Even Buffet pointed out that small businesses have been decimated, through no fault of their own. People need to stop being insensitive to their real issues. I find that's exactly the case with the US Media and people who don't stop to recognize how many trillions of dollars were transferred to the ultra-wealthy from innovative small businesses. It's almost political in the worst way.
www.cnbc.com
I'm sorry to seemingly 'get political' here, but too many people have been ignoring this and making all sorts of statements. My intent is only to educate understanding among my fellow Americans.
But I now feel I must warn registered Democratic voters in the US to neither ignore this reality, as 4 out of 5 small businesses are owned by registered Republicans, nor just label very angry small business owners as just 'radical right-wingers' or, as worse yet, 'racists,' much less Jan 6th supporters. Nearly all disagree with Jan 6th, but are still upset with both federal and state/local clear favoritism of big business.
It's the most insensitive attitude to have, and -- ironically, causes the left to be viewed as being more pro-big business, anti-domestic small business -- just like being against many of the business tax code changes, which were actually pro-small business and domestic manufacturing while anti-big business, especially overseas.
The lockdown was a boon for the latter, destructive for the former, again, through no fault of the former, as even Buffet pointed out. Most of the top 2% gross income earners are heavily small business owners with actually little take home pay, people who don't live lavishly either.
Warren Buffett says the pandemic has had an 'extremely uneven' impact and is not yet over
Legendary investor Warren Buffett said the economic consequences of the pandemic are falling disproportionately on small businesses.
QUOTE: "The economic impact has been this extremely uneven thing where ... many hundreds of thousands or millions of small businesses have been hurt in a terrible way, but most of the big companies have overwhelmingly done fine," the Berkshire Hathaway CEO said... which led to a shutdown of a $20 trillion economy in full swing. Thousands of small businesses were forced to close their doors while big-box retailers and e-commerce giants took in those customers ... "It's not over," the 90-year-old investor said. "I mean, in terms of the unpredictability ... it's been very unpredictable, but it's worked out better than people anticipated for most people and most businesses. And it's just, for no fault of their own, it's just decimated all kinds of people and their hopes."
I'm sorry to seemingly 'get political' here, but too many people have been ignoring this and making all sorts of statements. My intent is only to educate understanding among my fellow Americans.
But I now feel I must warn registered Democratic voters in the US to neither ignore this reality, as 4 out of 5 small businesses are owned by registered Republicans, nor just label very angry small business owners as just 'radical right-wingers' or, as worse yet, 'racists,' much less Jan 6th supporters. Nearly all disagree with Jan 6th, but are still upset with both federal and state/local clear favoritism of big business.
It's the most insensitive attitude to have, and -- ironically, causes the left to be viewed as being more pro-big business, anti-domestic small business -- just like being against many of the business tax code changes, which were actually pro-small business and domestic manufacturing while anti-big business, especially overseas.
The lockdown was a boon for the latter, destructive for the former, again, through no fault of the former, as even Buffet pointed out. Most of the top 2% gross income earners are heavily small business owners with actually little take home pay, people who don't live lavishly either.