Inequality Deliberately Engineered

 The thing about inequality is that it’s not simply unfair—it’s deliberately engineered.

If the rich merely stumbled into wealth and the poor accidentally fell behind, we might call that misfortune. But this—this is design.

Take any map of a major city. You’ll find the poor corralled into zones like livestock—kept close enough to serve the rich, but far enough to be denied their amenities.

Public transportation? Excellent—so long as it connects you to someone else’s prosperity.

Parks and green space? Certainly. For the neighborhoods with no need to escape their homes.

The grotesque comedy is that the poor are often blamed for where they live, as if geography were a moral failing.

The rich, meanwhile, are praised for “investing in the community”—usually by bulldozing someone else’s.

The city, in its current state, is a monument to theft—legal, bureaucratic, and soaked in the language of progress.

And we are asked, politely, not to notice.

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