Wotan Posted September 5, 2011 Report Share Posted September 5, 2011 It's amazingly sad to hear that Steve Jobs recently went into semi-retirement, evidently due to overwhelming and unlucky health difficulties. Because Jobs is a true capitalist hero. He gave the world: computer windows and mice, the Apple II, Macintosh, Pixar animation movies, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Humanity is incomparably richer and happier because of just this one man. And a grateful planet has made him a deserved billionaire in the process. Steve Jobs contrasts with the capitalist semi-heroes Warren Buffet and Bill Gates. All three started from nothing and ended up mega-rich, having benefited their fellow man massively thru business genius and stunning capitalist achievement. But Jobs differs from Buffet and Gates in that he isn't a public advocate of the killingly-evil morality of self-sacrifice, nor the loathsomely-evil politics of welfare statism. It's worth noting that all three business magnates have enormous numbers of employees who are strong New Liberals: whether Objectivists, semi-Objectivists, libertarians, laissez-faire capitalists, or updated classical liberals. The numbers here are wildly disproportionate and shocking. Yet none of the three commercial giants and high-prominence public figures -- not Buffet nor Gates nor Jobs -- openly promote these neoliberal ideals, nor donate to organizations which do. So all three could stand some intellectual self-improvement if they want to be considered truly and incontrovertibly great. Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, and Steve Jobs are all genuinely magnificent businessmen -- but philosophical dolts. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trebor Posted September 5, 2011 Report Share Posted September 5, 2011 (edited) Yes, it is sad that he is having such serious health problems. He's only 56 years old. Steve Jobs' 2005 Commencement address at Stanford: Text — "Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish." Donald Luskin, in his new book, I am John Galt (look inside), pays tribute to Steve Jobs. The first chapter is: "The Individualist: Steve Jobs as Howard Roark, the man who reinvented four whole industries just because it was so cool." Edited September 5, 2011 by Trebor Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheEgoist Posted September 6, 2011 Report Share Posted September 6, 2011 I would say Gates totally thwarted his position as any kind of hero long ago with Microsoft's support of anti-competitive laws...Just a side note. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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