>you're basically making fun of people for having high aspirations.

I'm recognizing that some people have aspirations to become CEO and own a company and thus represent those interests in a class war, instead of their real interests as a laborer.

As it happens startup founders have more in common with labor than they do with capital. It's pretty routine for them to be screwed out of the wealth they created by investors and control over the company they created.

It's also routine for 90% of them to fail and for them to return to wage slavery.

Nonetheless it's common for them to take the side of their aspired societal position than their actual one.

>In a perfect world enough people would have hit flag by now

I can tell I hit a sore spot. Am I right in guessing that you aspire to own and run a successful company one day but are not there yet and were triggered enough to hit the flag button?