Billionaire Tom Perkins wants you to feel the pain of those poor 1-percenters.
By
Take Tom
Perkins. He’s one of a growing number of the put-upon rich — billionaires who
grabbed a fabulous fortune by hook or crook but now complain that they are
victims of a “rising tide of hatred.”
Excuse
me, Tom, but the words “billionaire” and “victim” aren’t a natural pairing.
Yet,
even though he candidly concedes that he lives a life of vulgar excess, Perkins
wrote a sob-story letter to the editor The
Wall Street Journal published
in January. In it, he pleaded for relief from the “war on the American 1
percent, namely the ‘rich.’”
What’s
needed, he explained, is a slight tweaking of America’s democratic election
system.
“The Tom Perkins system,” he lectured, differs from
the current one because “you don’t get to vote unless you pay a dollar of
taxes. But what I really think is, it should be like a corporation. You pay a
million dollars in taxes, you get a million votes. How’s that?”
Gosh,
how did he cram so much vanity and ignorance into only three sentences?
Apparently,
no one has informed Tom that poor people pay a larger percentage of their income in various taxes than
privileged tax evaders like him.
Nor does
he seem aware that a democratic government cannot be anything like a
corporation, for government must serve the whole public, while a corporation is
an autocratic hierarchy that serves only a few.
And
golly, Tom, why should you and all of your billionaire buddies get anything
special — like extra votes — just for paying taxes? What you get in return for
taxes is what we all get: civilization.
OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator,
writer, and public speaker. He’s also editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower
Lowdown. OtherWords.org