Acting as Badly as Billionaires
After the end of the supposed decade of greed of the 1980s, Cy Curnin of the band The Fixx sang the following lines:
How much is enough when your soul is empty?
How much is enough in the land of plenty?
When you have all you want and you still feel nothing
How much is enough, is enough?
How much is enough?
Buy, buy, buy
Buy, buy, buy
We're drowning in possessions
If Cy had only known then how things would evolve over the next 35 years, as income inequality proved ever-widening, he and his bandmates might have waited to release the song.
Those with obscene amounts of money are wielding unprecedented power in the United States, and it’s easy to be disheartened by the lack of compassion and the massive consumption of the uber-wealthy today. I think actor Jesse Eisenberg said it best when he appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher in January of 2025 and had this to say about tech billionaires and politics:
”If you’re so rich and powerful, why are you not just spending your days doing good things for the world?”
Good question. And while it’s tempting to hop on that bandwagon and lambast Bezos, Musk, Zuckerberg and the like, it might also be time to look in the mirror and question our own motives in life, because from where I’m standing, there’s a lot of “amass as much wealth as you can, retire and live out your days in a gated community somewhere” mentality.
It’s true for some relatives of mine. It’s true for many friends of mine. And if I’m being honest, it’s true for me and my family. I spend a lot of time watching financial videos by Rob Berger on YouTube, reading articles on Investopedia and Motley Fool, updating spreadsheets and forecasting when my wife can retire. It’s not like this is foolish behavior – financial literacy and planning are important – but what exactly is the goal here? When the world appears to be headed for irreversible disaster, am I just hoping to ride off into the sunset and escape from reality?
The antidote for this type of mentality – whether you’re a billionaire or otherwise – is to get involved. Find a cause or causes that you feel strongly about, and start contributing, not just financially, but with your time. I was teaching English for a few years, and since that petered out a year ago I’ve made a few modest attempts to find something new to contribute to, but so far those have gone nowhere. One of the sad truths in life is that non-profits aren’t always well-organized and often lead to wasted time and dead ends. But when that happens, it isn’t time to give up on volunteering; it’s time to find a different non-profit.
Volunteering boosts one’s outlook on life, creates social connections with like-minded people, leads you out of the bubble you’ve been living in, and makes a difference in the lives of people or the lives of plants and animals. Those differences might be small, but that’s okay. If you’ve ever been in need of a little help, you know how important small acts of kindness can be.
So don’t follow the blueprint of billionaires. Don’t look at life as a way to accumulate wealth and ride out the rest of your lives in a bubble. Get involved.