Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

you are not taking it too literally. it's meant literally. there's nothing wrong with a professional athlete. there's a lot wrong with they or anyone accumulating 100s of M of dollars. the tax system should make that impossible to sustain. 1/

in reply to this
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

more than any particular good and service, we want to live in a democracy with meaningful political equality. when people have levels of wealth in the 100s of millions or billions, there is no meaningful political equality. 2/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

for very little personal sacrifice or risk, such people can have extraordinary influence over our polity. the cost of that is much more serious than any incentive effect on the few individuals who might see their upside clipped. 3/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

if we established a decent tax system, we'd compress the income and wealth distribution, such that only people at the very top of class achieved anything near the (soft) cap. the upper tail of the bell curve would be much slimmer. 4/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

people who get off on competing for relative wealth, could still do so, but they'd do so at smaller numbers. they'd still be fabulously rich and live lives of great luxury. but their games couldn't put them in a position to control our politics. 5/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

perhaps you might argue there are some people who are so extraordinary they'd get to the point where the tax system renders it difficult to become richer, and just quit. there might be. 6/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

most extraordinary people will continue to work when pure financial incentives wane, for excellence, prestige, fame. purely mercenary people tend not in fact to be extraordinary excellences. 7/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

but tend doesn't mean none. undoubtedly there will be some few extraordinary people who "Atlas Shrug" when they can't understand their work as being for the money, or for the increment of power and status that comes with the money. 8/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

that's a cost. but not a very great one. we tend to overstate the uniqueness of talent. 9/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

there's a kind of incumbency bias that works in favor of those already revealed to be extraordinary, but there is usually a deep bench of equivalent or even greater talents who could fill their shoes if they abandon them. 10/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

if Atlas wants to shrug, he or she can. that may exact some social cost, but it will also yield some benefit in making space for more extraordinary talents to enjoy success. 11/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

the net cost will be far loss than the cost exacted on us by stratifying into such differences in wealth and power that the rich become effectively a ruling class. 12/

in reply to self
Steve Randy Waldman
@interfluidity.com

as i hope more people can understand right now, that cost can be existential, is orders of magnitude larger than the loss if a small number athletic talents or entrepreneurs choose to shirk if they are not offered gargantuan carrots. /fin

in reply to self