Right.  This is one thing wrong with Los Alamos.   There isn’t just one boss, 
but a network of managers.   I’ve even had bosses make jokes like “You should 
really get a Tesla” (e.g. take on debt).   And it is easy to estimate the burn 
rate of employees if one has social ties to others at work (or if you live up 
there).    For most, the burn rate to income is even worse in the bay area, but 
at least there are other bosses available.   In a company town, you’re just 
screwed.

From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2021 7:42 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] What is Wealth for?

What is the function of wealth? Most of the discussion above is about it's 
function for the person who has it, but I think about this a lot in terms of 
wealth's function for society. If I had to define social class, it would be 
based around the benefit society should receive from having a healthy middle 
class, and that is entirely dependent upon wealth (not income).

Lower Class - The lower class lacks significant wealth relative to their 
expenses. Their ability to stand up for themselves is miniscule, because one or 
two missed paychecks will wreck their lives.

Upper Class - The upper class has sizable wealth, relative to their expenses. 
They have so much wealth that they could quit out of the socio-economic game 
entirely and be just fine. They could not work again ever, or at least last 
many, many years without doing so. They could start a business, run it however 
they felt like, and if it never made money, had some loss, or even went 
bankrupt, they could simply continue living off of other wealth.

Middle Class - Between those extremes you have people with enough wealth to 
take a stand, but not enough wealth to check out of the game. A middle class 
person can, when told to do something they consider immoral, or even 
sufficiently unpleasant, quit their job and spend some time looking for a new 
one without worry. Is your boss abusive? Are work conditions unpleasant? Were 
you asked to break the law, or look the other way while others did? Is your 
company starting to abuse or take advantage of its customers? You can refuse to 
take part in it. You might quit, you might make them fire you. Either way, you 
can use your power as a moderately-wealthy employee to push back against your 
employer. When the middle class is small, that does something, but not a lot, 
because the corporation can turn to the lower class as needed to fill 
positions. When the middle class is large, this has a huge effect on how 
workplaces operate (and this is why working conditions are better in industries 
dominated by middle-class skilled labor).

I tend to think of the boundary conditions there as a cushion of between 
6-months and 3 years. But you could certainly stretch that a bit. And note that 
this definition scales with cost of living. If you make $500,000 a year, but 
you would lose your house without the next two paychecks, you are functionally 
lower class, and your company will figure out how to abuse you as such. If you 
make $30,000 a year, spend every penny of your paycheck every month, but are 
quite happy with your current living conditions and have $30,000 in the bank, 
you are solidly middle class, and it will be harder for a boss to abuse you.

The function of a middle-class wealth is to organically do a huge chunk of the 
things we keep ineffectively trying to get laws to do. It reduces workplace 
abuse. It allows people to pursue things they are passionate about. It reigns 
in industry excess. It encourages more moral corporate action. Etc. If we 
wanted to accomplish those things, and we wanted to accomplish them through 
law, we would focus primarily on figuring out how laws could encourage 
savings*, and we would make moves to at least slightly reduce compulsive 
consumerism. Once you have a large middle class, companies would not be able to 
survive without accommodating the ability of middle class people to refuse 
unreasonable requests, and society as a whole will benefit.

*  Not weird 401K-style stock-market investment schemes with penalties if you 
try to touch the money early; regular, old-fashioned, savings. Bank account 
money, home equity, maybe a share in Cousin Steve's tree trimming business, 
cause you helped him get started.

On Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 2:02 PM jon zingale 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
so freaking cute.



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