A more accurate comparison of average compensations

Recently, MoveOn.org published an infographic purportedly showing the comparison of various annual salaries of people ranging from welfare recipients to Fortune 500 CEOs:

This is an extremely inaccurate depiction of the differences between these bits of information.

Here is a spreadsheet showing the various numbers indicated in the graph above, and some ratios showing numerical comparisons:

If we take the same representation, i.e. a set of disjoint circles, to show the comparison, using the data above, this is what we end up with:

Mine isn’t nearly as pretty, but you can see where the infographic designer erred in making the comparison. The incredibly huge CEO compensation circle is now normalized to the rest of the circles, assuming the area of the circle represents the compensation amounts. (In the full picture, the diameter of each circle is represented by the normalized compensation ratio.) But this is a truly horrible way to represent data for comparison if one is at all interested in showing things in a way that people can actually make reasonable judgements.

Traditionally, comparisons of single group data are shown via a pie chart:

This might be more useful to see the relationship between the compensation values. However, pie charts are also notoriously hard to accurately reflect data comparisons. People have a difficult time judging the ratios between slices by looking at an area. In this particular set of data, if all you really wanted to show was the disparity between CEO compensations and the other groups, it may serve. However, an even better way to show it to achieve proper visual perception would be as a bar chart:

The data represented above in no way diminish the intended message. CEO compensations are way out of the norm. I hate to see the message be distorted by an egregious use of the graphical comparison of statistics. Such only serves to let those who aren’t inclined to agree to be able to push it off as dire histrionics and point to it as an example of how misleading we are.

More OWS

#ows is not asking for a redistribution of wealth. They're responding to it.
@rushkoff
douglas rushkoff

I would say that is pretty much it, yes.

To many people, they’re looking at the protesters, and the situation in this country, as “Why are they complaining? Why are they out getting jobs?” — without the recognition that the wealth in this country has been getting redistributed, the gap between the rich and middle income is growing wider and wider, and the gap between the rich and poor could start being measured in astronomical units.

So, it’s not so much that “they hate the rich”, more accurately it’s a recognition that the rich hate them.

FDR – Words for Today’s Occupation

From his speech at the DNC in 1936, Franklyn Roosevelt said thse works, probably without realizing how prophetic they’d become:

These economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the institutions of America. What they really complain of is that we seek to take away their power. Our allegiance to American institutions requires the overthrow of this kind of power. In vain they seek to hide behind the Flag and the Constitution. In their blindness they forget what the Flag and the Constitution stand for. Now, as always, they [the Flag and the Constitution] stand for democracy, not tyranny; for freedom, not subjection; and against a dictatorship by mob rule and the over-privileged alike.

 

Daily Kos: Open Letter to that 53% Guy

Max Udargo over at The Daily Kos takes that 53% guy to task for his pretty basic misunderstanding of the issues driving Occupy Wall Street:

The 8-hour workday and the 40-hour workweek became a standard by which we judged our economic success, and a reality check against which we could verify the American Dream.

via Daily Kos: Open Letter to that 53% Guy.

Good read!

Not my generation, but I wish it were

Quote

occupy

John Cleveland, who posted this to facebook, writes:

“What They did not want you to ever find out is that your generation, the generation born between 1980-1995, actually outnumbers the Baby Boomers. They knew that if you ever turned your eye towards political reform, you could change the world.

They tried to keep you sated on vapid television shows and vapid music. They cut off your education and fed you brain candy. They took away your music and gave you Top Ten pop stations. They cut off your art and replaced it with endless reality shows for you to plug into, hoping you would sit quietly by as They ran the world. I think They thought you were too dumb to notice.

Indeed, I thought They had won.

But I watched you occupy the capital of Wisconsin. I see you today as you occupy Wall Street. And I see a spark, a glimmer of the glorious new age that is yours. A changing of the guard, a guard that has stood for entirely too long and needs your young legs to take his place.

I watch you turn away from what is easy and stand up for what is right. I see you understand we as a society are only as strong as our weakest link. I see you wise beyond your years. And I am proud. Give ‘em hell, kids. You are beautiful.” -Kate Danley

We are the 99% and together we are strong.
Together, we will triumph as we merge once again to 100%.

Via: John Cleaveland’s Facebook

Perspective

Edgar Mitchell Quote

Edgar Mitchell Quote

 

Quote by Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 Astronaut, after being to the Moon and looking back on Earth: “You develop an instant global consciousness, a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world, and a compulsion to do something about it. From out there on the Moon, international politics look so petty. You want to grab a politician by the scruff of the neck and drag him a quarter of a million miles out and say ‘Look at that, you son of a bitch!’”

Marcin Jakubowski: Open-sourced blueprints for civilization | Video on TED.com

Using wikis and digital fabrication tools, TED Fellow Marcin Jakubowski is open-sourcing the blueprints for 50 farm machines, allowing anyone to build their own tractor or harvester from scratch. And that’s only the first step in a project to write an instruction set for an entire self-sustaining village (starting cost: $10,000).

via Marcin Jakubowski: Open-sourced blueprints for civilization | Video on TED.com.