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4. I think this follows from both my original premise and your argument. I've seen it called synergy, the sort of intangible result of us all working together, income for which doesn't come to us but accrues to the providers of capital, not due to any effort of theirs but just because that's how the system is structured.
To me this is just a question of distribution. In my mind it is clear to me that there are social goods to which we are all entitled. And we are entitled to a dividend from them.
My thoughts are above.
The key question here would be what the bass of that entitlement is. I can go with the synergy idea -- which, BTW, is espoused by Elizabeth Warren albeit a bit sloppily -- because it recognizes that the whole is more than the sum of its parts, i.e. there is wealth produced by the fact that we all work together that doesn't accrue to any of those workers individually. That wealth has to appear somewhere, and the way our system is set up, it appears in the returns on capital.
From that point I think argument could be made that, for example, the Waltons of Walmart are actually stealing from their workers, since they live in luxury while performing no actual labor while their workers tend to be destitute, but also that a tax on purely financial transactions to provide for basic needs for everyone is legitimate, because it takes the wealth produced by synergy and delivers it back to everyone. It serves also as a benefit to the production of wealth, because those with secure housing and good health are more productive.


















