I don't understand what you mean.I'd switched units because you'd disputed the original $2 spent to purchase the lottery ticket.

I agree, and I'm glad you said that because I was getting ready to say exactly the same thing. To expound on your point... it goes both ways... if we get to say that the cashtronauts don't deserve their spaceships because they aren't the ones doing the actual work that creates the billions of dollars, or that the Wall street folks don't really create anything or do anything other than shuffle numbers around, so they don't deserve their immense wealth, then we can equally scrutinize the can collector's actual inputs to determine whether we think he deserves all that money. I'm sure Bezos put in more "work" in a given year than our heroic intrepid half-hour recycler-turned billionaire. You can argue that he did "something", but certainly not enough actual substantive activity to deserve a billion dollars. So I'll add that I agree that this discussion need not be limited to a billion dollars at all, because you are correct that the same concept applies regardless of the amount of money in question. I'll have to circle back and read your last post, because you gave me some other real food for thought on this same topic.But also, the same process that makes a billion dollars undeserved can make a million dollars undeserved. Or $2 undeserved.