Yea, that's
something rich folks say.
Not exact matches
Schulich, you see, has
something to say to his neighbours on the list of Canada's 100 Wealthiest People, along with other
rich folk who might be reading.
Surrounded by the thousands of musicians who play on our stages, climb our steps, jam in our lobbies, we come from
something larger - a
rich history, an evolving tradition, a living culture of
folks from around Chicago and the world coming together to create music.
In the squandered sci - fi tale In Time, the
rich subjugate the poor by equating one's lifespan with money —
something lower - class citizens don't have — and the paycheck - to - paycheck
folks literally run out of time and expire.
Woody is often sharp with character study and Jasmine is
something else, but his portrait of San Francisco working class
folk is less convincing and carried only by the strength of a typically excellent cast (it also co-stars Louis C. K., Andrew Dice Clay, Peter Sarsgaard and Michael Stuhlbarg) and an honesty and commitment that the socially poised
rich of the film lack.
I would think that
something like this would already exist in limos (or other cars used by paranoid
rich folks).
If we do
something about it, if we adjust our policies in the way that, say, Franklin D. Roosevelt did during the Great Depression — so that we help the 99 percent and preempt the revolutionaries and crazies, the ones with the pitchforks — that will be the best thing possible for us
rich folks, too.