich'.

What role do you think the 'pervert class' will actually play in history, other than a device to break down American sovereignty? once the job is done, and it almost is, you're about as useful as a poop flavored lolly pop. It's funny to watch Californians justify their existence and even try and convince themselves theyre important. They most certainly are not, and when things really go down- no one likes a traitor.

6   MershedPerturders   2013 Aug 27, 12:06pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Comptroller says

Rich people want to disable the poor at gunpoint and ass rape them. Poor people want to rip out rich people's eyes and skull fuck them. In the end, we all agree and the only difference is in interpretation.

well the rich are outnumbered. guess whose getting a good skull fucking?

7   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 27, 12:18pm  

It's unbelievable how greed in this country has been built into something that should be admired.

In this culture, people are admired for using tricks to extract money while producing nothing in the process. Flippers and speculators are envied, massive extortion is revered as the acme of skill.

No wonder the country runs a trade deficit: no one wants to bothers actually producing something. Physics Ph.Ds use their intelligence to create more devious financial ways to extract wealth from clueless people. Every Average Joe wants a "MBA" because the only serious occupation is seen a "running a business", which in most cases means "shuffling papers", "adding numbers", and "shouting at other people".

Americans spend their entire lives in vacuous pursuit of *money*, with no other goals than money itself, and in the process they prostitute themselves, and make themselves slaves, governed by their fear of lacking, or simply appearing to be less "successful".

The "pursuit of happiness" has long since become the "pursuit of wealth" and the promises of "instant satisfaction", that is instant only in how long it lasts, guarantying their greed is never slaked.

"What rich people admire".... What an ideal!

8   MershedPerturders   2013 Aug 27, 12:31pm  

Heraclitusstudent says

It's unbelievable how greed in this country has been built into something that should be admired.

come on, it's fairly obvious that Bill Gates is 100 billion times more intelligent and useful than most people! where's your common sense, stick-to-itiveness, and American pride!!!!!!?????

9   Rin   2013 Aug 27, 2:08pm  

Dan8267 says

I can admire rich people like Tim Berners-Lee and despise rich people like Henry Paulson. Do I want to be rich? Yes, but only the ethical kind of rich.

Nikola Tesla, quite possibly the most brilliant mind of the late 19th and early 20th century, died broke. And as far as I'm concerned, no one has matched this person's abilities.

If Tesla had died rich, I'd buy into the whole Ann Rand/Hank Paulson/Bill Gates tripe but no, instead, it's just those who corral money, who make it in the end. BTW, I'm now one of those persons, as I work for a hedge fund. I'm not proud of that but at least I won't be sleeping under a bridge during retirement. That's been secured after this quarter's P/L bonus.

10   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 27, 2:08pm  

MershedPerturders says

come on, it's fairly obvious that Bill Gates is 100 billion times more intelligent and useful than most people!

Bill Gates is one of the most deserving and he didn't write Quick And Dirty OS, last I checked. He got a charity contract from IBM that he used to screw them. Very useful indeed.

11   Homeboy   2013 Aug 27, 2:49pm  

Honest Abe says

Rich people admire other successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people, the so called evil 1%'rs. If you view wealthy people as bad in any way, you can never be wealthy. How can you be something you don't like?

In other words, if you don't like rich people, don't be one.

Nah, we just hate rich assholes.

12   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 27, 4:22pm  

John Bailo says

Why aren't more people following the greatness of Gloria MacKenzie??

What are her success secrets?!?

Envious people read Kiyosaki who tells them to admire the rich and think like them.
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are dangled in front of them like carrots in front of donkeys. They all think they are smart and will beat the crowd.
But assuming Kiyosaki is wealthy, is he because he thinks like Buffet? Nope... If he is wealthy, it's because he wrote books targeting American greed, and it's like shooting an elephant in a corridor.

With such attitudes you'd think Americans must all be rich. But that's the funny thing: they just make themselves rats in a rat race. Most of the time they can only use debt to pretend.

If don't have at least 6 months of living expenses in front of you, I don't care how much you make: you're poor. And by this measure most Americans are.

13   Philistine   2013 Aug 27, 6:07pm  

sbh says

It's the asshole that we hate.

But give him money, and he becomes an even bigger asshole that can engage in greater assholiness. The two are not mutually exclusive.

15   HydroCabron   2013 Aug 27, 11:03pm  

sbh says

Jesus, you simply must know when to abandon your persona, especially when it matters.

What? AF is a persona?!

16   smaulgld   2013 Aug 27, 11:24pm  

Dan8267 says

it's how he got rich that counts.

That is the key. If someone through hard work or brilliance creates a product of service that we are WILLING to pay money for because we want it, that person deserves and earns his/her money.

If the person makes money by using government favors to extract money from us via bailouts, subsidies, fraud or corruption that person does not deserve our adoration and should not have our money.

17   smaulgld   2013 Aug 27, 11:30pm  

Rin says

If Tesla had died rich, I'd buy into the whole Ann Rand/Hank Paulson/Bill Gates stripe but no, instead, it's just those who corral money, who make it in the end.

Actually Ayn Rand railed against the so called capitalists who owed their success not to working harder but to currying favor with government officials to provide them with special favors and monopolies.

Wall Street is not capitalism, its government sponsored profits.

In capitalism greed and excess self correct. i.e. you make risky bets you get a big pay off, but if you lose you go out of business.

In a crony capitalist government backed economic system, you take big bets and you win big. If you lose you get bailed out.
So in the words of Joey in Raging Bull: if you win you win, if you lose you still win!
That is not capitalism.

18   edvard2   2013 Aug 28, 1:33am  

Honest Abe says

Rich people admire other successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people, the so called evil 1%'rs. If you view wealthy people as bad in any way, you can never be wealthy. How can you be something you don't like?

In other words, if you don't like rich people, don't be one.

And to add to this little snippet of "wisdom" let's not forget that true conservatives admire the rich and do so unquestionably no matter who that rich person is because they have been told by the various successful lobby groups, fake astroturf political movements, and corporate interests groups whom pay for their chosen conservative politicians to like them no matter what and that any and all benefits that could possibly benefit them directly, whether that be social programs or environmental standards that hurt those monied interests are of course bad as well.

True conservatives know that they have a place and that is that they are to remain quite, don't question the status quo, believe that they too someday will be better off if they only believe the BS they've been conditioned to believe, and to admire the very forces that in turn work against their best interests.

19   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 1:34am  

Rin says

Nikola Tesla, quite possibly the most brilliant mind of the late 19th and early 20th century, died broke. And as far as I'm concerned, no one has matched this person's abilities.

Tesla was awesome, but Turing did match his abilities in a different field.

20   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 1:51am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Comptroller says

Rich people want to disable the poor at gunpoint and ass rape them. Poor people want to rip out rich people's eyes and skull fuck them. In the end, we all agree and the only difference is in interpretation.

I think the problem is monogamy. It is physically impossible for person A to ass rape person B while person B is skull-fucking person A.

The solution, of course, is the golden rule. It's not gay if it's in a three way. Person A ass rapes B while B skull fucks C who in turn skull fucks A in a devil's three way.

http://www.youtube.com/embed/i-MFsRfPoys

Since there are more poor people than rich, this works out well if both B and C are poor.

21   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 1:55am  

sbh says

I have, over 35 years of grunt work, only made in the low six figures twice. Having retained and invested the maximum by law for each and every of those years I'm fucking rich by anyone's measure. Anybody hate me now?

I would think not. That's exactly how people are suppose to become wealthy, by building real wealth rather than screwing over other people.

I certainly believe that a person can become a millionaire, even a decamillionaire over a lifetime this way. However, with the extremely rare exception of revolutionizing technology, I don't see how anyone could become a billionaire this way. Most billionaires made their fortunes exploiting others rather than creating wealth. Perhaps celebrities and sports figures less so, although even in their case it's the technology and those who made it that created a large portion of the wealth.

22   HydroCabron   2013 Aug 28, 2:04am  

sbh says

I have, over 35 years of grunt work, only made in the low six figures twice. Having retained and invested the maximum by law for each and every of those years I'm fucking rich by anyone's measure.

My definition of rich is having passive (non-labor) income somewhere north of $500,000 per year. That's why surgeons, high-powered attorneys, most athletes, and anyone else who sells their labor is not rich.

Anybody hate me now?

Depends.

Do you fund organizations which purchase congressmen and sell lies about climate change, gun rights, and taxation to angry white buck-toothed rubes?

23   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 2:32am  

HydroCabron says

My definition of rich is having passive (non-labor) income somewhere north of $500,000 per year. That's why surgeons, high-powered attorneys, most athletes, and anyone else who sells their labor is not rich.

I use the same definition, but with $100,000 year-2000 dollars, or about $132,000/yr today. I like expressing everything in year-2000 dollars for consistency and since it's a nice round number.

24   finehoe   2013 Aug 28, 2:51am  

In an earlier study, published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Piff and four researchers from the University of Toronto conducted a series of experiments which found that “upper-class individuals behave more unethically than lower-class individuals.” This included being more likely to “display unethical decision-making,” steal, lie during a negotiation and cheat in order to win a contest.

In one telling experiment, the researchers observed a busy intersection, and found that drivers of luxury cars were more likely to cut off other drivers and less likely to stop for pedestrians crossing the street than those behind the wheels of more modest vehicles. “In our crosswalk study, none of the cars in the beater-car category drove through the crosswalk,” Piff told The New York Times. “But you see this huge boost in a driver’s likelihood to commit infractions in more expensive cars.”

http://billmoyers.com/2013/08/27/a-plutocracy-ruled-by-self-centered-jerks/

25   Rin   2013 Aug 28, 3:06am  

Dan8267 says

Tesla was awesome, but Turing did match his abilities in a different field.

I guess I'd see Tesla as a Wilt Chamberlain type, Goliath of his times but very few titles. Nikola was kept down by the team efforts of Edison, JP Morgan, & [cheap bastard] Westinghouse, just like Wilt was contained by the '60s Boston Celtics.

Turing along with Von Neumann were more like Bird and Magic, both amazing HoFers but with a lot of mainstream recognition for their efforts.

26   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 3:12am  

Hassan Nemazee, the wealthy Manhattan investment banker, steps over a security chain as he leaves federal court in Manhattan after being sentenced to 12 years in prison for bank fraud. (AP Photo/Larry Neumeister)

As the capital class would say, there is too much regulation like that security chain. Nemazee is just being an efficient businessman.

27   dublin hillz   2013 Aug 28, 3:14am  

HydroCabron says

My definition of rich is having passive (non-labor) income somewhere north of
$500,000 per year. That's why surgeons, high-powered attorneys, most athletes,
and anyone else who sells their labor is not rich.

Lets take a look at stock like T. Current dividend yield 5.34%. To generate $500,000 in passive income requires amount X times 18.72. This results in required investment of $9,363,295 in order to sit on ass and generate $500,000 per year. Or for "safety" in can be any number of dividend paying stocks that average 5.34% annual yield. Yeah surgeons and most attourney most likely will never save over $9 million as well as average athletes, but elite athletes and lawyers should be able to with moderate discipline.

28   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 28, 4:03am  

sbh says

Heraclitusstudent says

Americans spend their entire lives in vacuous pursuit of *money*

Even Aristotle recognized that the good life is impossible without a certain measure of wealth, let alone the virtuous endeavor of the moral agent. What virtue does one ask of a starving man?

"Wealth is a tool of freedom, but the pursuit of wealth is the way to slavery."

F. Herbert.

29   Dan8267   2013 Aug 28, 5:12am  

sbh says

I think thrift is virtuous.

The problem with the capital class is they think thrift is a vice because it decreases demand and thus GDP. A wiser economic system would convert thrift into safe investment which would increase GDP by shifting demand from pizzas to robots, but try explaining that to Keynesians.

30   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 28, 5:21am  

sbh says

I think thrift is virtuous. That I ask myself to live a productive life is to also expect my stored labor to live a productive life so good can be done with it.

I didn't say there is anything wrong with taking practical decisions to make sure you have what you need to live well. It becomes a vice when money is the goal by itself, and when your only pride is the assets you sit on. And (Dan is wrong) that's regardless of how you earned these, even through grunt work and thrift.

Could you lose all you have tomorrow through a freak accident and still be proud of your life?
That's the question.

31   dublin hillz   2013 Aug 28, 5:31am  

Heraclitusstudent says

It becomes a vice when money is the goal by itself, and when your only pride is
the assets you sit on

That is true - it seems to me that the a vast majority of arguments on this site in terms of buy vs rent and housing vs stocks is people ego tripping about net worth.

32   Honest Abe   2013 Aug 28, 6:53am  

Most people run from responsibility - which is why most people are just about broke.

Rich people are willing to take on big responsibilities - which is why they get paid the big bucks.

Low responsibility = low pay
High responsibility = high pay.

Its that simple. Read the Millionaire Next Door. Those who don't read are at the same disadvantage as those who can't read.

H. Abe

33   dublin hillz   2013 Aug 28, 7:06am  

Honest Abe says

Most people run from responsibility - which is why most people are just about
broke.

At the end of the day not being broke is about spending less than what you earn. And there are plenty of people who make good salaries that are broke since they spend all their money on all sorts of frivolous items. Of course some people have no choice but to be broke since all of their earnings are eaten up by taxes and necessities.

34   Honest Abe   2013 Aug 28, 7:10am  

DH - Good points, I'm in 100% in agreement with you.

35   finehoe   2013 Aug 28, 7:10am  

Honest Abe says

Rich people are willing to take on big responsibilities

What responsibilities did these take on?

http://www.businessinsider.com/forbes-billionaires-list-who-inherited-their-wealth-2013-3

36   edvard2   2013 Aug 28, 7:20am  

Honest Abe says

Most people run from responsibility - which is why most people are just about broke.

Rich people are willing to take on big responsibilities - which is why they get paid the big bucks.

Low responsibility = low pay

High responsibility = high pay.

Its that simple. Read the Millionaire Next Door. Those who don't read are at the same disadvantage as those who can't read.

The problem with your assertion for this entire post is that its based almost entirely on gross generalization. Most people including myself do not care about rich people. There will always be people who are more wealthy than I. So what. I have other things to ponder.

Not all rich people got rich from hard work. Many simply inherited their money. Note I did not say ALL.

Not all poor people are lazy or lack ambition.

Not all rich people are wise with their money. Quite a few- just like the poor you discuss here- also go bankrupt.

So there are rich and poor people. So what? What else is new?

The issue I take with this post is that its entirely ideologically driven and doesn't stray one tiny bit from current GOP rhetoric. If so then they've done their jobs well. Do you wonder why the GOP and conservatives take this line of how the wealthy are idols we should all appreciate and adore? Ever wonder why even a whisper amongst the GOP that things might not be as fair as things might need to be when it comes to taxes and general financial obligation?

The reason is because that's what they want you to think. They want you to think that since these rich people are supposed geniuses whom naturally deserve every penny we've been told they sweated to get that we too should feel humbled by their very presence and that so when it comes to things like drilling wells, installing pipelines, or discussing things like environmental regulation, taxes, or otherwise other pieces of legislation then naturally those whom have been spoon-fed that all wealth is totally deserved and earned by honest sweat of the brow that they will never-ever question ANYTHING that gets in the way of putting more money into the pockets of the very people that they have been taught are the epitome of success.

Then they cleverly turn your attention to the "real" problems, which of course are people like environmentalists ( who get in the way of oil profits) or liberals- who like things like healthcare and other social programs which eat into the profits of the industries tied to those. They want you to please not pay attention to the actual problems here but instead simplify it all down to one thing, and that is to blame it all on the liberals. Yes- it is alllll their fault.

That's really what this is about. Its about purposely driven, money-backed political ideology meant as a distraction.

37   Heraclitusstudent   2013 Aug 28, 7:23am  

Honest Abe says

Most people run from responsibility - which is why most people are just about broke.

Yep It's well known that Euclid, Mozart, Einstein, Leonardo and St Augustine all took up huge responsibilities.

That's why they are remembered now.

God, I hate this mindset.

38   theoakman   2013 Aug 28, 7:52am  

John Bailo says

Rin says

Nikola Tesla

He did cool stuff but went from obscurity to being a bit overrated.

A/C was his most productive invention and as good as it was, it left us with a legacy of centralized high voltage generation, even though most of our needs are DC.

However, we are now moderating some of that with local generation through fuel cells.

Testa's later stuff was also interesting, but never implemented or proven to work.

Legacy of centralized high voltage generation? He cut everyone's power bill by a factor of a 100. The only viable transmission of power from one location to another is through high voltage. I'm not quite sure why you think it matters that household items need DC. It's not hard to convert at all.

And his accomplishments and impacts far exceed the AC generator.

39   theoakman   2013 Aug 28, 7:57am  

Tesla's patents would have earned him the equivalent of a trillion dollars today. He unselfishly gave up his patents so Westinghouse wouldn't go bankrupt for the good of society. Westinghouse, being the selfish pricks they were, forgot about him. The only thing they did was buy him an apartment after it made national headlines that the poor guy was almost homeless.

Tesla is a classic example of someone who does all the hard work and watches everyone else get rich from it. There are multiple examples of individuals taking gross advantage of him outside of the Westinghouse deal.

40   Honest Abe   2013 Aug 28, 7:58am  

Responsibility relates to obligation and or being accountable. The group stated above is a bunch of theoretical physicists, artists and theologians. None of which are held "accountable" or are under any obligation. FAIL.

Comments 1 - 40 of 78       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions