I thought Trump was a shoo-in? Christ knows that's the message these people are getting over and over again, drummed into their heads so they can get good and pissed off when they're told the truth.
Windows 10 users, I've been using kill-update.exe for years now to only update Windows when I damn well want to.
Disclaimer: before the inevitable dogpile, yes, this is bad practice. Yes there are many reasons why you might not want to do this. Yes, allowing your software to update itself whenever it wants is safer. No, I don't care. If you don't care either, this software might be for you.
I asked my SO what she thought his wallpaper might be. First answer: himself.
Which doesn't really change the point does it. These people are de-facto kings ruling us; their wealth subverts the entire idea of democracy. You can't tax them out of existence without taxing their wealth because none of them have any actual income. Banks fall all over themselves to fund anything they care to do.
In any case, 2% isn't going to do fuck-all even if it gets passed which is hardly a certainty.
Problem? Singular?
A concentrated effort by bad-faith actors who understand that the only thing Americans love more than being told they're right is being able to feel smugly superior. Tap into that with the power of social media and voila.
Le Coq suggested that when simply considering the 10 biggest fortunes in France, the tax would bring in no less than €13bn for the state.
A 2% tax on billionaires. Give me a break.
The point isn't to bring in money, the point is to eliminate these blights on society by any means necessary. How bad will the world have to get before something that looks like this happens? When the world was more civilized - the world conservatives constantly pine for - the ultra-wealthy were taxed over 90%, because we knew that too much power in the hands of a single person was immensely dangerous. We knew this intrinsically from generations of being ruled by kings, but we got firsthand experience with it from them constantly fucking up the economy.
There was shame in being wealthy. Hell, there was shame in being rich when I was growing up - it was understood that you couldn't get mega-rich without stepping on the necks of the working class and being horrible people. It's nearly Christmas - go rewatch It's a Wonderful Life for crying out loud. 1946!
Well, I mean... not much better.