I am of the opinion that forced redistrubution of wealth is immoral.
How does someone get from “a good, hard working poor person” to "a person who ‘deserves’ and ‘has a right to’ the fruit of someone else’s labor?
Doesn’t your boss get the fruit of some elses (your) labor? i.e. their employees
Doesn’t the stock holder get the fruit of some elses labor? i.e. the employees of the company?
It seems that the question is – how do we ensure that the workers get a fair share of the profit they help to create. That they are paid a fair wage for the work they do. If the history of employers shows anything it is that most will take advantage of any and everyone they can to make bigger and bigger profits for themselves. If they didn’t we wouldnt have the labor laws and child labor laws that we do. Here is an exchange between an 8 year old textile mill worker and a Judge from 1911
Judge: Helen what time do you go to work?
Helen: Half after 6 evenins
Judge: When do you come home from the mill?
Helen: Half after 6 mornins
Judge: How far do you live from the mill?
Helen: I dont know. I guess mostly takes an hour to git there
Judge: And the inspector tell me its across lonely fields exposed to storms that sweep down the valley. Whats you pay Helen?
Helen: I git 3 cents an hour, sir.
Judge: If my arithmetic is good that is almost 36 cents for a nights work. Well now, we do indeed find the flesh and blood of little children coined into money.
It seems immoral to me to pay executives 100’s of millions of dollars in salary, bonuses and stock options while not paying a wage to the worker on the floor that will support a family.
It seems immoral to me to ship jobs to other countries where child labor may be employed, where workers are at times locked in their factories, where the environmental standards are lax and where at times prison labor may be employed
Our laws and tax policy should address issues like that.