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Wealth & Money Quote by Barack Obama

"I think when you spread the wealth around it's good for everybody"

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Obama’s line is a Rorschach test disguised as a folksy sentence. “Spread the wealth around” sounds like common sense at the dinner table, not ideology in a policy memo, and that’s the point: it smuggles a contested theory of government into an everyday moral instinct. The verb “spread” softens what opponents would call “redistribute,” turning a coercive-sounding act into something closer to buttering toast. Then comes the kicker: “good for everybody.” It’s a deliberately universal promise, framing equality not as charity or punishment, but as self-interest with better PR.

The specific intent is political and rhetorical: argue that progressive taxation and a stronger safety net aren’t zero-sum, they’re stabilizing. In Obama’s telling, an economy works best when more people can buy in - afford health care, education, a first home - because broad demand and social cohesion are economic infrastructure. The subtext is a rebuke to the trickle-down moral universe: wealth isn’t sacred simply because it’s accumulated; its legitimacy depends on whether the system producing it is broadly livable.

Context mattered. The remark came during the 2008 campaign, amid anxiety about inequality and the looming financial crisis. Conservatives seized on it as proof of “socialism,” which tells you how potent the framing was. Obama wasn’t trying to radicalize the electorate; he was trying to normalize a basic premise of modern liberal governance: that shared prosperity isn’t a sentimental goal, it’s a practical one, and the wealthy benefit from the stability it buys.

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TopicWealth
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I think when you spread the wealth around - Barack Obama
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Barack Obama

Barack Obama (born August 4, 1961) is a President from USA.

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