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The World’s Richest Doubled Their Wealth During Covid

Dr. Munr Kazmir
4 min readJan 20, 2022

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Bernie Sanders is furious, probably.

“Bowie Sanders” January , 2016. January 10, 2016. (Photo: Chris Piascik)

The first rule of the wealth gap, is that no one can look upon the wealth gap.

It’s not that looking at the wealth gap isn’t allowed- it is allowed.

It’s just impossible.

Quite some time ago, possibly after Silicon Valley gave rise to the myriad wonders of modern technology, but perhaps before it sold that technology to build the Chinese Communist Party’s surveillance state, the wealth gap grew beyond the ability of the human eye to perceive it.

The wealth gap can no longer be accurately mapped on a chart, shown on a graph, or rendered in scale. It can’t be a visual during a TED Talk; it won’t fit on a Power Point slide.

The world’s wealthiest, the 1% of the 1%, have so much more money than everyone else on Earth, next to a bar on a graph representing the wealth of the wealthiest, the corresponding bar representing the rest of us would be an infinitesimal pixel too small to be viewed without a microscope.

If, on the other hand, you rendered all the world’s wealth not owned by the world’s ultra-wealthiest, into a bar visible to the human eye, let’s say the size of the period at the end of this sentence, the corresponding bar representing the world’s wealthiest would…

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