Greed is certainly an unworthy characteristic to posses, but I trust greed; I understand greed; greed is predictable when recognized. The biggest problem I see today is that people cannot recognize greed when they are looking at it. They look at the corporations that are greedy for their profit margins (as they are designed to be and expected to be) and they can see that because it is obvious and is pertinent to the nature of business. When they look at the social programs in America (welfare, foodstamps, etc), though, they think of them as charitable programs instead of recognizing them as insidious instruments of greed (by the politicians implementing and controlling them, not necessarily by those receiving them). If one cannot even recognize greed, what does it matter discussing it?
Well put, though I will say that I have known people on welfare, foostamps, ss, etc. and they needed it due to their current situations and I honestly had no problem knowing that part of my money was going toward them. Living in cities is expensive as hell (especially nowadays). A friend of mine was one of those delivery guys that drives their bikes around the city-- he mainly delivered food for a few places. He accidentally was injured pretty badly and was out of work for a while. No insurance because he can't afford it and nobody offers it. It was just this huge mess for him-- he's only making 17,000+/- a year for what I deem an
extremely rigorous and dangerous job, so any form of gov't aid he got I have no quarrel with. However I've heard that 30%+ of welfare is illegitimate so I'm with you on those cases-- anyone who's just being a lazy parasite can go screw themselves.
As far as 'greedy people/corporations' go, sure! If they work hard, they deserve those margins. However I've
also known people that have it good due to a complete lack of hardwork-- rich parents raising spoiled kids and the like. One guy I went to HS with got into the stock market and hit it big due to his dad watching over his investments. He's constantly taking expensive vacations, living in Trump Tower, spending $ left and right, etc. and he has the nerve to complain about Obama taxing the tax bracket he falls into (we're talking 7-digit range here). I just wish people would realize that even if the gov't does tax the rich a bit more, the majority will still have plenty of cash. It's unfortunate that these scenarios can't be black and white-- sometimes hard work ends you up on the streets and little effort gets you everything. The world's a b1+ch sometimes.