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4 votes
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The vertical farming bubble is finally popping
20 votes -
Tesla's squandered lead
10 votes -
The lie that's destroying the economy
5 votes -
Could mediocre movies save movie theaters? ‘Ticket to Paradise,’ ‘A Man Called Otto’ and ‘80 for Brady’ say yes
4 votes -
The greatest tax system in the world – why can't America be as great as the Faroe Islands?
14 votes -
How Helsinki became the mobile gaming capital of the world
4 votes -
How the inventor of the troll doll missed out on a fortune
5 votes -
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki is stepping down
13 votes -
Disney CEO Bob Iger is open to selling Hulu
4 votes -
The forgotten story of Modulex – Lego's lost cousin
7 votes -
Warner Bros. Discovery to keep Discovery+, in strategy shift
4 votes -
Meet the man building a thousand wheelchair ramps in Iceland – Ramp Up Iceland aim to make everyday life less challenging for people with physical disabilities
4 votes -
Paramount Plus and Showtime become ‘Paramount Plus with Showtime’
11 votes -
How Gautam Adani lost more than $50 billion in a week
4 votes -
IKEA is using more wood from Sweden and the Baltics to make up for not sourcing it from Russia and Belarus, which the company has shunned due to Moscow's war in Ukraine
4 votes -
Netflix offloads two completed films, filmmakers shop projects elsewhere
6 votes -
Our new off road Kid Rig - from 'Not a Wheelchair'
4 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
Apple confirms ‘Flora And Son’, streamer’s biggest Sundance deal since ‘CODA’
3 votes -
Spotify said Monday that it will cut 6% of its workforce to reduce costs – CEO Daniel Ek took full responsibility for the job cuts, which he called “difficult but necessary”
8 votes -
‘Fair Play,’ starring Alden Ehrenreich and Phoebe Dynevor, sells to Netflix for $20 million in huge Sundance deal
1 vote -
Excessive outbreaks of seaweed are clogging up our waters – now the algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products
5 votes -
Hollywood cannot survive without movie theaters. Why is this so hard for studios to believe?
5 votes -
Amazon discontinues charity donation program amid cost cuts
18 votes -
Unpopular opinion: Brands will appear far more trustworthy if they stop all this "narrative feeding"
In this post, I'm going to say something which might seem controversial, politically incorrect or even downright harsh to some of you. Feel free to let me know and express your strong disagreement...
In this post, I'm going to say something which might seem controversial, politically incorrect or even downright harsh to some of you. Feel free to let me know and express your strong disagreement if that's the case. Everyone's world view is different and I'm ever ready to adjust my own in light of new found facts and evidences.
What I'm observing these days is that many big tech companies and large corporations are pushing lot's of content on Linkedin, Twitter, etc. which conveys the idea that these companies are standing up for the rights of supposedly oppressed section of the masses (females, minorities, etc.). 8 out of 10 postings from them are typically about these, a group picture of women employees, retweets or likes of those who have posted on new joining and promotions, etc.
With all due respect, the problem here isn't with the virtues of women empowerment, etc., needless to say these are good things to be celebrated in a society. But the problem is with their approach. When 8 out of 10 posts are only on these topics, the impression or narrative being pushed becomes that the world at large is very cruel and gruesome whereas these large capitalists are the ones who are implementing just rules and ethics on that world. Do you think this narrative or story they're selling is based on any factual reality?
I've seen and experienced a fair part of that "world at large" myself and while there are indeed many problems with it and it's far from perfect, it's a bit rich of these capitalists to make that kind of narrative signaling when, in fact, they're the ones who are partly responsible for keeping it ever poor and oppressed. These companies have the highest privileges of the world and they profit out of a crony system that thrives and benefits from the gates which keep the competition away.
Now, I'm not one of those "ancap" dudes who blatantly cancels capitalism entirely. Oh no, we all do need capitalism, not only because it's a system that pays your salaries and bills but also because the alternative is much worse and we have seen what it did in Russia and Korea and China. I just wish capitalism was more inclusive and of the Adam Smithian Laissez Faire and free competition kind and less of the big tech and surveillance capitalism kind.
This constant narrative pushing by the corporates, in effect, keeps people distracted from this truly bad aspect of capitalism. The masses are gullible, they can't see it, but the people sitting at top positions in these companies should know better. What kind of society are they trying to create with this? These companies have nothing to fear. Even if the masses actually realized and start thinking about this problem, they're hardly in a position to do anything about it. The way our rigid systems are designed and work, I don't see it changing for at least decades, if not centuries. But I wish these brands stop pushing on the narrative front in the meantime. In fact, the only thing that will change is make them more trustworthy in the eyes of wise people in the society, that's what I think.
7 votes -
Phantom offsets and carbon deceit
6 votes -
Sundance readies big return as indie film business struggles to survive
3 votes -
Microsoft is laying off 10,000 employees
10 votes -
Lithium company Ioneer scores $700 million conditional loan from Energy Department for Nevada plant
4 votes -
Behind Disney’s activist investor battle: A Marvel mogul’s revenge play
2 votes -
Warner Bros Discovery weighs sale of music library to pare debt
6 votes -
Donald Trump's company sentenced to pay $1.61 million penalty for tax fraud
11 votes -
Right-to-repair advocates question John Deere’s new promises
9 votes -
The first family of human cannonballing
5 votes -
The American Farm Bureau Federation and John Deere have signed a 'Memorandum of Understanding' allowing US customers to fix their own equipment
27 votes -
What’s driving TV’s un-renewal wave
7 votes -
Would you fall for it? General Motors' propaganda video from the 1950s.
8 votes -
As demand for electric vehicles soars, Stora Enso in Finland has hired engineers to look into the possibility of using lignin, a polymer found in trees, to make batteries
6 votes -
Kill your own business
3 votes -
Here’s the electric car that Sony is going to build with Honda
6 votes -
Warner Bros. Discovery says it’s done killing shows and movies just for tax write-offs
3 votes -
Barnes and Noble's surprising turnaround
18 votes -
Japan’s business owners can’t find successors. This man is giving his away.
9 votes -
Iceland Foods has lost its ongoing legal battle with the country Iceland over the frozen food retailer's trademark name after the EUIPO dismissed its appeal
7 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried: FTX founder arrested in Bahamas
11 votes -
Netflix will be next on Microsoft’s shopping list
9 votes -
Denmark's semi-autonomous territory Greenland is coveted by China, the United States, and global mining companies
9 votes -
Tesla: Our ‘failure’ to make actual self-driving cars ‘is not fraud’
9 votes -
Child workers found throughout Hyundai-Kia supply chain in Alabama
8 votes