Self-perpetuating autocracy: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "For all its delusions of fairness, enlightenment, openness to challenge and new ideas, employee surveys and so on, do not believe that your employer — if it has any sign..." |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
For all its delusions of fairness, enlightenment, openness to challenge and new ideas, [[employee survey]]s and so on, do not believe that your employer — if it has any significance in the financial services industry — is anything other than an oppressive Marxist regime. Supply, demand, freedom of expression, fairness, democracy, transparency — these are accoutrements of an [[anarcho-syndicalist commune]]. | {{a|people| | ||
{{Image|BB|jpg|Emmanuel [[Goldman]] yesterday. I mean [[Goldstein]]}} | |||
}}For all its delusions of fairness, enlightenment, openness to challenge and new ideas, [[employee survey]]s and so on, do not believe that your employer — if it has any significance in the financial services industry — is anything other than an oppressive Marxist regime. Supply, demand, freedom of expression, fairness, democracy, transparency — these are accoutrements of an [[anarcho-syndicalist commune]]. [[Investment bank]]s like to believe they have these qualities — they certainly hold them dear — but this is a famous misconception. The nearest account to the inner workings of an investment bank you’re likely to see — albeit without out the sex, however joyless and mechanical its depiction may be — is {{author|George Orwell}}’s ''[[Nineteen Eighty-Four]]''. | |||
{{sa}} | |||
*[[Performance appraisal]] | |||
{{egg}} | {{egg}} | ||
{{c|Metaphor}} | {{c|Metaphor}} | ||
{{draft}} |
Latest revision as of 08:31, 29 October 2022
People Anatomy™
A spotter’s guide to the men and women of finance.
|
For all its delusions of fairness, enlightenment, openness to challenge and new ideas, employee surveys and so on, do not believe that your employer — if it has any significance in the financial services industry — is anything other than an oppressive Marxist regime. Supply, demand, freedom of expression, fairness, democracy, transparency — these are accoutrements of an anarcho-syndicalist commune. Investment banks like to believe they have these qualities — they certainly hold them dear — but this is a famous misconception. The nearest account to the inner workings of an investment bank you’re likely to see — albeit without out the sex, however joyless and mechanical its depiction may be — is George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.