That is actually a very good topic, because it has to do with the "colonizer/settler mindset" and refurbished history that is the basis for the US being so naive.deva wrote:dj superflat wrote:actually, the way capitalism works is we all get rich together, not at the expense of one another. (the banker isn't taking money from the lawn care guy, instead, he's the only reason the lawn care guy has a business (no one pays for lawn care if they don't have money elsewhere); and the lawn care guy borrows money from the banker to buy a new truck or mower, which helps the banker and the lawn care guy.)
The way the U.S. has become rich is by having abundant natural resources (and of course due to the genocide of the people that were living here before the Europeans came, but that is another topic)
I think this is not exactly true, but has some truth. Commercial interests that at first drew their power from the US economy and channels of influence have created a network of resource pools that happen to exist in poorer countries, they negotiated access to these resources at low rates and these commercial interests in turn exert influence on the US to perpetuate that advantage ins something of an artificial way. This is an extremely important point, because the people in those countries see "the US" as these commercial interests, and sometimes we in the US erroneously see these commercial interests as "us", but they do whatever they do in the interest of profit, period.The way the U.S. has extended that wealth and power is by creating client states and impovershing them in order to maintain our wealth. Go talk to the people of Latin America in order to learn this.
Rest assured, if the resources those big commercial interests needed existed in West Virginia, the people there would be exploited at the lowest possible wages for the highest possible benefit... ah, wait a second...



