02-28-2011, 03:13 PM
And average working and middle class people are left to fight over the crumbs.That's the other point.
free lunch
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02-28-2011, 03:13 PM
And average working and middle class people are left to fight over the crumbs.That's the other point.
02-28-2011, 03:40 PM
Magic cookies I guess - just appear out of thin air.
David Ninole Resident
Ninole Resident
02-28-2011, 03:45 PM
I sometimes think of the meaning of words like: employed or adjusted.
Well adjusted employee- sounds like a well adjusted tool to me- or at least that's what I visualize. Just a thought.
02-28-2011, 03:55 PM
Not magical- other people grew the grain, sugar etc., more people transported , baked and delivered the finished cookies to the table. The CEO just takes at the end.
And the tea partier and the union guy are left to fight over 1 of a dozen cookies that people like the tea partier and the union guy made. Call it a joke or a parable.
02-28-2011, 04:57 PM
quote:Without the CEO to provide guidance, would there have been as many employees in the first place?
02-28-2011, 05:19 PM
I've never known a CEO to have provided any "guidance".
In answer to your question, yes there would be. The business elite is much overrated by our culture.
02-28-2011, 07:09 PM
Fighting ignorance is ..... never mind, one need an open mind.
Ninole Resident
Ninole Resident
02-28-2011, 08:12 PM
I have owned small companies, and worked for large corporations, I do investment analysis.
I am most certainly not ignorant about this subject. And I make money betting against these fools. The business elite particularly in the finance and energy sectors both in the US and internationally is profoundly ignorant and shortsighted. To repeat: the business elite is overrated.
02-28-2011, 08:40 PM
There are a few members of the business elite that must be given credit for living up to the billing however.
I may not agree with them, but they were /are competent. Steve Jobs and Bill Gates: created much of the content of our lives today. Larry Bossidy: turned a really messed up Allied Signal into today's Honeywell International. Allan Mulally: the current Ford turnaround. And of course in a past generation, Lee Iacocca at Chrysler. |
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