Go to Mexico and you will find mostly all Catholic Churches full of gold… the best part is that we went to war and the state seized all of the vaticans assets in Mexico… they still keep the 10% but the gold and cathedrals belong to the state See * guerras cristeras
That's because we ARE living in another Gilded Age. Instead of Rockefeller, Carnegie, and Vanderbilt, we have Bezos, Zuckerberg, and Musk in the 21st Century. Like the mid 1800's to the early 1900's, the vast majority of wealth is concentrated at the top, while the rest of us fight over the crumbs that are left. "Those who fail to LEARN from history, are doomed to REPEAT it." This is why ACTUAL history isn't taught in America's schools. Just the revised, watered down version. the more collectively ignorant Americans are, the greater grip of the plutocracy over wealth and power. Ignorance is BLISS for the wealthy.....
I've been screaming we're a civil oligarchy to deaf ears for years. Americans don't...or simply can't believe it. We were never a true free society and we never will be. Wealth = worth is part of our DNA.
I wouldn't trade the capitalistic system that causes that for anything. Six years ago, I was homeless sleeping in my truck. Now I'm typing this comment from I don't even know what island off the Colombian coast. What I do know is I got here from my private luxury yacht charter, which I was able to afford because I worked smarter. Stop writing hate comments on an ABC News youtube video and grow up.
been noticing this and waiting for someone to make the comparison - the lifestyle differences are HUGE. As a nurse, I rarely get ANY lunch…and hurt my body to earn a living…the hospital CEOs barely show up to work, work from home, order groceries, and never do ANY physical labor. They also rarely worry about money, meanwhile the critical workers like me are living on the edge. Its just huge differences like never before.
It's insane that the most critical to society are worked to death for pennies- Truthfully stronger corporate regulation is the answer and I normally lean libertarian, but this is getting ridiculous how much the average person is bled dry to line a CEO's pockets.
Now try digging ditches for a living, try being a soldier, a construction worker. We don’t get paid a 1/4 of what you do and you think your body is being destroyed…. LMFAO
@@JayZee-lo8qyEverybody’s different, what hurts her body might not hurt yours, they want us pointing fingers and fighthing each other instead of focusing on the real problem
@@JayZee-lo8qyyou’re not wrong but neither is she, Men do work harder, I am sorry that so many have been attacking our men, it’s not right, we need many kinds to make things work.
I got no sympathy for over paid nurses. Last time I went to the hospital for dehydration, they brought in mental health professionals. Simply because I looked dirty. I even pointed out my weight loss, got ignored. I know that people who are struggling financially buy vehicles like the Honda super cub. Not an luxurious civic. I also know that the medical industry likes testing on people in developing countries. Those are the people I think need to get paid.
Lol for real this has been so obvious and they act like it isn’t. Major news is also funded by advertising from massive corporations so I doubt they have that much incentive to cover this. Smaller independent journalists have been covering wealth inequality way more
You will be waiting forever, the trickle down effect is just planted there to keep working class people like you going, thinking maybe one day you'll have a better life.
Really? Cause I’m pretty sure the increases in parking, tolls and other fees are exactly what the trickle down was intended to do, and it’s working! So yes, as taxes for the wealthy and corporations have reduced, the tickle down is increased financial burdens for the rest.
Where one might fall out a window for bucking the state. Meanwhile, they allows a million Americans die of COVID so Elon stayed happy and to stoke Trumps ego.
My dad was teamster for decades and because of them he earned a livable wage, although just barely. I never thought of ourselves as poor but when I became an adult I sadly discovered that many in our community, our church looked down upon us. The teamsters also set up a pension for my father. They pay him $2500 / mo. which on top of his $1500 Social Security he's better now than ever before. But think about that, he worked basically since he was 18 and paid into the system until he retired at 65 and the government only gives him $1500 for all that time! If he hadn't belonged to a union where would he be now? (Shout out to the Boeing workers!)
Unions are not perfect, but just like the hate toward HOA's the problems normally arise from bad leadership. And since leaders are elected, it is the rank and file that needs to get off their *** and manage how the unions are run. Unions have and will ensure that the top won't take everything. Because, as we have seen over the last ~50yrs, they will absolutely take everything. The money(1000x pay), freedom(Patriot act), and country (buy politicians).
A second gilded age, but everything's from Ikea and designed to fail. We won't have any marble clad buildings to mark us, just skyscrapers that will require careful demolition when they become public hazards.
5:51 To put this into perspective: A milkman in the 1950's made enough money to buy a house, and raise a family. Despite the job being unskilled labor. Plus, the low cost of rent and tuition.
Correct, thats why those housewives commercials were so popular, you can actually afford to stay home and look after the kids. The irony is that you can't even be a house mom today if you even choose to. The cost of everything is so high right now.
Population in 1950 was a third of what it is now. If you want every Amazon driver (2024 Milk Man) to make enough to buy a house, you better be prepared to pay 60x more for your cheap infinite Amazon junk delivered right into your clammy hands every day. We have too many people all competing for the limited opportunity.
@@nychris2258 The issue is manufacturing left the US...if you wanna know where our middle class is please go to China, you will see them happily spending money on rolexes and dior while strolling around with their kids in a packed mall in shanghai. I only came to this conclusion when i randomly decided to visit there for a 4 day vacation. The average person there appears a lot more gratuitous than our ppl here in the States
@@sew_gal7340 Not necessarily true. My niece just had twins and her spouse and her work for tech companies and have good salaries. Their using their parental leave first one for 6 months and then the other, her husband's company is allowing him to work from home mostly. They own 2 houses, they had to move due to their jobs so they rented out their old home because housing prices skyrocketed that high. They used the first home as collateral to buy their current house.
Definition: The Gilded Age, period of gross materialism and blatant political corruption in U.S. history during the 1870s that gave rise to important novels of social and political criticism. Yeah, I'd say so.
@@CoercedJab Yeah, I'm sure that JD Rockefeller went on to personally influence the dictionary definition of the word Gilded Age during his lifetime. I actually remember this story being told to me, you see JD Rockefeller was on his death bed and his last words were "The Gilded Age will be defined as a period of gross materialism and blatant political corruption in U.S. history during the 1870s that gave rise to important novels of social and political criticism." Great insight, very valuable!!!!!!
@@TheAS687 lmao meanwhile it sounds like you got those sweet sweet loans 😂 I notice you didn’t answer either question and instead went for a personal attack? Do they teach that in college?
The reason unions can struggle to be affective is because there are no laws about how fast companies need to make a deal once a union is approved. Companies will deliberately drag out negotiations over years to stymie the union
But ABC can’t come out and say that, because the owners of media conglomerates are the kinds of a-holes that this puff piece is cautiously criticizing.
Phony Stark didn't "innovate" anything. He bought corporations, after he got lucky betting on stocks from the money his parents gave him from slave emeralds.
@@PelosiStockPortfolioyes we need that and we need to create competition. new wealth and major regulations on how much of the market a group of investors can control. They're getting rich because they don't have competition. Top tax rate over 1000000 99 perfect capital gains and income tax. also we need some redistribution of wealth for the super rich kick them back down to under 100 million dollars worth of cash and assets combined.
@@Bailey-cx7zz Monopolies can harm society when they completely control something that is necessary to function in our daily lives. Facebook doesnt provide anything necessary in our daily lives, it is not something we must have. What is the point in requiring facebook to have competition? Focus on the things that actually matter.
@@PelosiStockPortfolio No. we are not an island. How are we going to compete with outsourcing if we have the highest tax rate in the world? Tax the billionaires to the poor house, does that touch the government spending of 35 trillion? NO
@@ST-rj8iu Tax the billionaires to 90%, like it was done in the 1950's and 1960's when "America was great". Why dont you want to make America great again? Do you hate America?
Congress stopped passing new laws. And since the 90s, the FTC has been asleep at the wheel. Biden tried to change it a bit but wasnt' very successful in court when trying to stop mergers.
A bit of conjecture here, but as far as I recall, it isn't considered a monopoly if there's alternatives. The rules could be the same, but now with globalization, there's often competition even if it isn't from/in the US.
I'm not against anyone doing well. My issue is that many who have see no issues with everyone else struggling. It's a shame and government officials should be embarrassed that there are so many people experiencing homelessness and individuals/families struggling to afford the most basic necessities.
My parents took me on a tour of Hurst Castle in California when I was a kid. I knew nothing of the Gilded Age beyond Daddy Warbucks from the Annie movie, yet I felt a subtle sense of disgust walking through the endless rooms of opulence. I felt the same way when learning about the Palace of Versailles in junior high French class. My teacher extolled a room covered in gold foil for its beauty, but all I could think about was French Revolution and how freaking poor everyone else was. Suddenly it made sense to me why Marie Antoinette was beheaded. Even children can recognize that places like Hurst Castle and Breakers mansion are a shameful waste of resources.
I have met the Hearst family. Yes they are extremely wealthy but they are nice people. The Hearst and Rockefeller’s live near Seattle. Big ass homes! Wow!!
Hearst Castle is an atrocity today. Just a bunch of random aging crap, even the tour guides acknowledge the fake Arabic on certain items. Hearst got grifted just as much as he grifted.
Oh man...I was a youngun' when I visited Hearst Castle years ago, what a throwback. I was too young at the time to know the insinuations of that kind of wealth and grandeur. But yeah, agreed. I'm pretty sure I'd feel the same if I revisited it.
My great grandfather was a sharecropper in the Jim Crow south with a 9th grade education and he was able to provide for his wife and 8 kids. Meanwhile I have two degrees and a pretty good career with no kids and can’t afford a studio apartment. YES we are in a second gilded age.
be like the "new" rich. have everyone in your family claim those next group of 8 children, get tax benefits and welfare for 18 years, and claim you are elite.
They did work, really well actually... So well that it prompted the largest backlash along socioeconomic lines that the world has ever seen to the point where CEO pay is now 300-400 times their average worker vs the 60s-70s where CEO pay was 30-40 times their average worker... Beginning somewhat in the early 70s, massively ramping up with the aid of Reagan who laid the groundwork for the takeover, then the model created under Reagan becoming commonplace under the following administrations/legislatures. One little tax break followed by one little cut to social spending and maybe an anti-union measure here or a campaign finance change there, then another round, then another round, and then another round. Round and round til today where corporations pay next to nothing in taxes but can buy elections wholesale, unions are fighting for their lives, and avg wages have fallen massively below productivity. 50 years of a massive, organized, unified, and most importantly patient effort to assure the dominance of capital owners in the United States for all time. It didnt matter what party was running congress or who the president was, they all sold us out and are all continuing to do so.
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Trading without professional guide...Huh i laugh you, because you will remain where you are or even make huge loses that will stop you from trading, this has been one of the biggest problem to new traders
My CFA Julianne Iwersen Niemann, a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
I came from poverty but have worked at some of those top levels, and seen their world. WE ARE 100% in an absolute state of disparity. The fact people in Australia are skipping meals is shocking. Because this is the place it should be the least likely to happen.
1 million seconds adds upto about 11 days while 1 billion seconds is about 32 years...most people don't grasp the difference in wealth & financial systems.
What's sad is that, it wouldn't take much. Just 1, maybe 2, days of no spending anything, and that effect would be felt immediately on the rich and the tide would turn in a heartbeat.
@@theseventhgeneration6910 nah, $150K a year is around $7500 a month after tax. Mortgage for an old house is starting from 5K a month in CA. After grocery and other spendings to maintain said house, you have around $1000 left.
@@Melior_TraianoI wouldn’t be so sure. I think the prices we, the working class and the impoverished class, pay may not be as obvious. I’m thinking of the number of people who die from drug overdoses, homelessness, preventable diseases like obesity and heart disease (both appear to be diseases from a life of gluttony and excess but can be linked to poor education, lack of availability of healthy food choices due to cost and food deserts - it’s far cheaper to buy soft drinks than milk). Also the deaths caused by pollution eg Flint Michigan, maternal and child mortality due to insufficient access to care and nutrition, not to mention the level of risk to personal safety is not proportional to the level of pay - eg fishermen, oil rig workers, prison guards, ICU nurses etc etc and one of the most egregious cases - war veterans. We often hear about life expectancy statistics from a whole population scale. I wonder what that breakdown looks like across different wealth and socioeconomic groups. Also the stats on quality of life and other outcomes. I think we can get the illusion that life is getting better for each generation, and I wonder if the level of improvement is the same across the board or as I suspect, the ultra rich enjoys a level of quality and access that we can’t even imagine, let alone realise how much we are missing out on despite working harder and making far more sacrifices to our lives in comparison.
@@Liliarthan You make some good points. I won’t pretend to have all the answers or immediate insights into the statistics. However, when reading books like Jack London's The People of the Abyss, which recounts his real-life experience in London in 1901, it becomes clear how much life has improved for the majority of people since those times. Back then, child labor was prevalent (only formally abolished in 1938 in the U.S.), and the working class could literally be worked to de ath by their employers, with few rights, no social security, and no health care. Worker protections were almost non-existent and working hours were much longer than today and unregulated. The average life expectancy was around 48 years for the entire population. Women only gained the right to vote in the U.S. in 1920, and the Civil Rights Act (which prohibits discrimination based on race) only came into effect in 1964.
Again...water is wet? This IS the Gilded Age 2.0, I don't need experts telling me what has been happening for a while. But as with the first one, it'll fall/fail eventually. That's the good part. The bad part is that many will suffer as a result. What happened last time? The First World War. Followed by a decade long era of insane prosperity, but at least it was somewhat accessible for the rest of us. Followed by a global depression, then the Second World War that brought us out of it and the social reset that happened after that. The late 40's into the 50's was an era of upward mobility that finally many could achieve, rather than the few. History. We're very literally repeating what happened almost a century ago. So much for learning from it.
@@anuragchakraborty8766 That last part isn't true at all. There's plenty. But just like a century ago, people didn't think so because all the super wealth were hoarding them like they pretty much always do. The pendulum always swings.
Watching this after I saw a news story about a Pepsico plant shut down without notifying employees. They showed up and were given garbage bags to collect their things and were escorted out by police. Some had been there nearly 30 years and couldn't even receive a dignified notice of job termination. Nope. Just the disrespect and humiliation that goes along with being employed in the US.
Reminds me of how Elon fired his employees for choosing public and personal safety over his bottom line, and Trump praising him for it. America just voted in a male Marie Antoinette.
I remember being in highschool in the early 2000s and these super rich families were credited with creating wealth and better living standards for all through public works and charities. The message was the only way to improve the lives of everyone in the country was to become super rich just like them. And I wasn't in some deep red or backwoods school; this was 30min outside DC in a well off area of mostly high level government workers. It's taken decades for me to unlearn all that crap 😞
I remember reading High School finance books in the 2000s and it talked about savings and how one could earn money by having it sit in the bank. Now we just live in an era where if you work hard you'll have to move back with your parents. 😢
At least during the first Gilded Age, the rich built beautiful libraries and museums, helped to fund parks and gardens for the public, etc. They did this to keep the masses happy enough that they didn't take up the pitchforks and arms. Today's robber barrons offer nothing of the sort. Just selfishness on steroids. "Greed is good", or so I've been told.
Instead of that these billionaires use internet algorithms to divide people based on hate. If people are too distracted trying to screw people different than them they won’t notice the real masterminds of their misery, because fear is a stronger emotion than love.
For the people that think unions are bad and backing rich A hole for president and glaze a certain South African billionaire you are the biggest idiots in the country and aloud this to happen thank you
Unions can be good for workers, all candidates are rich a-holes, no one should ever think about glazing Elon just gross I will "allow" you to think about that
i'm voting against that rich a hole, but I KNOW unions are bad. I worked under one. never will again. they are just as extortionary, useless, and give zero shits about you like the corporations you seem to despise.
Growth is one thing. But eventually it slows down. And economic management becomes more important. Especially with maintaining the middle class. Hence why European economics is different. They never had Westward Expansion like we did.
Tucker Carlson is beneficiary of the Swanson Food Co. that his mother inherited part of. Just from the inheritance he's estimated to be worth over $300 million.
@@dianaverano7878 sort of, even with a few million dollars inhertiance and leg up with that name he is a multi-millionaire many times over, Its levels to having to "Really" work for it and he didn't start from scratch. Im not mad at it, just pointing it out.
@@02nupe he went into modelling even at an early age, as he knew he has to work. Millions are nothing within few years if you cant handle it and continue to earn millions to maintain it. Millionaires continue to be rich because they have businesses that are continuously running. His side of the family lost losts of money along the way. That is documented even before he was born
This expands past wealth into many aspects of life. It seems there is a growing divide between the classes as far as fitness, intelligence, etc and lack of competition in the gene pool.
I highly recommend watching the PBS American Experience documentary The Guilded Age (available here on TH-cam). It is eye opening for people who don't know the history if the era in detail, especially the labor issues of the time.
Elites and the Oligarchy have been around for a very long time. Greed of not wanting to share the wealth can be traced back to the Monarchy. Everyone thinks just because the nobility that came to live in the USA no longer have titles it doesn't mean they didn't have influence and have become kings without titles just a very well known rich name. SO indeed the USA has a monarchy they are just called by a different name know as the elites/Oligarchy.
Most people here will disagree but the average American has it better than the richest people of the late 1800s. Yes they had servants and large mansions but we have air conditioning, cars, airplanes, modern medicine, and access to all the world information and music in our pocket. All of which was made possible by capitalism.
You're such an idiot. I've never heard of a king or a gilded age millionaire killing themselves. Being at the top of society in any time period gives a person such a feeling of euphoria and pure dopamine, your peasant mind would never comprehend their existence.
What this video leaves out is that labor unions for police, teachers, and doctors make it virtually impossible to fire bad police, teachers, or doctors. There is also the possibility of political capture (like we see with UAW) where signing up for a labor union means signing up for a political party. Labor unions increase a worker’s bargaining power and can increase their wages, however there are important drawbacks to consider and intentionally omitting them from a “informative” news video is not helpful.
Yes. I stand corrected. Fred was born in the Bronx. Immigrant grandparents. Either way immigrants and I’m sure Fred was not wealthy. People don’t identify with the plight of others for some reason.
It’s too bad the oligarchs aren’t building beautiful homes anymore, or building hospitals, museums or schools. I’m not sure where all their money goes, but at least during the gilded age wealthy did give back.
The gilded age created beautiful architecture, and took millions out of rural poverty towards an industrialized urban reality. It was the final transition towards the modern age. Nowdays, not a single mansion will ever be a museum, it has no value, no art, no quality construction. And there hasn't been any significant change in the way society works so far.
Educate yourself. The Progressives, aka Democrats and RINOs, ARE AND WERE the Gilded Age wealthy. They want to keep that power by any means necessary even if it means unleashing biowarfare, invasion, kleptocrats, lobbyists, and actors against the common man. Progressive Gilded wealthy threw natives and ranchers off their land, killed their animals, enacted monopolies, unleashed wars, and used eugenics to turn vast swaths of land into their own playgrounds (only wealthy then could access the parks), and they only wanted "educated" to be skilled workers who know their place. Just like the Democrats now.
Let's see how long this comment is live before it's removed... Finish the phrase: "Those who don't learn their history..." I feel that so much of the 21st century is just a repeat of the 20th. - 10/25/24 @ 12:37 PM U.S. CST
Things like unions only work if the people are committed to working hard. If workers are lazy because they know they can’t get fired-the whole thing falls apart.
Jokes aside, it’s not that workers aren’t pro Union it’s just that being union means we’re just gonna laid off for someone who’ll do it cheaper and for no benefits
People who support Equality of Outcomes are going to have to explain why somebody who works one hour should be paid the same as somebody who works 8 hours.
@@Law19157 But doesn’t that also apply to executive positions? Why should a CEO working 5 hours and making poor business decisions that drives a legacy brand into losing millions of dollars be paid 200 times what a salary worker makes?
CEOs should make a lot. Every few weeks they come in to work to make another stupid rule for the poor sucker at the bottom to follow. Then they jump on their private jet to get on their 5 billion dollar boat.
It is literally like that. Jamie Daimon faced federal prosecution for fraud in the Lehman Shock but Obama chose not to go that route. Obama could have not bailed out Wall St. and instead (like Biden after the pandemic) paid the money directly to each American. The payout would've been around $22,000 per American who could have used the money to go to their local bank and restructured their mortgages and car payments with almost zero interests and all the Wall St. banks would've collapsed. Instead many Americans lost their jobs, their homes, while Wall St. banks with no strings attached to their bailout and immunity from prosecution paid themselves bonuses. They eventually paid the money back, but now we have Wall St. banks that are too big to fail. The effect 2008 had on the regular family though was devastating, something even now we haven't recovered from.
@@OneFreeMan17 I built and now manage a small 5 person business so you could say I am the CEO, without me those people wouldn't be pulling in 5k USD per month but without them I probably wouldn't either. CEOs should exist but the majority are following the same line placed down for generations. A lot of people just see the rich and think it was an easy way and those people are bad but most of the time that is not the case. I spent two years working hard and went from 15k in debt to being able to retire at 30.
Yep, which the power and greed triggered as a means to eliminate the "undesirable" populations when WWI didn't get rid of enough. They started the American Eugenics Societies and worked with the Nazis later to further their work globalizing power and eliminating the unwanted races and ethnicities. WWII through the 1950s was a surprise that elevated those undesired peoples to a strong middle class and they couldn't have that so they made the Boomers and Millennials out to be the ubermensch and destroyed X and X's children as best they could world wide.
People who ignore (and want others to ignore) the concept of a Gilded Age 2, tend to throw around words like "socialism", "communism" and then give countries like Venezuela and Cuba as examples instead of countries like Norway, Sweden, or Denmark as examples of strong unions, living wages, and access to healthcare. And they have in the past scared people into not supporting measures that they deem "socialist" because supposedly rich people "create jobs" so they need that tax break. Except not just rich people create jobs. And taxes are low for the wealthy historically speaking. The rich today pay less than 40% in taxes, while in the 60s they paid upwards of 60%. And America had the largest middle class in history and least inequality during that period.
😂😂😂 You have not done your homework at all. That living wage BS was stopped by those countries long ago and they're trying to remove socialism as a failed experiment now. Gov healthcare failed, unions failed, communism failed, all of it failed because it relies on leeching from taxpayers who are broke, not replacing at population rates and using immigrants who don't want to float the olds and will and do kill them to continue that socialism. Educate yourself
It means that if things keep headed in the current direction either the populace will revolt and upend the current powers, or our way of life will become unrecognizable: a few super wealthy and the rest basically a slave class. I think that's what they mean by unsustainable.
@@adamoliver4094 Haha, the British weren't popular either, neither were the monarchies of Europe. Caring for the people is important, not that it seems to matter to you.
@@adamoliver4094 I'd add that it's also unsustainable in terms of human life, both quality and actual lives. Greed, hording of resources at the expense of people's health and well-being is harmful on a moral level. Your desire to downplay the impact of wealth and power centralizing, belies an ignorance of history, economics, and human nature.
"Gilded" implies the thinnest layer of gold, covering up base materials - or even rot - below.
Sounds accurate to me then.
Go to Mexico and you will find mostly all Catholic Churches full of gold… the best part is that we went to war and the state seized all of the vaticans assets in Mexico… they still keep the 10% but the gold and cathedrals belong to the state
See * guerras cristeras
That’s precisely why the Gold was chosen to the first place. Fully intentional
Where was Kamala helping illegals get housing?
Yes that's why the book was named such. Great metaphor
That's because we ARE living in another Gilded Age. Instead of Rockefeller, Carnegie, and Vanderbilt, we have Bezos, Zuckerberg, and Musk in the 21st Century. Like the mid 1800's to the early 1900's, the vast majority of wealth is concentrated at the top, while the rest of us fight over the crumbs that are left. "Those who fail to LEARN from history, are doomed to REPEAT it." This is why ACTUAL history isn't taught in America's schools. Just the revised, watered down version. the more collectively ignorant Americans are, the greater grip of the plutocracy over wealth and power. Ignorance is BLISS for the wealthy.....
It's another kind of feudalism.
No kidding...having tried to explain this people who don't get it is infuriating. So much for learning from history.
I've been screaming we're a civil oligarchy to deaf ears for years. Americans don't...or simply can't believe it. We were never a true free society and we never will be. Wealth = worth is part of our DNA.
I learned everything you said in school.
We need protections though. Protections from police, government, and our labor. Also fun fact our infrastructure sucks. Boo 21st century
Gilded age... where the upper class passes the middle class in wealth by multipliers of 10X. Time for pitchforks my friends
I can smell the hate through my screen 😂
Pitchforks are too kind.
I prefer blood eagling.
@@Anthony-dj4ndGet lost bootlicker.
I wouldn't trade the capitalistic system that causes that for anything. Six years ago, I was homeless sleeping in my truck. Now I'm typing this comment from I don't even know what island off the Colombian coast. What I do know is I got here from my private luxury yacht charter, which I was able to afford because I worked smarter. Stop writing hate comments on an ABC News youtube video and grow up.
More like chainsaws
been noticing this and waiting for someone to make the comparison - the lifestyle differences are HUGE. As a nurse, I rarely get ANY lunch…and hurt my body to earn a living…the hospital CEOs barely show up to work, work from home, order groceries, and never do ANY physical labor. They also rarely worry about money, meanwhile the critical workers like me are living on the edge. Its just huge differences like never before.
It's insane that the most critical to society are worked to death for pennies- Truthfully stronger corporate regulation is the answer and I normally lean libertarian, but this is getting ridiculous how much the average person is bled dry to line a CEO's pockets.
Now try digging ditches for a living, try being a soldier, a construction worker. We don’t get paid a 1/4 of what you do and you think your body is being destroyed…. LMFAO
@@JayZee-lo8qyEverybody’s different, what hurts her body might not hurt yours, they want us pointing fingers and fighthing each other instead of focusing on the real problem
@@JayZee-lo8qyyou’re not wrong but neither is she, Men do work harder, I am sorry that so many have been attacking our men, it’s not right, we need many kinds to make things work.
I got no sympathy for over paid nurses.
Last time I went to the hospital for dehydration, they brought in mental health professionals.
Simply because I looked dirty.
I even pointed out my weight loss, got ignored.
I know that people who are struggling financially buy vehicles like the Honda super cub. Not an luxurious civic.
I also know that the medical industry likes testing on people in developing countries.
Those are the people I think need to get paid.
I’m starting to think these news outlets are 2 years behind us in time
Lol for real this has been so obvious and they act like it isn’t. Major news is also funded by advertising from massive corporations so I doubt they have that much incentive to cover this. Smaller independent journalists have been covering wealth inequality way more
We've been in a 2nd guilded age since the 1980s 😢 these corporate media are disgusting just talking about it now decades late
They are and on purpose
@@erykahhoney588Exactly!
It is
still waiting for that trickle down
The faeces really did trickle down
Been waiting since Ronald Regan
You will be waiting forever, the trickle down effect is just planted there to keep working class people like you going, thinking maybe one day you'll have a better life.
Really? Cause I’m pretty sure the increases in parking, tolls and other fees are exactly what the trickle down was intended to do, and it’s working!
So yes, as taxes for the wealthy and corporations have reduced, the tickle down is increased financial burdens for the rest.
@@levmoses742 precisely
In Russia its called Oligarchy
Here we call them "Entrepreneurs" or Business moguls and other embelished names to hide the truth.
Where one might fall out a window for bucking the state. Meanwhile, they allows a million Americans die of COVID so Elon stayed happy and to stoke Trumps ego.
@@megaponful Same in the Philippines.
Here too. Now. We should have elected Harris. America is poisoned by Fox "news".
Unions are good for building the middle class. The End
Weekend?!
My dad was teamster for decades and because of them he earned a livable wage, although just barely. I never thought of ourselves as poor but when I became an adult I sadly discovered that many in our community, our church looked down upon us.
The teamsters also set up a pension for my father. They pay him $2500 / mo. which on top of his $1500 Social Security he's better now than ever before. But think about that, he worked basically since he was 18 and paid into the system until he retired at 65 and the government only gives him $1500 for all that time! If he hadn't belonged to a union where would he be now? (Shout out to the Boeing workers!)
Also a good igniter to foreign competition.
UAW Union killed American car industry….!
Unions are not perfect, but just like the hate toward HOA's the problems normally arise from bad leadership. And since leaders are elected, it is the rank and file that needs to get off their *** and manage how the unions are run. Unions have and will ensure that the top won't take everything. Because, as we have seen over the last ~50yrs, they will absolutely take everything. The money(1000x pay), freedom(Patriot act), and country (buy politicians).
"There arent too many guest rooms"... no duh, you think the Vanderbuilts were sharing?
Guest rooms are usually for when family stays. Their family had multiple homes in Newport so no need for guest rooms.
What about Anderson Cooper tho? jk 😅
A second gilded age, but everything's from Ikea and designed to fail. We won't have any marble clad buildings to mark us, just skyscrapers that will require careful demolition when they become public hazards.
Its a lot of mansions from that era that no longer exist, ones like this are the exception and not the norm...
@@02nupe Depends on location. Walking around Chicago or New York you see craftsmanship that doesn't exist anymore.
Wealthy people dont shop at ikea.
you know many skyskrapers are from the progressive and new deal era right?
Yes- things are built cheaply
5:51
To put this into perspective:
A milkman in the 1950's made enough money to buy a house, and raise a family. Despite the job being unskilled labor.
Plus, the low cost of rent and tuition.
Correct, thats why those housewives commercials were so popular, you can actually afford to stay home and look after the kids. The irony is that you can't even be a house mom today if you even choose to. The cost of everything is so high right now.
Population in 1950 was a third of what it is now. If you want every Amazon driver (2024 Milk Man) to make enough to buy a house, you better be prepared to pay 60x more for your cheap infinite Amazon junk delivered right into your clammy hands every day. We have too many people all competing for the limited opportunity.
@@nychris2258 The issue is manufacturing left the US...if you wanna know where our middle class is please go to China, you will see them happily spending money on rolexes and dior while strolling around with their kids in a packed mall in shanghai. I only came to this conclusion when i randomly decided to visit there for a 4 day vacation. The average person there appears a lot more gratuitous than our ppl here in the States
@@sew_gal7340 Not necessarily true. My niece just had twins and her spouse and her work for tech companies and have good salaries. Their using their parental leave first one for 6 months and then the other, her husband's company is allowing him to work from home mostly. They own 2 houses, they had to move due to their jobs so they rented out their old home because housing prices skyrocketed that high. They used the first home as collateral to buy their current house.
@sew_gal7340 America got cheap products made at low cost but at a price of losing its manufacturing. There are whole towns that never recovered.
Definition: The Gilded Age, period of gross materialism and blatant political corruption in U.S. history during the 1870s that gave rise to important novels of social and political criticism.
Yeah, I'd say so.
You do realize they’re the ones who’s then write the history right 😂
@@CoercedJab "the one's who then write the history"
Is English your language?
Because this sentence doesn't make sense, the grammar is wrong.
@@CoercedJabYeah, you might want to sit this one out until you learn English if you want those quips to hit 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@CoercedJab Yeah, I'm sure that JD Rockefeller went on to personally influence the dictionary definition of the word Gilded Age during his lifetime. I actually remember this story being told to me, you see JD Rockefeller was on his death bed and his last words were "The Gilded Age will be defined as a period of gross materialism and blatant political corruption in U.S. history during the 1870s that gave rise to important novels of social and political criticism." Great insight, very valuable!!!!!!
This is literally my paper topic for sociology.
Thank you for studying Sociology. I wish more people would study it. It’s OPEN people’s eyes.
Sounds fun I loved that course
Two questions: do you have student loans? And what kind of job will you get with that degree?
@@thedopplereffect00 it’s literally a course he never stated he was becoming a sociologist. Can only assume you’ve never been to college.
@@TheAS687 lmao meanwhile it sounds like you got those sweet sweet loans 😂
I notice you didn’t answer either question and instead went for a personal attack?
Do they teach that in college?
The reason unions can struggle to be affective is because there are no laws about how fast companies need to make a deal once a union is approved. Companies will deliberately drag out negotiations over years to stymie the union
We ARE in a second gilded age as far as I'm concerned
But ABC can’t come out and say that, because the owners of media conglomerates are the kinds of a-holes that this puff piece is cautiously criticizing.
When a private citizen can start their own space program there are serious problems with the tax structure.
😢 Elon space program is literally financed bu public funds, add to injury 🤕
whats wrong with that? I don’t believe it’s wise to let government have a monopoly on that.
Whats wrong with them.
State monopoly is bad and unethical.
You don't think private citizens should be allowed to innovate? Should they be stopped from creating computer or automobile companies too?
Phony Stark didn't "innovate" anything. He bought corporations, after he got lucky betting on stocks from the money his parents gave him from slave emeralds.
We need some monopoly busting
No, we need higher top tax rates and to close the loop holes in the tax system
@@PelosiStockPortfolioyes we need that and we need to create competition. new wealth and major regulations on how much of the market a group of investors can control. They're getting rich because they don't have competition. Top tax rate over 1000000 99 perfect capital gains and income tax. also we need some redistribution of wealth for the super rich kick them back down to under 100 million dollars worth of cash and assets combined.
@@Bailey-cx7zz Monopolies can harm society when they completely control something that is necessary to function in our daily lives. Facebook doesnt provide anything necessary in our daily lives, it is not something we must have. What is the point in requiring facebook to have competition? Focus on the things that actually matter.
@@PelosiStockPortfolio No. we are not an island. How are we going to compete with outsourcing if we have the highest tax rate in the world? Tax the billionaires to the poor house, does that touch the government spending of 35 trillion? NO
@@ST-rj8iu Tax the billionaires to 90%, like it was done in the 1950's and 1960's when "America was great". Why dont you want to make America great again? Do you hate America?
What happened to all the laws put into effect that broke up Ma Bell and the other monopolies. Now they are everywhere and growing by the day!
Congress stopped passing new laws. And since the 90s, the FTC has been asleep at the wheel. Biden tried to change it a bit but wasnt' very successful in court when trying to stop mergers.
A bit of conjecture here, but as far as I recall, it isn't considered a monopoly if there's alternatives. The rules could be the same, but now with globalization, there's often competition even if it isn't from/in the US.
Remember this when a celebrity tells you to bike to work or who to vote for.
Bro, we got a second gilded age before gta 6
I'm not against anyone doing well. My issue is that many who have see no issues with everyone else struggling. It's a shame and government officials should be embarrassed that there are so many people experiencing homelessness and individuals/families struggling to afford the most basic necessities.
My parents took me on a tour of Hurst Castle in California when I was a kid. I knew nothing of the Gilded Age beyond Daddy Warbucks from the Annie movie, yet I felt a subtle sense of disgust walking through the endless rooms of opulence. I felt the same way when learning about the Palace of Versailles in junior high French class. My teacher extolled a room covered in gold foil for its beauty, but all I could think about was French Revolution and how freaking poor everyone else was. Suddenly it made sense to me why Marie Antoinette was beheaded.
Even children can recognize that places like Hurst Castle and Breakers mansion are a shameful waste of resources.
I have met the Hearst family. Yes they are extremely wealthy but they are nice people. The Hearst and Rockefeller’s live near Seattle. Big ass homes! Wow!!
Hearst Castle is an atrocity today. Just a bunch of random aging crap, even the tour guides acknowledge the fake Arabic on certain items. Hearst got grifted just as much as he grifted.
Oh man...I was a youngun' when I visited Hearst Castle years ago, what a throwback. I was too young at the time to know the insinuations of that kind of wealth and grandeur. But yeah, agreed. I'm pretty sure I'd feel the same if I revisited it.
Marie Antoinette would urge you to trust the experts…
@@mycatlovesme159if they’re so nice they should fund my university education 😂
My great grandfather was a sharecropper in the Jim Crow south with a 9th grade education and he was able to provide for his wife and 8 kids. Meanwhile I have two degrees and a pretty good career with no kids and can’t afford a studio apartment. YES we are in a second gilded age.
be like the "new" rich. have everyone in your family claim those next group of 8 children, get tax benefits and welfare for 18 years, and claim you are elite.
We knew this 20 years ago.
We knew this 30 years ago when the richest were Gates and Jobs.
So you're saying the last 100 years of wealth redistribution programs didn't do anything.
Government keeps borrowing from the national debt instead of raising taxes on the rich to cover their overspending.
They did work, really well actually... So well that it prompted the largest backlash along socioeconomic lines that the world has ever seen to the point where CEO pay is now 300-400 times their average worker vs the 60s-70s where CEO pay was 30-40 times their average worker... Beginning somewhat in the early 70s, massively ramping up with the aid of Reagan who laid the groundwork for the takeover, then the model created under Reagan becoming commonplace under the following administrations/legislatures. One little tax break followed by one little cut to social spending and maybe an anti-union measure here or a campaign finance change there, then another round, then another round, and then another round. Round and round til today where corporations pay next to nothing in taxes but can buy elections wholesale, unions are fighting for their lives, and avg wages have fallen massively below productivity.
50 years of a massive, organized, unified, and most importantly patient effort to assure the dominance of capital owners in the United States for all time. It didnt matter what party was running congress or who the president was, they all sold us out and are all continuing to do so.
The first Gilded age hasn’t ended and never will.
Investing in many sources of income that are independent on government paychecks is the prudent thing that everyone should be thinking about right now, especially given the global economic crisis. Stocks, forex, and digital currencies are still good investments at this time
Trading without professional guide...Huh i laugh you, because you will remain where you are or even make huge loses that will stop you from trading, this has been one of the biggest problem to new traders
How can one find a verifiable financial planner? I would not mind looking up the professional that helped you
My CFA Julianne Iwersen Niemann, a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Found her online page by searching her full name, I wrote her an email and scheduled a call, hopefully she responds.
The thing is people often doubt the prospects of financial advisors like Julianne Iwersen Niemann in business/markets today.
I came from poverty but have worked at some of those top levels, and seen their world. WE ARE 100% in an absolute state of disparity. The fact people in Australia are skipping meals is shocking. Because this is the place it should be the least likely to happen.
This mansion was built by the finest UNION craftsmen, but they didn't want to pay their regular employees. UNIONIZE YOUR WORKPLACE!
Unions are a business. Typically a 'connected' one. No thanks.
1 million seconds adds upto about 11 days while 1 billion seconds is about 32 years...most people don't grasp the difference in wealth & financial systems.
Boy I wish we’d all unite and have “no spend days.” Hurt the wealthy’s pockets for this deep disparity between the classes.
So what would you consider wealthy? Anyone with more money than you?
It is directed towards anyone making more than precisely $153,000 per year.
What's sad is that, it wouldn't take much. Just 1, maybe 2, days of no spending anything, and that effect would be felt immediately on the rich and the tide would turn in a heartbeat.
@@theseventhgeneration6910 nah, $150K a year is around $7500 a month after tax. Mortgage for an old house is starting from 5K a month in CA. After grocery and other spendings to maintain said house, you have around $1000 left.
“Buy Nothing Day” is a thing. All it takes is organization. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buy_Nothing_Day
so many died in gilded ages for the top to live so comfrotable
Yeah its not as bad now as it had been in those days...
@@Melior_Traiano if you count the whole worlds population then it is billions suffer so a few million people can live like kings
@@Melior_TraianoI wouldn’t be so sure. I think the prices we, the working class and the impoverished class, pay may not be as obvious. I’m thinking of the number of people who die from drug overdoses, homelessness, preventable diseases like obesity and heart disease (both appear to be diseases from a life of gluttony and excess but can be linked to poor education, lack of availability of healthy food choices due to cost and food deserts - it’s far cheaper to buy soft drinks than milk). Also the deaths caused by pollution eg Flint Michigan, maternal and child mortality due to insufficient access to care and nutrition, not to mention the level of risk to personal safety is not proportional to the level of pay - eg fishermen, oil rig workers, prison guards, ICU nurses etc etc and one of the most egregious cases - war veterans.
We often hear about life expectancy statistics from a whole population scale. I wonder what that breakdown looks like across different wealth and socioeconomic groups. Also the stats on quality of life and other outcomes. I think we can get the illusion that life is getting better for each generation, and I wonder if the level of improvement is the same across the board or as I suspect, the ultra rich enjoys a level of quality and access that we can’t even imagine, let alone realise how much we are missing out on despite working harder and making far more sacrifices to our lives in comparison.
@@Liliarthan You make some good points. I won’t pretend to have all the answers or immediate insights into the statistics. However, when reading books like Jack London's The People of the Abyss, which recounts his real-life experience in London in 1901, it becomes clear how much life has improved for the majority of people since those times. Back then, child labor was prevalent (only formally abolished in 1938 in the U.S.), and the working class could literally be worked to de ath by their employers, with few rights, no social security, and no health care. Worker protections were almost non-existent and working hours were much longer than today and unregulated. The average life expectancy was around 48 years for the entire population. Women only gained the right to vote in the U.S. in 1920, and the Civil Rights Act (which prohibits discrimination based on race) only came into effect in 1964.
My great grandma (mom’s grandma) was one of the maids there. She came from Ireland :)
Did she tell y'all stories about her working there ? And what were the people like as well ? 😎
Yeah share conspiracy stories. Spicy ones 😂
Again...water is wet? This IS the Gilded Age 2.0, I don't need experts telling me what has been happening for a while. But as with the first one, it'll fall/fail eventually. That's the good part. The bad part is that many will suffer as a result. What happened last time? The First World War. Followed by a decade long era of insane prosperity, but at least it was somewhat accessible for the rest of us. Followed by a global depression, then the Second World War that brought us out of it and the social reset that happened after that. The late 40's into the 50's was an era of upward mobility that finally many could achieve, rather than the few. History. We're very literally repeating what happened almost a century ago. So much for learning from it.
Except that there won’t be any era of prosperity this time round. We’re almost out of resources to spare. Tough luck.
@@anuragchakraborty8766 That last part isn't true at all. There's plenty. But just like a century ago, people didn't think so because all the super wealth were hoarding them like they pretty much always do.
The pendulum always swings.
Watching this after I saw a news story about a Pepsico plant shut down without notifying employees. They showed up and were given garbage bags to collect their things and were escorted out by police. Some had been there nearly 30 years and couldn't even receive a dignified notice of job termination. Nope. Just the disrespect and humiliation that goes along with being employed in the US.
Yup happened in Chicago, that factory has been there for decades.
Reminds me of how Elon fired his employees for choosing public and personal safety over his bottom line, and Trump praising him for it. America just voted in a male Marie Antoinette.
I remember being in highschool in the early 2000s and these super rich families were credited with creating wealth and better living standards for all through public works and charities. The message was the only way to improve the lives of everyone in the country was to become super rich just like them. And I wasn't in some deep red or backwoods school; this was 30min outside DC in a well off area of mostly high level government workers. It's taken decades for me to unlearn all that crap 😞
Sounds like NoVa hahaha
@@HappyOva where the N stands for knowledge 😆🤦🏻♀️
Sounds like potomac
No, they need to get rich so the peasants can eat & keep working.
Trust the experts!
I remember reading High School finance books in the 2000s and it talked about savings and how one could earn money by having it sit in the bank. Now we just live in an era where if you work hard you'll have to move back with your parents. 😢
'The Jungle' was published in 1906. It should be assgined in high school.
It used to be. So was Grapes of Wrath, Great Gatsby, and Farewell to Arms.
No matter the circumstance of the building of this it is a truly beautiful architectural building!!
Every monument of civilization is also a monument of barbarism.
I disagree. It's nothing but a monument to vanity, and it's overall pretty hideous.
At least during the first Gilded Age, the rich built beautiful libraries and museums, helped to fund parks and gardens for the public, etc.
They did this to keep the masses happy enough that they didn't take up the pitchforks and arms.
Today's robber barrons offer nothing of the sort. Just selfishness on steroids.
"Greed is good", or so I've been told.
Instead of that these billionaires use internet algorithms to divide people based on hate. If people are too distracted trying to screw people different than them they won’t notice the real masterminds of their misery, because fear is a stronger emotion than love.
For the people that think unions are bad and backing rich A hole for president and glaze a certain South African billionaire you are the biggest idiots in the country and aloud this to happen thank you
Unions can be good for workers, all candidates are rich a-holes, no one should ever think about glazing Elon just gross I will "allow" you to think about that
@@AdamValadez-x1yPlease clean your intestines with drain cleaner
Allowed *
i'm voting against that rich a hole, but I KNOW unions are bad. I worked under one. never will again. they are just as extortionary, useless, and give zero shits about you like the corporations you seem to despise.
I remember when liberals loved them both, what changed? 😂😂😂
I would say there's no doubt that we are living in another gilded age. Don't know why we need experts to say so.
You don’t need an expert to tell you that
At least in the first gilded age, the grossly wealthy built libraries and theaters and other institutions that benefitted society.
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” - Mark Twain.
"Experts"? A society where one person has enough money to end world hunger, and doesn't. This doesn't require an expert.
One must possess invisible magic to solve those issues.
@@Fido-vm9zi or elons money
Growth is one thing. But eventually it slows down. And economic management becomes more important.
Especially with maintaining the middle class.
Hence why European economics is different. They never had Westward Expansion like we did.
The Caribbean, Africa, Asia, Central and South America: "Europe never what?"
Collectivism fails ....anywhere it's ever been tried.
imagine living in your own museum
Be pretty dope tbh
@@Kingedwardiii2003 Fr sounds like a dream man cave to have museum stuff in my living spaces. I’d want a T. rex skull somewhere 😂
i like how skilled labor is now just “this ingroup monopolist lends me shekels for having a college degree and using a computer!”
Yes, let's tour some rich old guys house, so we can feel bad about being poor.
The tv show the gilded age is good and does the time period very well, if your reading this and have not watched the show go watch
Anderson Cooper is Vanderbilt royalty. 🤙
Yes but he said he needed to work hard as he wont inherit all the ancestors's money
Tucker Carlson is beneficiary of the Swanson Food Co. that his mother inherited part of. Just from the inheritance he's estimated to be worth over $300 million.
@@dianaverano7878 sort of, even with a few million dollars inhertiance and leg up with that name he is a multi-millionaire many times over, Its levels to having to "Really" work for it and he didn't start from scratch. Im not mad at it, just pointing it out.
@@02nupe he went into modelling even at an early age, as he knew he has to work.
Millions are nothing within few years if you cant handle it and continue to earn millions to maintain it.
Millionaires continue to be rich because they have businesses that are continuously running. His side of the family lost losts of money along the way. That is documented even before he was born
Yes, bow to your betters peasant
The “Technological Middle Ages”
"Why some experts believe we’re living in a second Gilded Age"
Some experts? Is there anyone who thinks we are not?
This expands past wealth into many aspects of life. It seems there is a growing divide between the classes as far as fitness, intelligence, etc and lack of competition in the gene pool.
It's by design
That closing comment about 'FLEX' was an insight to human-nature.
Couldn't care less about boats & houses. Do care about the health & well-being of children, families & communities.
We should be asking what happened AFTER the gilded age🧐
Time to repeat the French Revolution
No. We need a 2nd American Revolution. The French Revolution rapidly devolved into a bloodbath nightmare dictatorship Robespierre Napoleon etc
No
@@sociedadnortena9514Found the CEO
You first, kommy
@legendofman12 You severely underestimate the rage.
This is definitely becoming the 2nd Gilded age. Hopefully the middle class doesn’t get completely destroyed.
Becoming? It's been one for years, if not decades now.
I highly recommend watching the PBS American Experience documentary The Guilded Age (available here on TH-cam). It is eye opening for people who don't know the history if the era in detail, especially the labor issues of the time.
I've been saying this for the last 4 yrs.
Many people have been saying this for years . . .
The Biltmore in Asheville NC is kind of a big deal too. Christmas I think might be the most popular time of year
Elites and the Oligarchy have been around for a very long time. Greed of not wanting to share the wealth can be traced back to the Monarchy. Everyone thinks just because the nobility that came to live in the USA no longer have titles it doesn't mean they didn't have influence and have become kings without titles just a very well known rich name. SO indeed the USA has a monarchy they are just called by a different name know as the elites/Oligarchy.
Fact check: Jeff is no longer CEO of Amazon
The Gilded Age for a chosen few.
I've been saying this for years, we live in a Second Gilded Age.
Most people here will disagree but the average American has it better than the richest people of the late 1800s. Yes they had servants and large mansions but we have air conditioning, cars, airplanes, modern medicine, and access to all the world information and music in our pocket. All of which was made possible by capitalism.
I'll trade to be 19th cent millionaire. Air conditioning and middle seat on a jet liner are both over rated.
Capitalism was never the issue, there is government overspending and taxes on the rich are too low low to cover it in most states but California
You're such an idiot. I've never heard of a king or a gilded age millionaire killing themselves. Being at the top of society in any time period gives a person such a feeling of euphoria and pure dopamine, your peasant mind would never comprehend their existence.
Every company should have a board seat for unions.
What this video leaves out is that labor unions for police, teachers, and doctors make it virtually impossible to fire bad police, teachers, or doctors. There is also the possibility of political capture (like we see with UAW) where signing up for a labor union means signing up for a political party. Labor unions increase a worker’s bargaining power and can increase their wages, however there are important drawbacks to consider and intentionally omitting them from a “informative” news video is not helpful.
Tell it to Amazon ceo who loves to abuse workers.
Who will be our Teddy Roosevelt?
Did Fred Trump come here legally? I believe we are in a Gilded Age. I love that architecture
Lol donald father was born in the US
Yes. I stand corrected. Fred was born in the Bronx. Immigrant grandparents. Either way immigrants and I’m sure Fred was not wealthy. People don’t identify with the plight of others for some reason.
The breakers decorate quite impressively for the Christmas season
Was this building on Gossip Girl? The scenes when Vanessa goes to visit Nate’s family as his girlfriend..
It’s too bad the oligarchs aren’t building beautiful homes anymore, or building hospitals, museums or schools. I’m not sure where all their money goes, but at least during the gilded age wealthy did give back.
Nah bruh, we're regressing.
The gilded age created beautiful architecture, and took millions out of rural poverty towards an industrialized urban reality. It was the final transition towards the modern age.
Nowdays, not a single mansion will ever be a museum, it has no value, no art, no quality construction. And there hasn't been any significant change in the way society works so far.
And Americans just voted for the guy who’s going to give them all tax breaks and deregulate them 🤦🏻♂️
You mean the donors silly 😂 no party will bite the hand that feeds them let’s be critically honest
Educate yourself. The Progressives, aka Democrats and RINOs, ARE AND WERE the Gilded Age wealthy. They want to keep that power by any means necessary even if it means unleashing biowarfare, invasion, kleptocrats, lobbyists, and actors against the common man. Progressive Gilded wealthy threw natives and ranchers off their land, killed their animals, enacted monopolies, unleashed wars, and used eugenics to turn vast swaths of land into their own playgrounds (only wealthy then could access the parks), and they only wanted "educated" to be skilled workers who know their place. Just like the Democrats now.
Strong unions are possible with strong companies. Unions are also responsible for running companies into bankruptcy.
Let's see how long this comment is live before it's removed...
Finish the phrase: "Those who don't learn their history..." I feel that so much of the 21st century is just a repeat of the 20th. - 10/25/24 @ 12:37 PM U.S. CST
Society repeats itself about every 80 years, because those that lived it are no longer around to remind people of what it was like.
I saw this video's title and the Willy Wonka meme instantly sprung to mind with Gene Wilder in his "Tell me more" sarcastic pose.
Living in? Living in and have been living in.
Every tradesman I know is struggling; while simultaneously being the people that keep this world turning. Time for a huge change
So we need another French Revolution?
Things like unions only work if the people are committed to working hard. If workers are lazy because they know they can’t get fired-the whole thing falls apart.
Eat the rich
Ew
Word salad
@@Manwithaplan2021if that’s word salad for you then you are illiterate.
Super edgy
@@rickyayy No you’re just a super bootlicker
They say CEO is making 300-1000x more than the average worker.
Average American wage is $59,384.
X300 = $17,815,200
X1000= is $59,384,000
I’m not saying we shouldn’t be concerned with growing wealth inequality, but we have to stop bastardizing the term “expert.”
Jokes aside, it’s not that workers aren’t pro Union it’s just that being union means we’re just gonna laid off for someone who’ll do it cheaper and for no benefits
People who support Equality of Outcomes are going to have to explain why somebody who works one hour should be paid the same as somebody who works 8 hours.
Because their marginal revenue products are different 🤦♂️
@@izzyc1570 That doesn't answer the question
@@Law19157
But doesn’t that also apply to executive positions? Why should a CEO working 5 hours and making poor business decisions that drives a legacy brand into losing millions of dollars be paid 200 times what a salary worker makes?
@henrylivingstone2971 That CEO would be fired by the Corporate Board. You assume a corporate is ok with its CEO losing the company money.
@
Boeing and Disney come to mind
My husband is IBEW strong and union proud. No way he'd EVER work non-union working on the power lines.
Duh
History repeats itself eh?
The gap, is even wider between the haves and have nots than during the “Guilded Age”… hello!
CEOs should make a lot. Every few weeks they come in to work to make another stupid rule for the poor sucker at the bottom to follow. Then they jump on their private jet to get on their 5 billion dollar boat.
It is literally like that. Jamie Daimon faced federal prosecution for fraud in the Lehman Shock but Obama chose not to go that route. Obama could have not bailed out Wall St. and instead (like Biden after the pandemic) paid the money directly to each American. The payout would've been around $22,000 per American who could have used the money to go to their local bank and restructured their mortgages and car payments with almost zero interests and all the Wall St. banks would've collapsed. Instead many Americans lost their jobs, their homes, while Wall St. banks with no strings attached to their bailout and immunity from prosecution paid themselves bonuses. They eventually paid the money back, but now we have Wall St. banks that are too big to fail. The effect 2008 had on the regular family though was devastating, something even now we haven't recovered from.
CEO’s shouldn’t exist.
@@OneFreeMan17
I built and now manage a small 5 person business so you could say I am the CEO, without me those people wouldn't be pulling in 5k USD per month but without them I probably wouldn't either.
CEOs should exist but the majority are following the same line placed down for generations.
A lot of people just see the rich and think it was an easy way and those people are bad but most of the time that is not the case. I spent two years working hard and went from 15k in debt to being able to retire at 30.
Why don't you become one and show us all how easy it is.
@@CoasterRanger I will. I just need an idea and the first million. In another year I'll be the richest dude on earth.
Conveniently forgot to mention the Gilded Age ended in the Great Depression…
Yep, which the power and greed triggered as a means to eliminate the "undesirable" populations when WWI didn't get rid of enough. They started the American Eugenics Societies and worked with the Nazis later to further their work globalizing power and eliminating the unwanted races and ethnicities. WWII through the 1950s was a surprise that elevated those undesired peoples to a strong middle class and they couldn't have that so they made the Boomers and Millennials out to be the ubermensch and destroyed X and X's children as best they could world wide.
Why are we pretending these houses aren't ugly?
Big? Yes. Costly? Yes. Worth the eye sore?🤢
Have you seen the tacky trash most actors and sports stars built and love? 🤮
People who ignore (and want others to ignore) the concept of a Gilded Age 2, tend to throw around words like "socialism", "communism" and then give countries like Venezuela and Cuba as examples instead of countries like Norway, Sweden, or Denmark as examples of strong unions, living wages, and access to healthcare.
And they have in the past scared people into not supporting measures that they deem "socialist" because supposedly rich people "create jobs" so they need that tax break. Except not just rich people create jobs.
And taxes are low for the wealthy historically speaking.
The rich today pay less than 40% in taxes, while in the 60s they paid upwards of 60%. And America had the largest middle class in history and least inequality during that period.
😂😂😂 You have not done your homework at all. That living wage BS was stopped by those countries long ago and they're trying to remove socialism as a failed experiment now. Gov healthcare failed, unions failed, communism failed, all of it failed because it relies on leeching from taxpayers who are broke, not replacing at population rates and using immigrants who don't want to float the olds and will and do kill them to continue that socialism. Educate yourself
4:45 People call things unsustainable, but then do not explain why it's unsustainable. Does unsustainable now just mean unpopular?
It's word-saladian
It means that if things keep headed in the current direction either the populace will revolt and upend the current powers, or our way of life will become unrecognizable: a few super wealthy and the rest basically a slave class. I think that's what they mean by unsustainable.
@@RyvreRandom Okay, so it means unpopular. Thank you.
@@adamoliver4094 Haha, the British weren't popular either, neither were the monarchies of Europe. Caring for the people is important, not that it seems to matter to you.
@@adamoliver4094 I'd add that it's also unsustainable in terms of human life, both quality and actual lives. Greed, hording of resources at the expense of people's health and well-being is harmful on a moral level.
Your desire to downplay the impact of wealth and power centralizing, belies an ignorance of history, economics, and human nature.
The people are starving.. let them eat cake…
I somewhat appreciate how well you kept your sarcasm in for the servants quarters
cake is a cult buzzword. it means different things to different people.