Rich as a Roman prince
2009-03-03
When Marc Antony and Gaius Octavian Caesar were battling
Brutus and Cassius for control of the Republic in the
fictionalized TV series "Rome," Antony and Octavian identified
1,000 wealthy enemies and had gangs kill them. The objective
was two-fold: To quell opposition, and to raise money for the
noble cause. In the non-fictionalized modern version, both
Barack Obama's Democrats and Jiøí Paroubek's Social Democrats
are planning to soak the rich as a way to overcome the crisis.
Winning support from the "plebeians" for this is easy, because
everyone is ready to shift the blame for the crisis onto the
affluent. The problem, of course, is that extracting more tax
from the 2% or 5% richest people won't raise nearly enough
money to achieve the stated goals. As the Romans knew, the
only way to proceed is to take the capital of the rich, not merely
to tax their current income. And so the U.S. is going after the
Swiss bank accounts of 52,000 people. For now, at least, the
methods being used are peaceful.
[Czech Republic television ÈSSD]
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