Two of Silicon Valley’s famous venture capitalists make the case for backing Trump: that their ability to make money is the only value that matters.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 months ago

      He might be a shitty Doogie Howser knockoff, but he wasn’t born as mayor. 🙄

      Before that, he worked as a consultant for the profiteering maximization firm McKinsey for 3 years.

        • @[email protected]
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          25 months ago

          When your job is extracting as much money as possible, including via unnecessary mass layoffs, being good at your job is a BAD thing.

          His job was to help screw workers over to maximize the wealth of already rich people and to a certain degree, it still is.

            • @[email protected]
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              25 months ago

              Maximizing profit is what you are paid to do

              Which is a societal disease, not an immutable fact of life. Seeking profit maximizing at the expense of the workers and/or the quality of the product or service you offer is not virtuous or natural.

              Without the realization of that fact, you cannot be successful in either.

              That’s just false. Many of us would consider providing a good product or service and providing gainful employment the end goals of commerce. Not maximizing profit at the expense of everything else like a goddamn parasite.

                • @[email protected]
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                  35 months ago

                  believes in free enterprise

                  Like religion, that’s a concept the powerful made up to control the market.

                  Truly “free” enterprise, IE unburdened by regulations, inevitably ends up with the powerful dominating the powerless.

                  As I’m sure you’d agree, being dominated by someone who’s more powerful than you is nobody’s idea of free. In fact, even if you’re into it, it tends to be rather expensive.

                  Building good product and services is a way to maximize profits. It really isn’t an either/or situation

                  That used to be the case, sure, but nowadays there’s all sorts of ways to tweak profits that necessitates compromising on either quality (including treatment of workers) or profits.

                  So if you want to maximize (achieve the maximum of) profits, you literally have to compromise the quality, how you treat your workers, or both. Almost all companies do both.