DaisyAnne
I am with those who cannot believe that others think the trickle-down theory will work. In fact, I don't think they do. What I think they believe in is masters and slaves. They think the slaves will be grateful for what they are "given" if the masters are allowed the riches of the world. And, of course, they think they are part of the "master" group.
I'm pre-occupied with the mind-set of the electorate, particularly that section of it that is impoverished yet consistently votes for a party that increases such impoverishment. There appear to be, in the main, two divergent groups.
One group appears to believe that the 'rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate' is the natural order of things, and that any attempt to interfere with the 'rich' man is asking for trouble because he will up sticks and take his wealth - the trickle-down from which the poor man relies - and find another castle in a more lucrative location.
Then there are John Steinbeck's 'temporarily-embarrassed-millionaires', who think the wealth is there for the taking but the only reason they can't get at it is because of those blasted individuals who insist on a more equitable society for everyone.
There's quite a lot of references to "magic money trees" from both groups, but neither appear to understand how an economy functions, or why it functions the way it does.
It's all a bit depressing.