Canard DuJour
Veteran Member
Some seem to think Price is suspect for pretending to be charitable when he's really doing this as a way to drum up more revenue; others seem to think he's really being charitable, but that he's being too charitable (wrong word, really) by virtue of paying the same salary to entry-level employees as certain higher ups, and that this is not a good thing—which it clearly isn't: Paying an unskilled employee the same as a skilled employee is going to curtail (or outright destroy) the skilled employee's incentive for sticking with that company, unless they have a wicked egalitarian bent. DBT and I think he's awesome for being bold enough to do this well-intended thing, and that exploitation of wage-earners is morally wrong and that someone at the forefront of modern business needs the nads to own up to it and be willing to work towards changing it.
After thinking on it, I think if it were my money, I would bump my lesser-skilled employees up to whatever income bracket I considered necessary to ensure their ability to sustain themselves without financial distress, while bearing in mind that there are many people who simply cannot manage money, no matter how much they have; but I would pay my more highly-skilled or professional employees considerably more, since that seems not only fair but just common sense.
What's most certainly true is that people with very large incomes—say in the many millions per year—have far more money than they need and might want to consider how they can put their money to productive, even beneficial use. Note I say "consider", since if a billionaire who's earned her money lawfully, and through her own effort and intelligence, refuses to part with a single nickel, that ought to remain her right in any civilized nation, since to force her to part with that nickel against her will would make that parting something other than charity. Charity should be wholly voluntary and genuine. That being said, no-one in a civilized nation should be prevented from (nor feel ashamed for) calling the billionaire who refuses to part with a nickel a money-grubbing Smaug, and to hold her in private or public contempt.
That being said, if Steve Weiss, from the old board, were here, he'd tear me a new ass for saying that. And Ayn Rand, whom I revered when I was in my thirties, and still admire, though to a lesser degree, would call me all sorts of names, using many exclamation points (far more than the Chicago Manual of Style recommends).
What rot.
Nobody is going to quit a $100,000 a year job as a manager just because his subordinates also get $100,000 a year - not if the alternative is to do the same job for $90,000, with subordinates who get paid $40,000. You would need to have a very sick mind to fuck yourself over just for the pleasure of lording it over people who are being fucked over even more than you.
Most people aren't going to do that, no. There are always a few prats who would, and they tend to give themselves away with their political opinions.
