Decent plunder

Kayli 2022-11-20 00:37:36

Personal expression to (nonsense)

A documentary with clear logic and presentation. Until the government redressed, changed the term, and financially recovered, the perpetrators and those who helped convince the lie almost never apologized, and the words in the court hearing were carefully rehearsed by lawyers. The social class of those who can't afford to lose is slipping again, and it's getting harder and harder to rise; the brewers and promoters of the financial tsunami move up—these are the same people in the industry.

Talking about the decline of American manufacturing, one of them questioned the relative lax regulation of pay in the financial industry "You know an engineer built up bridges, but what a financial engineer create? They create dreams, but when it comes to nightmare, somebody else pay for them.” Although the evolution of the world and human society has slipped into the cave of consumption, and the individual meaning has been lost in the larger historical context, finance has indeed promoted the development of different new industries, helping them bigger. With such a huge amount of boosting power having the same magnitude of destructive power, finance becomes predatory without having to pay the bills. And decent plunder (no longer Viking-style) is built on human materialism, vanity, fear, and differences in intelligence, information, and means.

So I still retain my interest in finance, the industry that concentrates the most human nature, the wrestling between groups, the flow of global money, the changing numbers. Some people use bait, some people mistrust trust, and it is full of blood. But don't get me wrong, I hate human society, and out of disgust I want to explore the subtleties of human society. It seems paradoxical, but to me the ruins of humanity often obscures the human consciousness (the light), so watching 2001 A Space Odyssey I would cry because briefly surrendered to the light of humanity, she completely enveloped me.

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Extended Reading

Inside Job quotes

  • David McCormick: [not knowing how to answer the interviewer] Could we... could we turn this off for a second?

  • R. Glenn Hubbard: [annoyed with the interviewer] This isn't a deposition, sir. I was polite enough to give you time, foolishly I now see. But you have three more minutes. Give it your best shot!