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Money managers, financial management. Yeah, they make sense in capitalism but they really don't produce anything tangible.
I think 'producing something tangible' is hardly a fair metric.
A therapist doesn't produce something tangible, but many of them provide value to their clients.
A guitar teacher (or any teacher for that matter) doesn't produce something tangible either, but they again provide value.
If the business is to produce educated people. Teachers provide the core benefit.. and pretty measurable.
It's when there's a teacher with 7 line managers that are just have meetings to talk about the teachers "output" that causes the problem.
Yeah but those aren't groups I have to deal with unless I choose to. You really can't get around the financial system. It's not like I can take a 100 bucks and walk up to say a gas station and say "1 share please". And before you say Robinhood keep in mind that you don't actually own those stocks, they own them and you are just "managing it".
I'll agree to that but still wish we didn't have a "need" for finance people.
What does Atwater make?
What do you mean, like, how much money does the company make?
Oh, no, I mean what do we make?
I don't follow. We make money.
No, I know we make money. I mean, what do we create?
We create wealth.
No, no, I mean, what do we build, what do we design, you know? Because I have some ideas that could really help the company.
Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, we don't build anything.
The financial industry is, ostensibly, about connecting people that need money to people that have more than they need. In practice it's about skimming from the top of EVERYTHING in society.
They provide plebs access to the complicated world of finance and pass on some of the yield. I think that's valuable.