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Check out the below video. It gives us a glimpse of the world’s tallest residential skyscraper and the three-story penthouse that sits atop it.

Great wealth has never bothered me—providing, of course, it was earned producing an ethical product or service and didn’t rely on cheating (i.e., fraud, extortion, crony capitalism, etc.).

Now here’s the rub. Despite the scourge of wealth inequality that great wealth naturally engenders, I never really questioned my detached fondness for great wealth. I mean, after all, shouldn’t the spectacle of the few living exquisitely while the many live drearily rankle my sense of fairness?

Part of the reason great wealth has never bothered me is genetic. I don’t have a hyperactive envy gene—I just don’t care that others have more. And I don’t have a hyperactive ego gene—I know I’m scum, and I’m happy being scum.

But once I moved beyond my genetic disposition and began grappling with my deductive powers, I came up with three reasons for my detached fondness for great wealth. Here we go.

Utility

Groovy Ranch cost $265,000 and helped fund the livelihood of a builder and a handful of tradespeople for four months. Central Park Tower will cost $3 billion by the time it’s finished later this year, and its owners have been funneling money to numerous construction firms and hundreds of tradespeople since 2015. And all that funneling has been made possible because there are enough rich people in this world who are willing to spend over $7,000 per square foot for an apartment in Manhattan.

The rich are good to have around, especially if you produce things that only they can consume.

And talking about things that only the rich can consume, a lot of the technology that we take for granted today is only around because of the rich. For example, I bought a 50-inch flat-screen tv two years ago for $190. When my rich cousin bought a 50-inch flat-screen way back in 2006, it cost him $7,500. Now a question. How does cutting-edge technology become commonplace if there aren’t first-adopters willing and able to pay dearly for it? If you answered it doesn’t, go straight to the head of the class. Television manufacturers needed a lot of flat-screen profits early on to justify all the toil and innovation that would be needed to vastly improve the production process and mainstream 50-inch flat-screen tvs. And you and I didn’t supply those profits. The rich did.

Finally, here’s another thing that makes the rich so useful. If refined culture depended on me and others like me, refined culture would have vanished years ago. The great unwashed just don’t frequent plays, lectures, museums, string quartets, art galleries, and fine restaurants enough to make these luxuries viable concerns. But the rich do. And because of this, refined culture is always around whenever a miracle strikes and I want a little more out of life than beer, Doritos, and reruns of The Trailer Park Boys.

Inspiration

How do you get water from the Delaware and Catskill watersheds to exit a shower head that’s on the 131st floor of some skyscraper on 57th Street in Manhattan? How do you get a turd deposited on the 131st floor of said skyscraper down to the ground level and then to a sewage treatment plant? And how do you get said skyscraper, which is super-thin and over 1,500 feet tall, to withstand the stress of hurricane-level winds? The engineering involved in Central Park Tower boggles the mind. And it’s a testament to what great things human beings are capable of.

I, of course, don’t have a one-percent brain. So I could never design anything as remarkable as Central Park Tower. But my ninety-nine-percent brain is far from useless. And that means I still have the ability to be more—providing, of course, I don’t get comfortable. And things such as Central Park Tower (thank you, rich people!) inspire me to be a little less lazy and a little less satisfied with whatever “achievements” I’ve made to date.

Appreciation

The older I get, the more I appreciate simple, unabashed competency. And the reason for this is depressingly straightforward: It’s becoming increasingly harder to find. The national debt is now nearing $27 trillion. We spend a trillion dollars a year on public education and our tech companies still have to import programming talent from abroad. There are over 40,000 homeless people in Los Angeles. In 2016, voters approved a $1.2 billion bond measure (Proposition HHH) to address this infamy. Well, to date, Los Angeles has committed roughly $800 million in HHH bonds to housing projects and has produced a paltry 46 housing units.

Quick aside: To be fair to Los Angeles officials, there are currently 19 HHH housing projects under construction (representing 1,260 units), 60 HHH housing projects in pre-construction (representing 4,150 units), and 35 HHH housing projects pending approval (representing  2,230 units). Over the next six years, Los Angeles should manage to produce an additional 7,640 housing units. That’s much better than 46 housing units in three years. But it’s still pathetic, giving the size of the problem and the amount of money earmarked to mitigate that problem.

And it’s not just the government that’s awash in incompetency. How many people were shot in Chicago last week? How many Americans are competently managing their health, finances, and interpersonal relationships? How many Americans take pride in their work, their appearance, and their social graces?

Here’s another video to check out. It shows the on-going site prep of the Tesla terafactory in Texas.

Now, I don’t know exactly what I’m looking at in the above video. All I know is that hundreds of pieces of heavy equipment are buzzing around the construction site and in little over a month, Tesla has managed to clear, level, and drain more than a thousand acres of raw land. By this time next year, Tesla will have a functioning factory spitting out thousands of vehicles. That’s simple, unabashed competency—courtesy of a rich-ass MFer with a lot of drive and a lot of vision.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that competency is the exclusive province of the rich. My middle-class brother-in-law, for instance, is a superb carpenter and his crown-molding skills are nothing short of awe-inspiring. Competency can be found at all socioeconomic levels. But to my anecdotal eye, it definitely skews toward the rich. Whenever I come across someone who has mastered his or her finances, brought excellence to his or her profession or trade, or elevated the condition of his or her community, that someone is more likely to be from the upper class rather than the working class.

Quick aside: To show what I mean by saying that competency skews toward the rich, ask yourself the following two questions. First, how many incompetent doctors or dentists have you come across in your life? Second, how many incompetent government bureaucrats have you come across in your life? In my adult life, I’ve sought the services of at least a dozen doctors and dentists. And I can’t think of one who was incompetent. They were all excellent. I did work, however, with hundreds of bureaucrats in my twenty-one-year career in a municipal highway department and I would be hard-pressed to name twelve who were competent. 

Final Thoughts

Okay, groovy freedomist, that’s all I got. What say you? Am I giving the rich far too much credit? Or is my detached fondness for them warranted? Let me know what you think when you get a chance. Peace.

11 thoughts on “Why the Rich Are Awesome

  1. Good job Mr. Groovy. The main problem I see with an appreciation for the rich is the mistaken belief that is so prevalent— If you are rich then that means I have less.—WTF? I see that belief all the time amazing as it is.
    Thanks for another good one.

  2. Excellent Post Mr. Groovy. I think it was Lincoln who said – and I paraphrase, “You don’t build your house by tearing your neighbors down”.

    A personal observation about competence: I, and numerous acquaintances have noticed a large number of incompetent physicians these days. I constantly observe and hear about misdiagnoses and improper treatments. And much like the programming talent, it’s the foreign born doctors that seem to be the most competent. I think its time for us Americans to up our game.

  3. Good job Mr Groovy. The main problem I see with appreciation for the rich is the mistaken belief that is so prevalent— If you are rich then that means I have less.—WTF? I see that belief all the time amazing as it is.
    Thanks for another good one.

  4. If you think that the Ten Commandments reflect reality, and you include the 10th commandment about coveting your neighbor’s stuff, then we’re naturally wired to not-envy the rich. This probably explains why Commies and Socialists tend toward Atheism b/c they make their political case based on envy.

    A friend of mine had a godly (but poor) relative respond to a tour of his mac-mansion by saying, “I’m happy for you.” And that’s what we ought to say when we see some rich guy enjoying the fruits of his labors.

    And while we’re being happy for the rich guy, we should be thinking about how we can do whatever he did–but just a little better.
    steve poling recently posted…Dave Ramsey HeresyMy Profile

  5. You definitely are declaring a genetic predisposition vs simply a learned behavior for ‘lack of hyperactive envy’ , ‘hyperactive ego’ & ‘lack of fairness’ genes. Focus on competency , such as your own off-grid solar/water self-sufficiency, as well as the gratitude for & appreciation of examples of Utility, Inspiration & Compentency goes a long way – but is probably learned behavior. However, that i see as a rhetorical strengthening of ones own position.
    The problem with extreme wealth is that it is then used via power, connections as well as use of the capital to obtain more wealth far away from the original source and inspiration of the original good works. Using wealth for SOB (Symphony, Opera & Ballet) as defined by a departed ‘retail philanthropist, Doris Buffett vs good works is also not the issue. BTW, i appreciate my theater tickets being made affordable by the patrons / member contributions who sit in the first dozen rows, while i sit 20 rows behind…. no problem … theater is great to see.
    We still have to somehow address the wealth inequality effects, such as private wealth / hedge funds buying up foreclosed or even regular market housing and turning them into hi-cost rental units for further profit . The wealthy do produce a winner take everything dynamic.

  6. Thanks for your reminder of the value of the wealthy, and our need to avoid envy. There’s good in all things, it’s up to us to find it and avoid focusing on all the negativity that seems to be escalating in our world today. We can all benefit from a positive attitude, regardless of whether we have a 1% brain or ramble around with all of the other 99%’s.

  7. Well said, most of my career I worked for one of the 200 richest men in America. He had thousands of employees in 60 companies. I was managing the engineering department at one of his oil and chemical plants and decided to leave to go to a competitor. He dropped everything in his busy schedule, hopped on his jet and flew to my location. He sat down in my office and opened a thick folder and proceeded to show me the company whose job I had accepted was on the verge of bankruptcy. He said he hoped I would stay, they had big plans for me. I stayed and had the career I always dreamed of. What kind of person sees a single tree in a forest of thousands and tends to it? Oh, and he started in business with nothing, built an empire largely because his employees would charge the gates of hell if he led the way. What a man.

  8. Vision, gumption, and sacrifice. I think those are three common traits of the rich and thriving middle class. I also think there is a strong correlation that the stronger you possess and exhibit these traits, the more material wealth you have.

    Also, society values different forms of wealth differently. Maybe one day we’ll have a “crown molding mania” like Holland’s “Tulip mania” except it won’t be a bubble that pops.

  9. “The older I get, the more I appreciate simple, unabashed competency. ”

    From Proverbs (“see a man competent in his work? he will stand before kings”) to Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance….competency, and quality, of work, has been valued.

    Sadly, it has become less and less common…and worse….less and less valued.

    Another thought provoking, excellent post, sir.
    planedoc recently posted…Flying in a Milk BottleMy Profile

    1. “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance’ – I haven’t heard that title in decades!
      I read it in my late teens or early twenties, when I was at Uni.
      (Can’t remember a thing about it now… maybe I should read it again…)

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