‘World’s Poorest President’ Explains Why We Should Kick Rich People Out Of Politics
I don't necessarily agree with kicking rich people out of political office, but he makes very good points.
Humans are too prone to letting money drive them. Money is power. Couple that power with the power of politics and the entitlement mentality fostered in these conditions. Those are not the ideal minds to be making big decisions that affect everyone. They may be intelligent and capable, but almost as likely to let greed and entitlement run the show as religious fundamentalists are likely to try to force their beliefs into public policy. It may be that the power of money is more subtle and subconscious and therefore more influential on the person who is telling him or herself, "I totally don't let money stop me from doing the right thing from my powerful and influential public office. I'm awesome."
The cure for that is training in using critical thinking skills on one's own thoughts, reactions, emotions, and decisions. That's how I describe "exercising one's own conscience."

Like that's ever gonna happen.
Even so, I'm not sure if kicking the rich out of political office would be more unfair than it is reasonable to even test it out.
We'd also miss out on the contributions of all the rich people who do value people over money, who do hold themselves accountable, who can say "I was wrong, I'm sorry" like a god damned grownup, and who do more good than harm.
Not least of all, the fight that it would take to even get such a bill past the zygote stage. Think religious zealotry has turned the GOP into an idiocracy machine now? The disease would just dig in deeper. First new law created after such a bill is killed: Rich politicians can legally enter any citizen's house and beat them to death with bags of gold doubloons. The popular "Learn Your Place" law. Why popular? Because rich politicians who like the law hang out with other rich politicians who like the law, therefore it's popular.
OK, that's a ridiculous scenario but it does illustrate Mujica's point.
What do you think?
“I’m not against people who have money, who like money, who go crazy for money,” Mujica said. “But in politics we have to separate them. We have to run people who love money too much out of politics, they’re a danger in politics… People who love money should dedicate themselves to industry, to commerce, to multiply wealth. But politics is the struggle for the happiness of all.”
Asked why rich people make bad representatives of poor people, Mujica said: “They tend to view the world through their perspective, which is the perspective of money. Even when operating with good intentions, the perspective they have of the world, of life, of their decisions, is informed by wealth. If we live in a world where the majority is supposed to govern, we have to try to root our perspective in that of the majority, not the minority.”
I don't necessarily agree with kicking rich people out of political office, but he makes very good points.
Humans are too prone to letting money drive them. Money is power. Couple that power with the power of politics and the entitlement mentality fostered in these conditions. Those are not the ideal minds to be making big decisions that affect everyone. They may be intelligent and capable, but almost as likely to let greed and entitlement run the show as religious fundamentalists are likely to try to force their beliefs into public policy. It may be that the power of money is more subtle and subconscious and therefore more influential on the person who is telling him or herself, "I totally don't let money stop me from doing the right thing from my powerful and influential public office. I'm awesome."
The cure for that is training in using critical thinking skills on one's own thoughts, reactions, emotions, and decisions. That's how I describe "exercising one's own conscience."

Like that's ever gonna happen.
Even so, I'm not sure if kicking the rich out of political office would be more unfair than it is reasonable to even test it out.
We'd also miss out on the contributions of all the rich people who do value people over money, who do hold themselves accountable, who can say "I was wrong, I'm sorry" like a god damned grownup, and who do more good than harm.
Not least of all, the fight that it would take to even get such a bill past the zygote stage. Think religious zealotry has turned the GOP into an idiocracy machine now? The disease would just dig in deeper. First new law created after such a bill is killed: Rich politicians can legally enter any citizen's house and beat them to death with bags of gold doubloons. The popular "Learn Your Place" law. Why popular? Because rich politicians who like the law hang out with other rich politicians who like the law, therefore it's popular.
OK, that's a ridiculous scenario but it does illustrate Mujica's point.
What do you think?
