Monday, June 12, 2006
One of the blogs I read (Larry James' Urban Daily in the list on the right) is by the CEO of an inner-city Dallas nonprofit. He gets a lot of comments, mostly supportive, some with good questions and suggestions, and occasional attacks (this last category has a 99% Anonymous rate). What strikes me in the attacks is they assume automatically that the people at a food pantry made choices significantly worse than the normal person. A decent probability, but do we usually assume people who do better than us made significantly better decisions, or are they lucky, or started with more, or something else that erases the difference in decisions?
Also (and this is completely unrelated), I saw The Perfect Storm last night. It was a big Clooney-Wahlberg weekend as I also saw Three Kings - both of these movies for the first time. Anyway, when Donny's collecting his pay for the fishing trip, the owner explains the pay system - that the non-sailing, non-fishing owner takes half the net profit, and the rest is divided by the crew. I know capitalism is supposed to reward the risk of supplying raw materials, but does it make sense for one person to profit that much? The others don't own the boat, of course, but especially for a profession like that, their health and life are in danger on every trip. It doesn't seem fair to me, but I can't quite decide on it. Any thoughts?
posted by Unknown 4:51 PM |
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