True about the company store, and miners are skilled workers using high-tech heavy equipment (although in consequence, there’s a lot less of them today because of that).
However, why do you let yourself get distracted about what a CEO might make and instead look at manufacturing opportunities as a way to decrease unemployment, ease poverty, cut taxes, increase the overall standard of living, decrease crime, feed hungry citizens, balance the trade deficit, fund healthcare and social security, and reduce the military threat from a dictatorship that is targeting nuclear weapons at us?
We’ve engendered some flaky priorities. Would you deny these benefits to our entire population out of spite because a CEO might someday make a buck on it too?
True about the company store, and miners are skilled workers using high-tech heavy equipment (although in consequence, there’s a lot less of them today because of that).
However, why do you let yourself get distracted about what a CEO might make and instead look at manufacturing opportunities as a way to decrease unemployment, ease poverty, cut taxes, increase the overall standard of living, decrease crime, feed hungry citizens, balance the trade deficit, fund healthcare and social security, and reduce the military threat from a dictatorship that is targeting nuclear weapons at us?
We’ve engendered some flaky priorities. Would you deny these benefits to our entire population out of spite because a CEO might someday make a buck on it too?