Pitting Us Against Each Other
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: It's
Hard To Be a Racist
President Barack
Obama and the Democratic Party have led increasingly successful
efforts to pit Americans against one another through the politics
of hate and envy. Attacking CEO salaries, the president – last year
during his Midwest tour – said, "I do think at a certain point you've
made enough money."
Let's look
at CEO salaries, but before doing so, let's look at other salary
disparities between those at the bottom and those at the top. According
to Forbes' Celebrity 100 list for 2010, Oprah Winfrey earned
$290 million. Even if her makeup person or cameraman earned $100,000,
she earned thousands of times more than that. Is that fair? Among
other celebrities earning hundreds or thousands of times more than
the people who work with them are Tyler Perry ($130 million), Jerry
Bruckheimer ($113 million), Lady Gaga ($90 million) and Howard Stern
($76 million). According to Forbes, the top 10 celebrities, excluding
athletes, earned an average salary of a little more than $100 million
in 2010.
According to
The Wall Street Journal Survey of CEO Compensation (November
2010), Gregory Maffei, CEO of Liberty Media, earned $87 million,
Oracle's Lawrence Ellison ($68 million) and rounding out the top
10 CEOs was McKesson's John Hammergren, earning $24 million. It
turns out that the top 10 CEOs have an average salary of $43 million,
which pales in comparison with America's top 10 celebrities, who
earn an average salary of $100 million.
When you recognize
that celebrities earn salaries that are some multiples of CEO salaries,
you have to ask: Why is it that rich CEOs are demonized and not
celebrities? A clue might be found if you asked: Who's doing the
demonizing? It turns out that the demonizing is led by politicians
and leftists with the help of the news media, and like sheep, the
public often goes along. Why demonize CEOs? My colleague Dr. Thomas
Sowell explained it in his brand-new book, The
Thomas Sowell Reader. One of his readings, titled "Ivan
and Boris – and Us," starts off with a fable of two poor Russian
peasants. Ivan finds a magic lamp and rubs it, and the jinni grants
him one wish. As it turns out, Boris has a goat, but Ivan doesn't.
Ivan's wish is for Boris' goat to die. That vision reflects the
feelings of too many Americans. If all CEOs worked for nothing,
it would mean absolutely little or nothing to the average American's
bottom line.
For politicians,
it's another story: Demonize people whose power you want to usurp.
That's the typical way totalitarians gain power. They give the masses
someone to hate. In 18th-century France, it was Maximilien Robespierre's
promoting hatred of the aristocracy that was the key to his acquiring
more dictatorial power than the aristocracy had ever had. In the
20th century, the communists gained power by promoting public hatred
of the czars and capitalists. In Germany, Adolf Hitler gained power
by promoting hatred of Jews and Bolsheviks. In each case, the power
gained led to greater misery and bloodshed than anything the old
regime could have done.
Let
me be clear: I'm not equating America's liberals with Robespierre,
Josef Stalin and Hitler. I am saying that promoting jealousy, fear
and hate is an effective strategy for politicians and their liberal
followers to control and micromanage businesses. It's not about
the amount of money people earn. If it were, politicians and leftists
would be promoting jealousy, fear and hate toward multimillionaire
Hollywood and celebrities and sports stars, such as LeBron James
($48 million), Tiger Woods ($75 million) and Peyton Manning ($38
million). But there is no way that politicians could take over the
roles of Oprah Winfrey, Lady Gaga and LeBron James. That means celebrities
can make any amount of money they want and it matters not one iota
politically.
The Occupy
Wall Street crowd shouldn't focus its anger at wealthy CEOs. A far
more appropriate target would be the U.S. Congress.
October
18, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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