October 19, 2024 EcoAnemia
This is what causes the first cultural and then human impoverishment to occur.
Cultural and human impoverishment. Profit without glory and merit
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A company has a good product.
Take it forward by trying to improve the product itself, the production chain, and invest some of the profits in technology.
That should be the goal.
For medium and large companies, this has not been the case for a long time.
I can’t help but wonder how it was possible to get so far away from the reality of production in favor of easy speculation.
To lose even the pleasure of creating, building, bringing to life something that can be used by so many people because it is useful for everyday life.
These are not so much economic as psychological considerations on my part.
The logic of making yourself a corporation would only be understandable if you were willing to invest heavily in research without being tied to banks or other lending institutions.
But the answer is much simpler.
You become a corporation just to make a lot of money.
But is such an answer really complete?
Money or power is necessary to provide things that are fundamental to life, including making it enjoyable for oneself and one’s loved ones.
But does it really require tens of millions of dollars and more?
Does it require as much money as a well-paying business offers?
I think not.
Yet this is the direction taken by a widespread mentality that indicates a definite desire to make a profit without any glory or merit.
Without even that good-natured vanity that makes one proud of what one can really do with one’s skills, one’s talent, one’s ability.
This is really a pity.
The reason for this impoverishment is first cultural and then human.