When American corps made the decision to offshore production, was that a "clash of classes"? I don't know how else you could label it but I'm sure you will find a way. Which is the point. When money pools, when our system goes from a large middle class and smaller at the poles to a pyramid common in the banana republics and the like, we have to wonder if that is actually good for society and what causes it. You have long railed on lobbyists. We have people able to lobby our governments, other governments, other corporations, exceedingly effectively.
I have mentioned Welsh because he began the CEO exuberance, as I noted his predecessor made $1 million his final year. We were not doing wrong in America that needed Welsh to come along and entirely rewrite the playbook. I believe you mentioned Ford earlier, you know the story, Ford's competitors were angry that he was "overpaying" workers. He cut the work day from 9 to 8 hours and paid $5/day instead of $2.5.
I'd rather have a Henry Ford than a Welsh (pro-nazi leanings aside for Ford). We went through a long phase in America that a corporation could make everyone good money, it was replaced by it should only make good money for the CEO and investors.
I am just arguing for a return to an America that invites everyone to share in the nation's wealth, not just a Musk or Bezos. The great socialist Abraham Lincoln once said, "Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is superior to capital, and deserves much the higher consideration." For reasons unknown, we have moved that sort of thinking to "socialist" and decided only capital and management matter. That's what needs to be smoothed out. On its own, labor has far less power, and in the last 50 years, there have been substantial efforts by one party to ensure it stays that way. Jobs were moved overseas to make people like Welch rich. But for some reason, he and his brethren, aren't considered the evil elite.
Was moving all our jobs overseas good for America? If it was, why do you support tariffs? If it wasn't, what caused it to happen? The simple answer, the one you will try very hard not to give, is people in one class could make a whole lot more by doing it. Welsh sure did, I am sure even you won't try to argue otherwise. We rewarded people who moved American jobs with enormous bonuses and lower taxes. That'll teach them a lesson.