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Friday, January 31, 2014

The 20 Richest Americans Are Greedy Takers — Not Inspirational 'Makers' | Alternet

The 20 Richest Americans Are Greedy Takers — Not Inspirational 'Makers' | Alternet:



The 20 Richest Americans Are Greedy Takers — Not Inspirational 'Makers'

They have all taken from the public or from employees, or through taxes or untaxed inheritances.

Photo Credit: By Kees de Vos from The Hague, The Netherlands (Bill Gates delivering key note) [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
 
 
The top individuals on the 2013  Forbes 400 list are generally believed to be makers of great companies or concepts. They are the role models of Paul Ryan, who laments, "We're going to a majority of takers versus makers in America." They are defended by Cato Institute CEO  John A. Allison IV, who once protested: "Instead of an attack on the 1 percent, let's call it an attack on the very productive."
But many of the richest Americans are takers. The top twenty, with a total net worth of almost two-thirds of a trillion dollars, have all taken from the public or from employees, or through taxes or untaxed inheritances.
Bill Gates
Bill Gates may be a knowledgeable and hard-working man, but he was also  lucky and opportunistic. He was a taker. In 1975, at the age of 20, he founded Microsoft with high school buddy Paul Allen. This was the era of the first desktop computers, and numerous small companies were trying to program them, most notably Digital Research, headed by brilliant software designer  Gary Kildall. His CP/M operating system (OS) was the industry standard. Even Gates' company used it.
But Kildall was an innovator, not a businessman, and when IBM came calling for an OS for the new IBM PC, his  delays drove the big mainframe company to Gates. Even though the newly established Microsoft company couldn't fill IBM's needs, Gates and Allen saw an opportunity, and so they hurriedly bought the rights to another local company's OS -- which was based on Kildall's CP/M system. Kildall wanted to sue, but intellectual property law for software had not yet been established. Kildall was a maker who got taken.
David Lefer, a collaborator for the book  They Made America, summarized: "Gates didn't invent the PC operating system, and any history that says he did is wrong."
Warren Buffett
At first glance, Warren Buffett seems to be a different breed of multi-billionaire, advocating for