I'm divided on this issue because I've been on both sides of this (somewhat). I have worked at my current job for over 12 years. For the first 8 or 9 years of that I had the mentality that I was always being "put down by the man" or that I was being taken advantage of and always looked at my managers/ corporate leader as "evil, or sitting around doing nothing as I slave away making them money"
One of my leaders I was close with kept trying to show me more things to learn and ways to get ahead but I would go back and forth with him that I wasn't going to work harder for free, bootstraps etc.
My girlfriend at the time passed away leaving me a single father with a part time job going nowhere. As soon as that happened I dropped all the crap and excuses I had been holding onto for so long, busted my ass and a year later I was in management myself.
And now being on the other side of things gives me some perspective because I have new hires that show up and literally think any work whatsoever is too much, and sound so entitled it makes me look back and see how ridiculous I was when I would do the same.
All that anecdotal evidence aside I do believe Bezos could fundamentally do more with his wealth and help his workers, but this whole notion that he didn't earn what he has and that the other people deserve all of his fortune isn't true either.
If you give a homeless person some money but he demands more because your "wealthy" compared to him... should he be entitled to your home, car, or bank account? Why should you be able to live this glorious "rich" life style when others live in the street and have nothing. It's the same mentality.
Amazon only exists because Jeff Bezos received healthy monetary investment from friends & family that bankrolled him. He didn't start with nothing and scrounge his way to the top. He had a decent idea, got a ton of free capital, and then used it to buy out competition and smaller firms.
At this point no, he hasn't "earned" what he has. He was essentially handed his business on a silver platter, and once the money started rolling in he started making money on the money he already had.
Let's at least be honest about Jeff Bezos if we're gonna talk about his wealth. He is an intelligent man, sure. He has drive and good work ethic, sure. But earned? The only people who have invested less to earn their fortune have the last names Kardashian or Jenner.
Bezos is a buyout champion, and a lot of those buyouts came with layoffs & company moves.
This isn't about people being entitled or lazy. It's about the welfare of the world as we know it, frankly. This kind of unchallenged concentration of wealth is and always has been historically dangerous.