The Locked Door with No Key: Why Ohio’s SB 153 Threatens Our Voting Rights

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Great Day, Fam.
I was watching a video by Brother Gary from Gary Economics, and he sparked a thought that just kept spiraling into truth. We need to sit down and break down this mind game—the kind of psychological hustle that makes us defend the wealthy while struggling to pay our own bills.
Let’s start here:
Rich folks make a lot of money. They may be bringing in six to seven figures, but they’re still trading time for money. Their lifestyle depends on continued effort. No work, no check.
Wealthy folks live off their assets. They don’t have to work because their money makes more money—for generations.
We often lump rich and wealthy together, but that’s part of the deception. These categories play by completely different rules.
Here’s the example:
A poor person earns $100 and pays 10% in taxes: $10
A rich person earns $1,000,000 and pays 10%: $100,000
A wealthy person accrues $10 million and pays 10%: $1,000,000
Now ask yourself: Who really paid the most?
If you go by dollar amount, it seems like the wealthy did. But let’s break it down by impact.
That $10 hurts the poor person way more than $100,000 hurts someone with a million-dollar income.
Tax burden is not about amount—it’s about pain.
The poor pay the most, because it costs them the most.
Working-class folks see the bite every time they open a pay stub:
City tax
County tax
State tax
Federal tax
Social Security
Medicare
You feel every dollar pulled. But the wealthy?
They wait until after the year is over to do creative accounting and decide what they “earned”—and what they’ll report.
They don’t feel the monthly sting. They hire people to hide the pain.
And here’s where it gets interesting:
I actually think the government is doing the rich a disservice.
Back when taxes on the wealthy were 90%, they had to get creative. They had to innovate, build, re-invest, hide, hustle—and give back. They had to earn their way around the system.
Now? They flaunt it.
We went from the days of hiding wealth to the days of celebrating it on social media.
And that’s dangerous—for everyone.
Let’s be clear:
The middle class keeps the poor from coming for the rich.
The middle class buffers the gap, gives people hope, makes them feel invested.
The middle class makes the system look possible.
And now? It’s shrinking fast.
The cost of living is up. Homeownership is down. Hope is drying up. People are living paycheck to paycheck with no future in sight. And the wealthy? Many of them are too out-of-touch to realize they’re pulling down the very bridge that kept them safe.
“Most millionaires are self-made.”
That’s a half-truth. Most millionaires are self-made… but not from poverty.
They usually come from middle or upper-middle class homes. Their families could afford to support them, help them take risks, cover their failures. That’s not “the mud.” That’s a head start.
And if we’re being real:
White middle class does not equal Black middle class.
The levels of access, network, and institutional support are not the same.
We’ve been tricked into defending the wrong folks.
We argue about taxes, praise billionaires, and shame each other for needing help—while the system laughs all the way to the offshore bank.
Who really pays the most?
The ones who feel it. The ones who can’t afford it.
Us.
It’s time we stop falling for percentages and start paying attention to impact.
This is Brother ha2tim, thinking out loud for the people.
Peace.
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