Shareholder capitalism: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{a|devil| | {{a|devil| | ||
{{Image|Gordon Gekko|png|The ugly face of shareholder capitalism, yesterday.}}}}'' | {{Image|Gordon Gekko|png|The ugly face of shareholder capitalism, yesterday.}}}}''Trigger warning for Millennials and Simon Sinek fans: this page was produced in a facility that also processes sarcasm. We cannot guarantee this page is entirely free from sarcasm''. <Br> | ||
Cancelled. A transparently bad idea, first formulated in 1987 by [[Wall Street|Michael Douglas]]<ref>[[Adam Smith]]: “Oi!”</ref> and now mercifully forgotten, having been devastated by {{author|Simon Sinek}}’s excoriating, timeless classic, {{Br|The Infinite Game}}. It is now [[Stakeholder capitalism|universally understood]] that the employed executives of a corporation are there to take the powerless [[shareholder]]s’ [[Capital structure|capital]], and use it to [[virtue signal]] on [[Twitter]]. | Cancelled. A transparently bad idea, first formulated in 1987 by [[Wall Street|Michael Douglas]]<ref>[[Adam Smith]]: “Oi!”</ref> and now mercifully forgotten, having been devastated by {{author|Simon Sinek}}’s excoriating, timeless classic, {{Br|The Infinite Game}}. It is now [[Stakeholder capitalism|universally understood]] that the employed executives of a corporation are there to take the powerless [[shareholder]]s’ [[Capital structure|capital]], and use it to [[virtue signal]] on [[Twitter]]. |
Latest revision as of 11:00, 11 February 2023
|
Trigger warning for Millennials and Simon Sinek fans: this page was produced in a facility that also processes sarcasm. We cannot guarantee this page is entirely free from sarcasm.
Cancelled. A transparently bad idea, first formulated in 1987 by Michael Douglas[1] and now mercifully forgotten, having been devastated by Simon Sinek’s excoriating, timeless classic, The Infinite Game. It is now universally understood that the employed executives of a corporation are there to take the powerless shareholders’ capital, and use it to virtue signal on Twitter.
See also
- Stakeholder capitalism
- The Infinite Game, Simon Sinek’s feeble attack on it
- Shareholder
- Stakeholder
References
- ↑ Adam Smith: “Oi!”