8 Comments
Oct 23, 2022Liked by Joan DeMartin

I visited Jackson Hole years ago, before the extreme wealth gap occurred. It is truly breathtaking and I can see why the extremely wealthy flocked there. A quick search reveals that most single family homes are over 15 million...lots of the huge log and stone "mansions" that the ultra wealthy build in the west.

Expand full comment
Oct 23, 2022Liked by Joan DeMartin

I know several people who used to work as bartenders, ski instructors, and other service roles in Jackson to support their "ski bum" lifestyle. All of them have had to move out in recent months, explaining that one can no longer live in the city on a working class income.

To me, it seems like a slow moving crisis, as the city will soon be the ultra-wealthy with no one to serve their food, clean their homes, etc.

Expand full comment
Oct 22, 2022Liked by Joan DeMartin

Interesting article Joan! One of the most interesting sections referred to how “wealth resides in a handful of Americans” but how millionaires and billionaires do give to philanthropies.

I think it would be helpful for readers to have a more complete understanding of exactly how much money is being donated to address many of the country’s and world’s challenges:

As an illustration, here’s a quote from The Giving Pledge and their pledges donating over $600 Billion dollars of their net worth upon their death.

“The Giving Pledge is a continually growing global community of over 230 signatories from 28 different countries.”

- I’d love to cut and paste all of the global challenges that organizations such as The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Bill Clinton’s Global Initiative, Rockefeller, Carnegie, and countless other Foundations (endowments) donate to charities every year, but the list and the charitable contributions are too long and too staggering.

I’ve been to Wyoming - there’s literally not a more empty state in the entire US (maybe Alaska) - I’d guess after traveling through the PNW this summer for 2 weeks - those $3.5 million dollar homes have everything to do with the labor and resources needed to transport building materials and laborers through the hundreds of miles of barren lands of Nebraska, Iowa, Idaho, California, Washington, and Oregon. Let alone maintenance and energy costs through out the year have to be nuts!

IMO - the US government needs to invest in sustainable industries not tax the wealthy. My generation and younger ones need jobs that can last a little longer than 1-3 years for $12-15 dollars an hour in distribution, fast food and hospitality, or education.

Where’s our generation’s equivalent jobs in gas, coal, railroad, and steel?

There’s a huge trickle down to the economy from our parent’s who could work and retire after 30 years and receive and afford a pension, home, and college for their kids and families.

Americans want to work! But there are no high paying and long term jobs! The federal government could have invested $5 trillion in propping up new industries in solar, hydro, and wind versus cutting $1000 checks during Covid!

Billionaires aren’t preventing the creation of jobs. How many people are employed by Tesla, Amazon, and Space X? 100,000’s!!

The economy is complicated, and I don’t have all the answers. But, there’s a trend in America for the past 20-40 years: “Just goto college!” And everything will be fine. You’ll find a high paying job and be able to take care of yourself and your family.

Not true. But this is still the push from K-12 and everyone believes “education will save the day!”

It’s just creating an Academic Industrial Complex of student loan debt, useless degrees, and a populace of uneducated who have even less hope than those holding a 4 year degree.

Expand full comment