It’s just a proxy for wealth using concrete things.

If you were given 10,000 dollars but your friends were also 100,000 dollars as well, would you take the deal?

Land and housing can get costlier while other things get cheaper, making you overall more prosperous. This is what happened in the USA and most of the world. Would you take this deal?

I wouldn't be able to hang out with them as much (they'd go do a lot of higher-cost things that I couldn't afford anymore).

I'd have a shittier apartment (they'd drive up the price of the nicer ones, if we're talking about a significant sized group; if it's truly just immediate friends, then instead it's just "they'd all move further away to a nicer area").

So I'd have some more toys but would have a big loss in quality of my social life. Pass.

(If you promised me that those cracks wouldn't happen, sure, it would be great for them. But in practice, having seen this before, it's not really realistic to hold the social fabric together when economic inequality increases rapidly and dramatically.)

No you would have the same house or better. That’s part of the condition.

More to the point, what does research into notions of fairness among primates tell us about the risks of a vast number of participants deciding to take this deal?

You have to tell us the answer so we can resolve your nickname "simianwords" with regard to Poe's Law.

> If you were given 10,000 dollars but your friends were also 100,000 dollars as well, would you take the deal?

This boldly assumes the 10k actually reaches me. Meanwhile 100k payouts endlessly land as expected.

usa sources: me+kids+decade of hunger level poverty. no medical coverage for decades. homeless retirement still on the table.

I don't know how nobody has mentioned this before:

The guy with 100k will end up rewriting the rules so that in the next round, he gets 105k and you get 5k.

And people like you will say "well, I'm still better off"

In future rounds, you will try to say "oh, I can't lose 5k for you to get 115k" and when you try to vote, you won't be able to vote, because the guy who has been making 23x what you make has spent his money on making sure it's rigged.

You’re missing the point. It’s not about jealousy it’s basic economics - supply and demand. No I would not take the deal if it raised the demand in something central to my happiness (housing) driving the price up for something previously affordable and make it unaffordable.

I would not trade my house for a better iPhone with higher quality YouTube videos, and slightly more fashionable athleisure.

I don’t care how many yacht’s Elon Musk has, I care how many governments.

What if you could buy the same house as before, buy the same iPhone as before and still have more money remaining? But your house cost way way more proportionally.

If you want to claim that that's a realistic outcome you should look at how people lived in the 50s or 80s vs today, now that we've driven up income inequality by dramatically lowering top-end tax rates and reduced barriers to rich people buying up more and more real property.

What we got is actually: you can't buy the same house as before. You can buy an iPhone that didn't exist then, but your boss can use it to request you do more work after-hours whenever they want. You have less money remaining. You have less free time remaining.

Do you have source for your claim? I have source that supports what I have said - look at disposable income data from BLS

If you’re asking me if I’m an idiot who doesn’t understand basic economics / capitalism, the answer is no. If you’re asking me if I think that in the real world there are negative externalities of inequality in and of itself that makes it more complicated than “everyone gets more but billionaires get more more” than the answer is yes.