Don't let them do it
I’ve spent my career highlighting the problems posed by extreme wealth. Not everyone buys it. “None of my problems exist as a result of someone else being a billionaire,” Greg B. recently wrote to me.The problem isn’t individual billionaires,
I told Greg. It’s the system of laws, rules, and regulations
tipped in favor of the wealthy at the expense of working folks.
I wrote my new book, Burned by Billionaires,
to help folks like Greg understand this system better. Here are 10 ways you —
yes, you personally — are being burned by billionaires, pulled from
my book.
1. They stick you with their tax bill. By dodging
taxes in ways unavailable to ordinary workers, billionaires shift
responsibility onto you to pay for everything from
infrastructure to defense and veterans services.
2. They rob you of your voice. Your vote might
still make a difference, but billionaires now dominate candidate selection,
campaign finance, and policy priorities. The
billionaires love gridlock and government shutdowns because they can
block popular legislation.
3. They supercharge the housing crisis. Billionaire
demand for luxury housing is driving up the cost of land and housing
construction for everyone. Billionaire speculators are also buying
up rental housing, single family homes, and mobile home parks to
squeeze more money out of the housing shortage.
4. They inflame our divisions. The billionaires
don’t want you to understand how they’re picking your pocket, so they pour
millions into partisan media organizations and divisive politicians to deflect
our attention. This divisive agenda drives down wages, worsens the historic racial
wealth divide, and scapegoats immigrants.
5. They’re trashing your environment. While
you’re recycling and walking, they’re zooming around in private jets and yachts
with the carbon emissions of small countries.
6. They’re making you sick. Billionaire-backed
private equity funds are buying up hospitals and drug companies to squeeze more
out of health care consumers. Health outcomes in societies with extreme
disparities in wealth are worse for everyone, even the rich, than societies with
less inequality.
7. They’re blocking action on climate. Fossil fuel billionaires spend millions to block the transition to a healthy future, keep their coal plants open, and shut down competing wind projects. They’re running out the clock for our governments to take action to avert the worst impacts of climate disruption.
8. They’re coming for your pets. Billionaire
private equity funds know we love our pets like family. To squeeze more money
out of us, they’re buying up veterinary care, medical specialties, pet food and
supply companies, and pet care services like Rover.com.
9. They’re dictating what’s on your dinner plate. The
food barons — the billionaires that monopolize almost every sector of the food
economy — are dictating the price, ingredients, and supply of most food.
10. They’re corrupting charity. Billionaire
philanthropy has become a
taxpayer-subsidized form of private power and influence. As philanthropy
gets more top-heavy — with most charity dollars flowing from the ultra-wealthy
— it distorts and warps the independence of nonprofits.
But there’s so much we can do to fight back.
You can talk to your neighbors about these 10 ways they’re
feeling the burn and organize a discussion group. When your neighbor complains
about their taxes, explain how the billionaires lobbied to shift taxes away
from themselves and onto everyone else.
You can join campaigns to invest in housing, education, and
clean energy by taxing the rich. If federal changes are blocked by the
billionaires, work at the state and local level. Or you can join satirical
resistance groups like “Trillionaires
for Trump.”
Finally, you can learn more about inequality and how to
fight it at Inequality.org, the
website I co-edit for the Institute for Policy Studies.
Billionaires have the cash, but we have something they
don’t: each other. And we’re tired of being burned.
Chuck Collins directs the Program on Inequality and co-edits Inequality.org for the Institute for Policy Studies. He’s the author of the new book Burned By Billionaires (more info at burnedbybillionaires.com). This op-ed was adapted from a longer piece at Inequality.org and distributed for syndication by OtherWords.org.
