For the umpteenth time, you are absolutely wrong on this. When i advocate less wage inequality, i'm not advocating anything that helps my position. I see the hard-working poor getting taken advantage of, and it is they who i am advocating for. I am in the top 5% (at least from an income perspective - due to my age, i'm probably only in the top 10-20% wealth-wise, but continuing to climb). I'm quite content with what I have. What i am not content with is the exploitation of labor, which is systematic in America.
I've worked factory jobs when i was younger. I saw people who worked harder than most receive very little compensation. I've interacted with the wealthy, and have found that for the most part, they possess don't possess any ability, or produce any outcome, that justifies their excessive wages.
Are there those who exploit welfare? Absolutely. Are there those who have achieved wealth due to their innovation and productivity? Absolutely. From what i've seen, these tend to be the exceptions to the rule, not the norm.
Yes, the welfare system is in serious need of reform. More work and training programs and less handouts would yield a better solution.
You bemoan the evils of government while giving big business a free pass, when government and big business collude to thrive off of other people's labor, while pointing the finger at the poor, despite the poor being used for the financial benefit of the wealthy.
It is empathy, not envy, which pushes me (and many of my liberal brethren) to my conclusions.
Ok, let's go with your assertion and assume it's empathy and not envy.
Does that make our conclusions "un"-empathetic?
You assert people are "taking advantage" of the hardworking poor, that people are getting wealthy "exploiting" them for their own financial benefit. I will admit you may feel empathy for the disparity in their earnings versus what others might earn. But the assertion that anyone is "taking advantage" of them, let alone "exploiting" them is hardly accurate, now is it?
I think you are confusing your empathy with someone else's envy. First, unless you are in the position of feeling
your wages are inequitable compared to someone else's, you can't be in a position of envy. Yes, if you think the same of someone else's wages being inequitable with yet another's, that might be "empathy" - but with what are you "empathizing?" With what are you "sharing a deep emotional understanding?"
Put differently, how do you know the person for whose inequitable wages you feel such empathy feels
themselves inequitably treated - except they voice their discontent? And if they voice such discontent, what is that if not ENVY - especially if the standard they use for feeling inequitably treated is someone else's wages? Again, how is that NOT envy?
Look, it's actually quite rare in this day and age, and in this nation that a person NOT be paid what they're worth. People may disagree about what their true worth is, wage-wise, but that's really not their call. They can negotiate, certainly, but in the end, it's the market that decides their worth, not some "evil wealthy person."