If you haven't read the manifesto, do yourself a favor and read it and come to your own conclusions. In my opinion it's a weird mix of extremely coherent and well reasoned points that come to a sort of nonsensensical conclusion but that doesn't deter from how good the good parts are and they are definitely worth reading
If you strip out the call for revolution stuff which is very poorly argued anyway and I think just transparently will never happen, the remaining 80% of the manifesto is very well written
Buy a company with debt (leveraged buy out). Hand that cash back to the "private equity investors". Let the company go bankrupt and the debt magically dissapears.
Modern consumer brands have essentially nothing to do with selling consumer goods. They are financial vehicles for private equity to lever up on.
In a decreasing liquidity environment many of these schemes will blow up. They could have sold 100x more insta pots and it wouldn't have mattered, it's pure financial gambling under the hood
Pseudo profound bullshit. People buy stuff. It makes sense to construct spaces to conduct these activities. There's nothing interesting to be gained by the comparison to religion.
The best case relationship that really holds is that both are concepts that relate to sociology. That's it
This is an article about the SEC coinbase announcement. That happened today. So I'm not talking about what happened yesterday, I'm talking about what happened today, because that is what is relevant to the article we are discussing.
so, ummmmm..... like..... bruh. go check what it did today
If you strip out the call for revolution stuff which is very poorly argued anyway and I think just transparently will never happen, the remaining 80% of the manifesto is very well written