Do Mitt Romney and John Key understand what it's like to be bottom of the heap?
There were some who felt the Occupy Wall Street movement was the preserve of new-age hippies in ramshackle tent-towns ranting aimlessly against "the man".
But despite the apathy, even aggression, the movement engendered among much of the general population - even here in New Zealand, where "get a haircut, and get a real job!" seemed to be the main retort to Occupy camps - the movement achieved one thing. Its main message, that a lucky few work zealously to protect a level of privilege completely inaccessible to the rest of us, has seeped into the general consciousness. Even if most of us have no intention of doing anything about it.
When even Americans are questioning the fairness of their much-vaunted capitalist system, it's pretty obvious a sea-change has occurred. Under normal circumstances, US Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, a ruthlessly successful businessman, might have been held up as nothing short of inspirational. Now, though, he is suffering for his links to the private equity firm he co-founded in 1984, Bain Capital.
It's beyond doubt that Bain, which Romney ran until 1999, did what the most aggressive, high-flying private equity funds have always done - pick floundering targets, raise debt and slash costs, all the while ensuring there's still plenty of cream for shareholders. Ethical or not, it's all legal stuff.