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World's richest five men double wealth since 2020

69 comments
  • I wonder when people will just lose it and start culling these guys for real.

    You have lower class people fighting each other in the mud over "welfare queens" and nobody seems to be reaching the logical conclusion that the real enemy is up in that ivory tower.

  • The truth here is so simple and petty... Corporations and the psychopaths who run them saw COVID as a personal sleight, an attack on them personally. Period.

    When things started to eventually "Open up" and financial numbers started to recover, it wasn't enough to just rebound, they had to take revenge on society and get rolling, record profits through gouging, shrinkflation, etc.

    Really and truly, this is what happened. Even if they didn't know what was driving them necessarily, they are such broken narcissists that the motivation was/is, "You took from ME, and there are the severe and prolonged consequences for that".

    100%

  • The Lockdowns ended up being poison to the middle class. Not to mention horrible for the mental health of millions and removed the development of children in specific demographics. :-(

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The world's five wealthiest men have more than doubled their wealth since 2020, while five billion people have been made poorer, according to a new report by British charity Oxfam.

    It estimated that 148 top corporations made $1.8 trillion in profits, 52 percent up on 3-year average, allowing hefty pay-outs to shareholders even as millions of workers faced a cost of living crisis as inflation led to wage cuts in real terms.

    "This inequality is no accident; the billionaire class is ensuring corporations deliver more wealth to them at the expense of everyone else," Oxfam International interim Executive Director, Amitabh Behar, said.

    To address the imbalance, the charity urged governments to curb corporate power by breaking monopolies, instituting taxes on excess profit and wealth, and promoting alternatives to shareholder control like forms of employee ownership.

    "Corporate power is used to drive inequality: by squeezing workers and enriching wealthy shareholders, dodging taxes, and privatizing the state," Oxfam said.

    "Around the world, members of the private sector have relentlessly pushed for lower rates, more loopholes, less transparency, and other measures aimed at enabling companies to contribute as little as possible to public coffers," Oxfam said.


    The original article contains 329 words, the summary contains 193 words. Saved 41%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

69 comments