As of 01/20/19, the richest six American tech leaders (Bezos, Gates, Zuckerberg, Ellison, Page, Brin) averaged overĀ $80 billionĀ in net worth. Meanwhile, the 25 million Americans just above the median, many of themĀ teachers, have an average net worth ofĀ $78 thousand. Thatās a difference of a million times.
For anyone questioning this disturbing truth, the following information should be helpful: There are overĀ 4 millionĀ preschool, primary, secondary, and special education teachers; the median teacherĀ age is 41; the median elementary school salary isĀ $57,000; the median wealth of a 41-year-old is onlyĀ $60,000. So itās probably even worse than a million to one. Consider also that about 77 percent of teachers areĀ female, and that females suffer the discrimination ofĀ lower wealth, especially Black and Hispanic women, for whom net worth is in the low HUNDREDS.
The Los Angeles teachers areĀ strikingĀ for better pay, smaller class sizes, the addition of nurses and counselors, and the ending of the rash ofĀ charter schoolĀ openings that suck the lifeblood out of the public school system. They could also be striking for a fairer wealth distribution. A technology boss is not a million times more important than an L.A. teacher.
Do they deserve it? Fact 1: The richest tech CEOs had shady beginnings
Bill Gates may be a knowledgeable man, but for starters he wasĀ lucky and opportunistic. In 1975, at the age of 20, he founded Microsoft with high school buddy Paul Allen. This was the era of the first desktop computers, and numerous small companies were trying to program them, most notably Digital Research, headed by software designerĀ Gary Kildall, whose CP/M operating system (OS) was theĀ industry standard. Even Gatesā company used it. But Kildall was anĀ innovator, not a businessman, and when IBM came calling for an OS for the new IBM PC, hisĀ delaysĀ drove the big mainframe company to Gates, who provided an OS based on Kildallās CP/M system. Kildall wanted to sue, but intellectual property law for software had not yet been established. David Lefer, a collaborator for the bookĀ They Made America, summarized: āGates didnāt invent the PC operating system, and any history that says he did is wrong.ā
To a large extent Mark Zuckerberg also took his ideas from others. Zuckerberg developed his version of social networking while he was at Harvard. Before he made his contribution, Columbia University studentsĀ Adam GoldbergĀ andĀ Wayne TingĀ built a system called Campus Network, which was much more sophisticated than the early versions of Facebook. But Zuckerberg eventually prevailed because of the Harvard name, betterĀ financial support, and the simplicity of Facebook. A possible fourth reason: it wasĀ allegedĀ that Zuckerberg hacked into competitorsā computers to compromise user data.
Jeff Bezos built his business with the extraordinaryĀ advantageĀ ofĀ min
Larry Ellison was #1 on Sam PizzigatiāsĀ Greediest of 2013Ā list. Greedy for money and for eternal life. According to theĀ Washington Post, āLarry Ellison has proclaimed his wish to live forever.ā He and fellow Silicon Valley CEOs Peter Thiel and Larry Page were āusing their billions to rewrite the nationās science agenda,ā as some scientists marvel at the āsuperiority complexā of the big-money men.
As for Googleās Larry Page and Sergey Brin, their company has gained recognition as one of theĀ worldās biggestĀ tax avoiders, a master at theĀ āDutch SandwichāĀ andĀ āDouble IrishāĀ global tax games.
Do they deserve it? Fact 2: The American public is responsible for almost all modern technology
The late Steve JobsĀ spokeĀ for the industry: āWe have always been shameless about stealing great ideas.ā
AsĀ Gar AlperovitzĀ noted, āBetween the mid-1980s and the mid-1990s the National Science Foundation spent $200 million to build and operate a network of regional supercomputing hubs called the NSFNET. Connected to the ARPANET, this network established Internet access for nearly all U.S. universities, making it a civilian network in all but name.ā
Government funding for technologyĀ goes backĀ much further, as explained byĀ Mariana Mazzucato: āFrom the Internet that allows you to surf the Web, to GPS that lets you use Google Maps, to touchscreen display and even the SIRI voice activated system ā all of these things were funded by Uncle Sam through the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), NASA, the Navy, and even the CIA.ā Mazzucato goes on to describe 12 major technologies that have their roots in government research, including memory and hard disks, displays, cellular technology, and all the Internet protocols. Much of it came from the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, NASA, the Air Force, and other tax-funded U.S. agencies. The biggestĀ expenseĀ in the iPhone is the touchscreen, which was developed at theĀ CERNĀ laboratories in Europe. The National Science Foundation funded theĀ Digital Library InitiativeĀ research at Stanford University that was adopted as the Google model.
The business-mindedĀ The Economist, with reference to Mariana Mazzucatoās bookĀ The Entrepreneurial State, admits that āMs Mazzucato is right to argue that the state has played a central role in producing game-changing breakthroughs, and that its contribution to the success of technology-based businesses should not be underestimated.ā
Why do billionaires want even more money?
Harvard studiesĀ indicateĀ that very rich people are likely to base their life satisfaction on the question āAm I doing better than other people?ā A survey of 2,000 millionaires and multi-millionaires, who were asked how much money would provide perfect happiness, found that ābasically everyone says [theyād need] two or three times as much.ā
Another insight comes from theĀ āultimatum game,āĀ in which one player divides a pot of money between himself and another, and the second player can choose whether or not to accept the offer. If the offer is rejected, neither player gets anything. Offers below 30 percent are usually rejected. Even at the cost of losing money himself, a player apparently canāt bear to see another person out gain him.
Capitalism is a perfect system for people like this, who care only about making more money than everyone else, and fail to grasp the importance of a healthy, working society. Itās a game of winner-take-all. AsĀ Charles KochĀ said, āI want my fair share and thatās all of it.ā
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