I found it to be low-quality SF that explored derivative, old ideas in a poor manner with no good rationale (really, aliens can build folded-dimension spacecraft but can't numerically integrate orbital motions for a few thousand years?).
If too much power gets concentrated in too few hands this minority starts to shape the world to their needs, and then the majority with no power becomes expendable and they simply get parked somewhere out of sight.
That is a very good point, but then should not the complaint be that power is too concentrated? Power comes in many forms besides wealth, as well.
I think it's worth exploring the wealth-power relation and concerns about concentration, but misidentifying (or misstating) one of several contributing factors as the fundamental problem does not help to gain support for the cause - especially when there are other reasons that people complain about wealth inequality. When a topic has multiple reasons for complaint, many people will assume the least valid reason is what is being argued.
That's absurd. If I'm at the bottom, increasing the average by making rich people richer isn't helping me one bit.
Making rich people richer won't help increase average quality of life, because the marginal utility of money has a significant diminishing return.
Regardless, it would probably be better to look at the minimum or perhaps bottom quartile quality of life than the average.
Their stuff is a big deal, but I'd never heard the name of the company behind them before my google just now.
Did you never read their documentation? HashiCorp branding is all over that.
Documentation is like sex: when it is good, it is very, very good; and when it is bad, it is better than nothing. -- Dick Brandon