The myth of hard work and meritocracy.

Yeah, it takes a lot of talking to get wage serfs to do any work.

Depends, doesn't take me a lot of talking. I hire mostly internationals(which is pretty convienant tax wise too) and as long as you offer more than the average pay in their country, they work pretty well.
 
Really disgusts me that the Republican Party is in power on the backs of Christians despite their economic platform being essentially social Darwinist.

I wonder if I'll see a Christian Democrat ("socially conservative, economically socialist" for us non-Europeans) party in my lifetime.

Can we run him against Ron Paul?;)

The only use for such a candidate might be someone who supports a fiscal free market and keeping the government out of our social lives being the opposing candidate, and WINNING.
 
Can we run him against Ron Paul?;)

The only use for such a candidate might be someone who supports a fiscal free market and keeping the government out of our social lives being the opposing candidate, and WINNING.

Are you aware that the hyper-individualism that economic libertarians tout is directly derived from anti-Christian polemicists from the 19th and 18th centuries?
 
Everyone should be paid according to the scarcity of the labour they provide and the benefits they provide to society.

Traitorfish said:
How on earth would you go about quantifying that?

Isn't that the whole idea behind pay awards? I mean, I know it's not perfect but don't companies generally reward their workers based on how hard it is to find people with those particular skills and how much profit (i.e. benefit) they will bring to the company?

It's a pretty ad hoc kind of affair, I know, but what would be an alternative?

I think any alternative might be better.
 
You completely ignored my point: You claimed that CEOs deserve the massively outscale pay because they are smarter than worker drones, I challenged your assertion. Your response is that people should unionize??

And what's wrong with unionizing? It's a private sector solution to a private sector problem. I'm completely against the U.S. government redistributing money. If the workers see how much CEO's are making, then it should be obvious their company has spare money on hand, so they should unionize to grab some of that money. I support private unions (public sector unions are another matter which I won't get into in this thread).
 
And what's wrong with unionizing? It's a private sector solution to a private sector problem. I'm completely against the U.S. government redistributing money. If the workers see how much CEO's are making, then it should be obvious their company has spare money on hand, so they should unionize to grab some of that money. I support private unions (public sector unions are another matter which I won't get into in this thread).

1. Unionization is banned by many large companies.

2. Unionization without government support often lead to trouble, especially when government goes where the money is.
 
And what's wrong with unionizing? It's a private sector solution to a private sector problem. I'm completely against the U.S. government redistributing money. If the workers see how much CEO's are making, then it should be obvious their company has spare money on hand, so they should unionize to grab some of that money. I support private unions (public sector unions are another matter which I won't get into in this thread).

You're still ignoring your own point: You said CEOs deserve the pay they get because of their smarts.

After reading my responses, do you still hold to that position?
 
You're still ignoring your own point: You said CEOs deserve the pay they get because of their smarts.

After reading my responses, do you still hold to that position?

There are more factors at work here. They are also getting pay based on other factors. One being the fact that they can get away with it.

If people can get away with taking more money they will. There was a police chief in California who made over $500,00 a year (his pension is still getting him over $100k a year). It's kind of ridiculous a police chief makes more than the president.

These things will continue until people stand up against it. In the latter instance the voters have to stand up against the politicians, and in the former either the shareholders need to stand up, or the workers need some kind of revolt.
 
How can you determine whether or not somebody was paid "for their work" if you're not working in an LTV framework? If work is worth whatever people will give you for it, then it follows that whatever you can get your hands on is the appropriate reward for your work.
 
That kind of depends how you get your hands on it. With these biggest CEO paychecks, it's not like the owners of the company have a say in what the CEO gets. The CEO appoints the board, the board decides what the CEO earns. When you are picking the people who decide what you will earn, and you are compensating the people who decide what you earn based on what you earn, then the best description of what is actually going on is not "pay", but rather "embezzlement".
 
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