Obsequitariat: Difference between revisions

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The 99% who are in it for the ride, the crumbs and the crusts of bread that fall from the tables of the fortunate. They who will swoon at an {{plainlink|https://www.linkedin.com/company/credit-suisse/posts/?feedView=all|ultra-high net worth wealth manager’s faultlessly woke social media output}} — topics, in order, including financial literacy for women, black professional social networking, net zero carbon emissions, investment approaches to give the world’s women financial independence, the female workforce after COVID, a white man speaking about gender diversity in leadership, sustainable and impact investing, Black History Month, the financial life-cycle of a woman, more about gender diversity, more about recruitment diversity — fairly quickly it goes on a loop.
{{a|devil|{{image|Water scarcity|png|Well I guess you could, but not taking kickbacks is good too.}}
}}{{d|Obsequitariat|/əˈbsiːkwɪˈteərɪət/|n|}}


Now all of these are laudable topics in and of themselves, and doubtless is is true that the financial services industry has badly failed each of these constituencies, along with many others which are not quite so presently in vogue. Our point here is not to throw shade on these causes and the difficult issues they present, but to ask — in a year that less obsequious commentators were predicting would be the most crisis-ridden in the institution’s history
The 99% who are in it for the ride, the crumbs and the crusts of bread that fall from the tables of the fortunate.
, including espoionate
 
They who will swoon uncynically at the righteous {{plainlink|https://www.linkedin.com/company/credit-suisse/posts|social media outputs of po-faced wealth managers}}; who will like, them love them, be inspired by them, share them, but never wonder whether they aren’t, to put it in the kindest way, a blatant misdirection from the real inner life of the organisations from whom they emanate?
 
To be sure, the ''cause de justice sociale du jour'' are doubtless laudable, of great currency, and it is true that the financial services industry has badly failed many constiuences in its unstoried history, some more ''à la mode'' than others.  
 
The point here is not to throw ''shade'' on these causes and the difficult issues they present — though they deserve a more careful and nuanced treatment than one can expect from a [[Twitter]] feed — but, in a where executives are literally committing espionage on each other, making billion-dollar losses in a quick but unrelated successions, sustaining criminal enforcements for wire fraud, bribes and corruption against governments, NGOs and charitable purposes from Malaysia to Mozambique — to ask, “does this not suggest that the industry has rather taken its eye off the ball?”
 
{{sa}}
*[[Virtue signalling]]
*[[Change paradox]]

Latest revision as of 00:18, 29 March 2023

Well I guess you could, but not taking kickbacks is good too.
In which the curmudgeonly old sod puts the world to rights.
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Obsequitariat
/əˈbsiːkwɪˈteərɪət/ (n.)

The 99% who are in it for the ride, the crumbs and the crusts of bread that fall from the tables of the fortunate.

They who will swoon uncynically at the righteous social media outputs of po-faced wealth managers; who will like, them love them, be inspired by them, share them, but never wonder whether they aren’t, to put it in the kindest way, a blatant misdirection from the real inner life of the organisations from whom they emanate?

To be sure, the cause de justice sociale du jour are doubtless laudable, of great currency, and it is true that the financial services industry has badly failed many constiuences in its unstoried history, some more à la mode than others.

The point here is not to throw shade on these causes and the difficult issues they present — though they deserve a more careful and nuanced treatment than one can expect from a Twitter feed — but, in a where executives are literally committing espionage on each other, making billion-dollar losses in a quick but unrelated successions, sustaining criminal enforcements for wire fraud, bribes and corruption against governments, NGOs and charitable purposes from Malaysia to Mozambique — to ask, “does this not suggest that the industry has rather taken its eye off the ball?”

See also