BwahahahahaMastery of technology yet not having the self-awareness for humanity.
And that is why it is grossly incorrect to hold any CEO on a pedestal. Their contribution becomes nil after the firm is run by professionals other than the founder. If Musk is not even running the company anymore except guiding its direction (which he obviously does under the influence of sycophants), his net contribution to the company is a big 0. This is true for all the rich men in the world who run empires. They believe that they are suddenly important in the world insofar behave like poorly disciplined children just because they have wealth.CEOs don't do things, it's not their job, they make high level decisions and sign off on expenses, that's all they do, well maybe that and some HR stuff like resolving disputes and being involved with the hiring/firing of important people.
Yes, although I have less faith in democracy, rather all I want is the bastards to be taxed fairly, year on year productivity is increasing and standards of living are falling which makes no goddamn sense unless there's an inequality problem and wealth inequality is a massive and ever growing problem.And that is why it is grossly incorrect to hold any CEO on a pedestal. Their contribution becomes nil after the firm is run by professionals other than the founder. If Musk is not even running the company anymore except guiding its direction (which he obviously does under the influence of sycophants), his net contribution to the company is a big 0. This is true for all the rich men in the world who run empires. They believe that they are suddenly important in the world insofar behave like poorly disciplined children just because they have wealth.CEOs don't do things, it's not their job, they make high level decisions and sign off on expenses, that's all they do, well maybe that and some HR stuff like resolving disputes and being involved with the hiring/firing of important people.
What the average joe does not realize is that such persons earn money by breaking the necks and backs of other people. The broken - the corporate slave - should get the power of collective decision making yet us slaves hold rich bastards like Musk on a high pedestal. These fuckers stop working when their self-earned assets start churning positive feedback loops and nearly eliminate the requirement of the said fucker. Has the said fucker right to these assets after the assets turn self-perpetuating? No. Absolutely not. Now when will people realize that all the uber-rich people in the world are no better (and mostly much morally worse) than the average person because all they do is eat, shit, flex and repeat and furthermore believe that they are entitled to be respected.
He is also one of the most hated persons in India. There are even proverbs in his name, so you can imagine the kind of wealth this asshole has amassed. This bastard is responsible for nearly bankrupting the telecom sector in India with his 'Jio 4G' (The antonym of Jio (Live) is Maro (Die). While he wrecked havoc on the telecom sector and continued bastardizing lots of other services, there were no antitrust litigations that worked out against him when there was bountiful evidence to sue his arse, thanks to the PM of India who is hand-in-gloves with this dick. And probably the most disgusting thing is that this piece of shit motherfucker earned massive profits when millions and millions of people got pushed below the poverty line during the lockdown phase and at that moment, I still witnessed eggheads applauding his 'genius'. It is just sad. Terribly sad. Fucking capitalism and the slavery it generates in the populace rather than enforces. People themselves are responsible to a great extent for whores like Ambani to continue squeezing every ounce of blood from the already starving populace.India’s wealthiest man Mukesh Ambani is worth some 91B USD
How to use science unscientifically? Social Media has proven that well enough. It cannot even fucking distinguish its input from output. How can you ever get a valid scientific metric if your previous output is your next input? In statistics, this is called overfitting your data. Now figure why YouTube has an absolutely terrible Trending section.Unfortunately algorithms are double edge sword.
Billionaires are outliers if we plot population on the x axis and income on y. If indeed personal traits mattered so greatly, there would have been a definite correlation between personality traits and success. Research is not definite about this. For example, conscientiousness is considered to be good in a working environment but conscientiousness itself does not yield a higher income. Similarly intelligence has a definite correlation with higher incomes but the number is not big enough to validly assert this claim. Properly done research rarely ever yields anything conclusive but are many times statistically significant. What you see about the billionaires and their social media portrayals is not accurate at all because if you try to predict a person's sum total susceptibility to become uber rich, it is close to nil even if you are very intelligent, etc.Billionaires seize opportunities and this takes skill, knowledge, and effort. Unless they're born to the money and never make decisions regarding it, it's likely that they're pretty clever etc.
The system that has emerged is because of workers adulating wealth so excessively insofar willingly submitting to people like Musk.Billionaires aren't the problem, it's the system and context.
Billionaires do get way too much hype. Elon Musk is not Iron Man or Nicola Tesla. He's not even Edison. His superpower is PR stunts putting him more in the realm of Trump.
I intended it to be that way because I was actually venting my frustration. That morning I had a foolish debate with mother regarding the same thing and her apathy really roiled me inside. (she's extremely practical and does not bat an eyelid towards such things)The way you talk sounds too reactive to me, like you've made it personal for no reason.
Well, of course?BwahahahahaMastery of technology yet not having the self-awareness for humanity.
He's educated and not an idiot but he's not a "master of technology" he has engineers and software developers and all other kinds of technical experts working for him, people at his level aren't up late at night designing things in CAD or heat testing components or trying to find the cause of a software bug.
He runs big organisations, which employ lots of people, and thus relies on good delegation. His job is to delegate correctly, to identify people's skills and talents, and to hire the right people for the right jobs.He's a CEO, he wants something done he has a meeting with the division managers who then farm out the specifics to project managers who in turn divide up that work between operating teams.
You sound like you think companies are better off without a CEO. Do you really believe that?CEOs don't do things, it's not their job, they make high level decisions and sign off on expenses, that's all they do, well maybe that and some HR stuff like resolving disputes and being involved with the hiring/firing of important people.
The MBTI J/P dichotomy is linked to income. If you look at charts of income levels by MBTI, 87.5% of the top half are Js, and 87.5% of those in the bottom half, are Ps.As far as I'm aware conscientiousness has been linked to income,
I doubt that most people spend their evenings reading the list of people who are billionaires somewhere in the world. If it wasn't for the hype, most people wouldn't know who any billionaires are.but yeah it certainly wouldn't explain billionaires. I agree they're overhyped,
If Elon wanted, I'm sure he could turn up in a gleaming red suit. He could probably get his tech guys to attach some lasers and smoke jets to make it look cool.Elon Musk is not Iron Man or Nicola Tesla. He's not even Edison.
Why? That seems like a reasonable argument.
He's not advocating for or against censorship, he's saying it's not his job to decide the scope of free speech, he's putting the onus of responsibility back on the world's governments to set guidelines for him to follow.
Twitter was never a legitimate moral authority and should never have tried to be, this is true of all private/religious organizations that try to meddle in public discourse, it's not their responsibility and an overreach of their influence.
How is it going beyond the law to choose to exercise less stringent terms of service than the law allows? To be "beyond the law" implies being outside of the law, are we actually talking about legality here or is there some other law to which you're referring?The law is that Twitter can set it's own ToS. Musk is going beyond the law in order to make sure that it doesn't.
Get your story straight is he hiding behind the law or breaking it?This also implies that if the government issued a law demanding no criticism of the left, Musk would support this because it's the will of the people. But we know he wouldn't (and shouldn't). He's appropriating a buzzword because it's convenient. He's hiding behind the law because it's convenient.
By taking a more hands-off approach.You think he's saying it's not his job to decide the scope of free speech, but that's literally his stated reason for taking over twitter: to adjust the scope of free speech on twitter.
Go woke, go broke.I don't see Twitter as a moral authority. I see it as a business maintaining its own interests. Woke corporations are just effective capitalism.
Go woke, go broke.
Everything makes money though.I hear this a lot but I don't understand it. A company's job is to make money. Woke marketing makes money, otherwise why do it?
In all honestly I've not been following this too closely but from all the memes and such the story I've been getting is that Elon hasn't been cracking down on Twitter and introducing more censorship/restrictions but rather the opposite, a view which a cursory google search seems to support, if you have evidence to the contrary please by all means elucidate me.I'm using the phrase in the same sense he's using it. "Beyond the law" meaning more stringent than the law.
That would be the tweet you posted correct?See the original tweet.
How is this "more stringent than the law."![]()
This is so deeply stupid.
Indeed Hado there seems to be some breakdown of communication because your position seems simultaneously so vague and narrowly defined that I honestly can't figure out what it is. I suppose you're saying that he's implying that these changes to Twitter's ToS are somehow "on behalf of the government" but how you came to that conclusion I have no idea, there's nothing in the tweet you posted that indicates such, unless again you're being incredibly biased in your interpretation.I'm not saying the things you think I'm saying. Maybe I didn't do a good job communicating. I'm not arguing he can't at all.
You said "he's saying it's not his job to decide the scope of free speech". But he's investing a lot of money to decide the scope of free speech on twitter. The law is already being followed, and the changes he's making are no more lawful than the way it was.
I'm not at all saying that he can't do this. I'm saying that it's weird he's pretending that he's acting on behalf of the government. He would prefer to adjust the ToS and that's fine.
If you want to dive into this I suggest we take it to another thread.I hear this a lot but I don't understand it. A company's job is to make money. Woke marketing makes money, otherwise why do it?
Has it occurred to you that "beyond the law" could be an abbreviation of "beyond the extent required by the law" because it's not an abbreviation of "outside the law" or "beyond the extent of the law" or "in breach of the law". This also fits better within the context of his actions and the other thing he said in the same post, it makes sense that if he reduces Twitter's censorship to only the extent required by the law he would say that he intends to abide by the law as it changes.Elon says he is bringing Twitter's free speech policy in line with the law. He says that he sees Twitter's policy as "beyond the law", meaning more stringent than the censorship that the law requires.
Even going with your knee-jerk reaction what Elon said was just hyperbole, he's an American venture capitalist of course he lives and breathes hyperbole, whereas Trump being the champion of Christianity is as far from the truth as the moon being made of cheese. Even as embittered as I am I would not call Trump a Christian.My major gripe is powerful individuals who say anything to get what they want, and the audience that empowers them. The subject tweet reminds me of Trump holding up a bible.
It sounds paradoxicalThis is so deeply stupid.
I think I had Hado's view although he did not mention it. Hado meant that Elon got everybody's hopes high about free speech and ended up posting this which is a lot more ambivalent than the convictions he was putting forth for buying Twitter. Classic politics. Basically it is probable that he tricked the majority of shareholders into believing that something radical will happen and then burst his own proverbial bubble by bringing the 'law' into definition despite the fact that in most free-speech-on-internet argue directly to the point and are generally more reflective about their arguments or quite direct - 'we want more privacy and less data collection', 'we want interoperability to choose our preferred apps.', 'we don't want government propagandas and malicious takedowns.'How is this "more stringent than the law."
Do you know what "stringent" means?
Are you saying he's advocating for more stringent laws? I can see how you could interpret it that way, if you were incredibly biased.
Cog this is what I've been trying to say this entire time. This is what I disagree with. "To the extent the law requires" =/= "the will of the people". It's not neutral, it's elon's preference. If it were neutral, Elon would not be willing to put all his money into it. But I think I'm done with that topic, too much miscommunication.Has it occurred to you that "beyond the law" could be an abbreviation of "beyond the extent required by the law" because it's not an abbreviation of "outside the law" or "beyond the extent of the law" or "in breach of the law".
@HadobladoCog this is what I've been trying to say this entire time. This is what I disagree with. "To the extent the law requires" =/= "the will of the people". It's not neutral, it's elon's preference. If it were neutral, Elon would not be willing to put all his money into it. But I think I'm done with that topic, too much miscommunication.