Fund Your Utopia Without Me.™

21 November 2012

The American Dream Is Alive and Well — In Canada



M2RB: Lily Allen






There's just one thing,
That's getting in the way,
When we go up to bed your just no good,
its such a shame!
I look into your eyes,
I want to get to know you,

And then you make this noise,
and it's apparent, it's all over.

Its not fair,

And I think you're really mean,
I think your really mean,
I think your really mean.

Oh you're supposed to care,

But you never make me scream,
You never make me scream.

Oh, I lie here in the wet patch
in the middle of the bed.
I'm feeling pretty damn hard done by
I've spent ages giving head
Then, I remember all the nice things,
that you never said to me.
Maybe, I'm just overreacting,
maybe, you're the one for me.

(lOoOoLz)






By Jesse Klein
 
Speaking at an event in Burlington, Ont., on Monday, Liberal Senator Art Eggleton warned the audience about the growing level of income inequality in Canada.

“I think our future level of prosperity depends on us addressing our current level of poverty,” he said. And who would disagree? Most people would prefer not to live in a society where people suffer in poverty. But, he continued, “I think in the income inequality context we are able to reach out to a much larger part of the population, who see the unfairness in the way we are going and the danger in the way we are going, both to our social fabric and the vigour of our economy.”

To back up his case, he cited statistics saying that in 1980, the average CEO’s salary was 40 times greater than the average worker, but that number has jumped to 189 times today. OK, but so what? If my neighbour has 189 times more money than I do (which he probably does), that does not mean that I’m doing badly. Measuring your success relatively to someone else’s can only ever show which one of you two is better off. The issue that should be on the minds of everyone — poor and rich, Occupier or Tea Partier alike — is whether our poor have enough to not just survive, but live comfortably. In the vast majority of cases, that’s so.

Looking beyond the material needs of the poor, what really matters is income mobility: How easy it is for people to better their lot in life by moving up the economic ladder, and whether the structure that’s in place creates a permanent underclass of destitute citizens. And the answer is good news: According to a new study from the Fraser Institute, Canadians are not stuck on one rung of the economic ladder; they in fact enjoy a high degree of income mobility.

The report examined Statistics Canada data on groups of people over five, 10 and 19 year periods. In all the time periods, those in the lowest income bracket experienced the highest degree of income mobility. Between 1990 and 2009, 87% of those in the bottom 20% of income earners moved into a higher income group; 21% managed to move all the way up to the top 20% of earners. The average salaries of people at the bottom increased by 635% over that same period of time.

Stated another way, in two decades, nine of every 10 of the lowest income earners were able to improve their lot in life; two in five of them ended up in the top 40% of income earners. Those who started in the middle were also able to command larger salaries as time went on: Approximately 70% of people in the second-lowest group were also able to move up at least one income group, and those who experienced a decrease in income mobility were most likely to have started in the top 20%.

The results of the study make sense: As people grow older, acquiring knowledge and skills along the way, they are able to garner a higher income. What this study shows is that contrary to those on the left who say the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer, the gap actually gets smaller over time.

“In 1990, the average income of individuals in the highest income group was 13 times that of individuals initially in the lowest group,” write the report’s authors. “By 2009, those who had been in the highest group in 1990 had an average income only twice that of those who had been in the lowest group in 1990.”

The take away for Canadians is that a little hard work can go a long way. For policy markers, this is a reminder that fighting poverty should focus on helping those who have fallen through the cracks, rather than penalizing those who have worked hard and managed to get ahead.

- National Post





 




Not Fair - Lily Allen
 
Oh, he treats me with respect,
He says he loves me all the time,
He calls me 15 times a day,
He likes to make sure that im fine,
You know I've never met a man,
Whose made me feel quite so secure,
He's not like all them other boys,
They're all so dumb and immature.

There's just one thing,

That's getting in the way,
When we go up to bed you're just no good,
its such a shame!
I look into your eyes,
I want to get to know you,
And then you make this noise,
and it's apparent, it's all over


Its not fair,
And i think your really mean,
I think your really mean,
I think your really mean.

Oh your supposed to care,
But you never make me scream,
You never make me scream,

Oh it's not fair,
And it's really not ok,
It's really not ok,
It's really not ok,

Oh, you're supposed to care,
But all you do is take,
Yeah, all you do is take.


Oh, I lie here in the wet patch

in the middle of the bed.
I'm feeling pretty damn hard done by
I've spent ages giving head
Then I remember all the nice things,
that you never said to me.
Maybe I'm just overreacting,
maybe you're the one for me.

There's just one thing,

That's getting in the way,
When we go up to bed you're just no good,
its such a shame!
I look into your eyes,
I want to get to know you,
And then you make this noise,
and it's apparent, it's all over.


Its not fair,

And i think your really mean,
I think your really mean,
I think your really mean.

Oh your supposed to care,

But you never make me scream,
You never make me scream,

Oh it's not fair,

And it's really not OK,
It's really not OK,
It's really not OK,

Oh, you're supposed to care,

But all you do is take,
Yeah, all you do is take.

There's just one thing,

That's getting in the way,
When we go up to bed your just no good,
its such a shame!
I look into your eyes,
I want to get to know you,

And then you make this noise,
and it's apparent, it's all over.

Its not fair,

And I think you're really mean,
I think your really mean,
I think your really mean.

Oh you're supposed to care,

But you never make me scream,
You never make me scream,

Oh it's not fair,

And it's really not OK,
It's really not OK,
It's really not OK,

Oh, you're supposed to care,

But all you do is take,
Yeah, all you do is take.






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