postmodern, to business

More evidence that corporate management is a flawed/inefficient system.

More than 4 out of 5 of bosses are 'accidental managers' who stumble into leadership with little training, a UK survey found

  • Around 82% of bosses lack any formal leadership or management training and qualifications.
  • A new survey by the Chartered Management Institute surveyed over 4,500 managers and workers in the UK.
  • Half of the managers surveyed said promotions are given based on internal relationships over performance.

Maybe we should stop promoting people because they're chummy with the boss? Maybe we should define what it actually is that managers do? Maybe we don't need so many managers in the first place?

https://www.businessinsider.com/bosses-managers-accidental-managers-no-formal-training-survey-2023-10

EwanCroft, to twitter

Opened a Bluesky account but I'm basically lurking. Seems like Twitter again... too much like Twitter again because there feels like a disconnect between the platform and I. It feels gamified.

DoomsdaysCW, to random
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

ICYMI - Targets Top-10 Tax Dodgers

By Andrew Emett -
January 30, 2016

"Targeting the top-10 corporate tax dodgers, Sen. Bernie Sanders pledged on Friday to close loopholes that allow these large corporations to exploit offshore tax havens in order to avoid paying U.S. income taxes. Last year, Fortune 500 companies reportedly held over $2.1 trillion in accumulated profits offshore to evade paying U.S. taxes.

"'Three major profitable corporations not only pay nothing in federal income taxes, they actually got a rebate from the IRS,' Sanders told a town meeting in a student center at Iowa Wesleyan University.

"The presidential candidate informed his supporters that , , and paid no federal income taxes between 2008 and 2013. During that period, these three companies amassed more than $102 billion in combined profits, yet they received over $4.1 billion in income tax rebates from the IRS.

"In 2012, GE stashed $108 billion in offshore tax havens and would have had to pay $37.8 billion if the loopholes were closed. Receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in tax refunds from the IRS, Boeing and Verizon regularly outsource their jobs to China and other low-wage countries while hiding their profits in tax havens.

"Although received a bailout of more than $1.3 trillion from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department, the bank hid $17.2 billion in offshore tax havens in 2012. Receiving a $2.5 trillion bailout during the financial crisis, stashed $42.6 billion offshore to avoid paying taxes in 2012.

"Faced with over 1,000 lawsuits accusing the company of selling Zoloft while secretly aware it could cause malformed hearts in newborns, operates subsidiaries in 151 tax havens. As the world’s largest drug manufacturer, Pfizer officially holds $74 billion in profits to avoid paying U.S. taxes.

"Although the CEOs of , , and have retirement accounts worth millions of dollars, these heartless tycoons want to raise the eligibility age for Medicare and Social Security to 70 while making significant cuts to Social Security. Sanders also mentioned that despite the fact that Federal Express receives $1 billion each year from the U.S. Postal Service, was awarded a $135 million tax refund from the IRS in 2011.

"'In America today we are losing $100 billion in revenue every single year because large corporations are stashing their profits in the Cayman Islands and other offshore tax havens,' Sanders asserted.

"According to a report last year from U.S. PIRG (Public Interest Research Group) Education Fund and Citizens for Tax Justice, nearly 75% of Fortune 500 companies have tucked away $2.1 trillion in accumulated profits offshore to avoid paying U.S. income taxes. In 2014, at least 358 of these massive corporations maintained 7,622 tax haven subsidiaries throughout Bermuda, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and other havens.

If elected president, Sanders plans to close these tax loopholes in order to create and maintain at least 13 million jobs by rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges, water systems, railways, and airports. On Friday, Sanders announced his plan to crack down on corporate tax dodgers by closing loopholes allowing U.S. corporations to avoid paying federal income taxes by setting up a post office box in a tax-haven country, artificially inflating foreign tax credits, and using offshore subsidiaries to evade taxes.

"Sanders vowed to eliminate tax breaks for , gas, and coal companies, which would result in saving more than $135 billion over the next decade. He also promised to prevent companies from avoiding taxes by corporate inversions. By acquiring or merging with a smaller foreign business, many U.S. corporations have evaded paying taxes by claiming the new company is foreign, when in reality little to no personnel or operations have moved offshore."

https://www.nationofchange.org/2016/01/30/bernie-sanders-targets-top-10-corporate-tax-dodgers/

grantimatter, to random
@grantimatter@mstdn.social avatar

What if Elon Musk, the planetary migrant, isn’t destroying Twitter at the behest of the Russians or the Saudis or his own inner insufficiencies… but he and Jack are just running an experiment on how a large-scale community migrated from one platform to another?
What if Elon Musk is using Twitter as a model for an uninhabitable Earth … just to get the social data?

RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@grantimatter

was never a baseline measurement for social data if you consider algorithms.

Just my thoughts on social data in general. I don't think needs any cover for the greatest investment loss in human history.

Follow the money.

AlixB, to random French
@AlixB@piaille.fr avatar

Affiche pour la site de Richelieu vue dans le métro. Le texte me laisse perplexe mais je la trouve belle! Et sinon, allez-y: la rénovation est très réussie, on peut aller bouquiner (gratuitement) dans la salle Ovale et visiter le musée qui expose des pièces choisies dans les collections.

baldur, to random
@baldur@toot.cafe avatar

“Hey designers, they’re gaslighting you. By Sara Wachter-Boettcher | Nice Work”

"They tried so, so hard to prove that they were valuable. But all they got for their effort was bone-deep burnout." https://medium.com/nice-work-from-active-voice/hey-designers-theyre-gaslighting-you-e02e5a4d9cff

Eka_FOOF_A,
@Eka_FOOF_A@spacey.space avatar

@baldur for all in jobs, contracting, or working for others. I bet I rankled many employers because I didn't cow and fall to their gas-lighting.

mara, to random

What you probably don’t know about Taco Bell, KFC and Pizza Hut!
The right wing love in America and how it’s alive and thriving and most people are unaware!

https://www.exposedbycmd.org/2023/10/05/parent-company-of-taco-bell-kfc-pivots-to-funding-right-wing-causes/

RememberUsAlways, to random
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

will try to make the economy and immigration the main issues in as they have in every cycle since I began voting in the 90's.

It is THE reason polls have been so far off come election day and things like "red wave" did not happen in 2022. It's possible to want something so badly it's obvious. Ask

RememberUsAlways, to random
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

I know everyone is upset about Biden building a wall on the border but he could secure as much as 5% of Republican voters if you can prove to them he got it done.


RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@shekinahcancook @gooba42 @FrankFrank

That target list is a assassin's dream.
Out of "working" tolerance.

nando161, to geopolitics
@nando161@kolektiva.social avatar

"Hey so it turns out that the #people of #earth accidentally did a #global #experiment to see if every #individual could course correct #climatechange through mass #personal #change of #habits, and it turns out, no! We can't! It was massive #corporate activity all along!"

#ecology #ecosystem #globalwarming #eattherich #killyourlocalfascist #killyourlocalcapitalist #ausgov #politas

clive, to random
@clive@saturation.social avatar

"Let's Stop Calling It 'Content''

I first starting noticing the word "content" in the late 90s

Companies looking to put writing, animation, video or art on their web sites would call it "content"

It flattened innumerable forms of culture into a sort of goo, extruded from a tube

25 years on, the term "content" has metastasized, eating whole the way many people talk about -- think about -- culture.

Let's stop now

My essay: https://clivethompson.medium.com/lets-stop-calling-it-content-8410bf5f94a9

A free link: https://clivethompson.medium.com/lets-stop-calling-it-content-8410bf5f94a9?sk=7a2668c44c31a4359876cfcd25a5f2d0

RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@clive

It's likely more beneficial to stop referring to ourselves as before we let redefine more terms in .

If they had their way, would be legal as it was for over a thousand years.

voron, to MandelaEffect
@voron@mstdn.party avatar

We are slightly insulted right now, but recall how the on the supply led to outrageous even though there was no real shortage. will do it again
👇
“Restrictions on food exports are overflowing. Countries are trying to protect their own stockpiles…”
.

https://www.csmonitor.com/World/2023/0928/Global-food-supply-chains-have-slowed.-What-s-behind-the-decline

DemocracySpot, to photography
@DemocracySpot@mstdn.social avatar

📷 "I'll always cherish my memories of the Polygroup® Summer of 2023."

Nonilex, to TeslaMotors
@Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

makers’ use of suppliers raises concerns about

US barring parts & products from the region poses a challenge for & other companies

Tesla boasts that its are a marvel not just of innovation but also , pledging in annual reports that it will “not knowingly accept products or services from suppliers that include forced labour or in any form.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/interactive/2023/electric-vehicles-forced-labor-china/

Nonilex,
@Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

Firms that appear to undermine a US ban on products made in emerge near the top of ’s sprawling network of suppliers, according to a WaPo examination of records & Chinese media reports. Among them are companies that have openly complied w/ ’s quotas for moving minority Muslim out of rural villages & into factory towns through what Chinese authorities call “labor transfers” or “surplus labor employment.”

QasimRashid, to random
@QasimRashid@mastodon.social avatar

Big 3 CEOs claim their pay is high b/c its performance based. Really? When they led so poorly that the Big 3 needed taxpayer bailouts—it was workers who took a pay cut.

Now that those workers have generated immense profit—workers still get the pay cut?🤔

Absurd corporate greed.

NoBeerToday,
@NoBeerToday@mastodon.social avatar

@QasimRashid

"Big 3 CEOs claim their pay is high b/c its performance based." - Well, without the workers to make their ideas & directions into reality, their 'performance' is dead on arrival.

While there are some notable exceptions, the truth is that becoming a CCO has less to do with ability than it has to do with being part of the right group & playing the right group politics. The 'it's not what you know but who you know' principle is prominent in the corporate world.


RememberUsAlways, to history
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

It's beginning. The end voyage to this chapter of .

The stench in the people's house has become overwhelming and obviously throwing fits.

cdarwin, to random
@cdarwin@c.im avatar

Nobel laureate James Buchanan is the intellectual linchpin of the Koch-funded attack on democratic institutions.

If the Tennessee-born economist James McGill Buchanan were alive today, it would suit him just fine that most well-informed journalists, liberal politicians, and even many economics students have little understanding of his work.

The reason? Duke historian Nancy MacLean contends that his philosophy is so stark that even young libertarian acolytes are only introduced to it after they have accepted the relatively sunny perspective of Ayn Rand. (Yes, you read that correctly).

If Americans really knew what Buchanan thought and promoted, and how destructively his vision is manifesting under their noses, it would dawn on them how close the country is to a transformation most would not even want to imagine, much less accept.

Buchanan’s view of human nature was distinctly dismal. Adam Smith saw human beings as self-interested and hungry for personal power and material comfort, but he also acknowledged social instincts like compassion and fairness.
Buchanan, in contrast, insisted that people were primarily driven by venal self-interest.
Crediting people with altruism or a desire to serve others was “romantic” fantasy: politicians and government workers were out for themselves, and so, for that matter, were teachers, doctors, and civil rights activists. They wanted to control others and wrest away their resources: “Each person seeks mastery over a world of slaves,” he wrote in his 1975 book, The Limits of Liberty.
The people who needed protection were property owners, and their rights could only be secured though constitutional limits to prevent the majority of voters from encroaching on them, an idea Buchanan lays out in works like Property as a Guarantor of Liberty (1993).
Buchanan saw society as a cutthroat realm of makers (entrepreneurs) constantly under siege by takers (everybody else).
His own language was often more stark, warning the alleged “prey” of “parasites” and “predators” out to fleece them.
https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/meet-the-economist-behind-the-one-percents-stealth-takeover-of-america

cdarwin,
@cdarwin@c.im avatar

In 1965 James M. Buchanan launched a center dedicated to his theories at the University of Virginia, which later relocated to George Mason University.

Nancy MacLean describes how he trained thinkers to push back against the Brown v. Board of Education decision to desegregate America’s public schools and to challenge the constitutional perspectives and federal policy that enabled it.

She notes that he took care to use economic and political precepts, rather than overtly racial arguments, to make his case, which nonetheless gave cover to racists who knew that spelling out their prejudices would alienate the country.

All the while, a ghost hovered in the background — that of John C. of South Carolina, senator and seventh vice president of the United States.

Calhoun was an intellectual and political powerhouse in the South from the 1820s until his death in 1850, expending his formidable energy to defend slavery. Calhoun, called the “ of the ” by historian Richard Hofstadter, saw himself and his fellow southern oligarchs as victims of the majority.

Therefore, as MacLean explains, he sought to create “ ” to constrict the operations of government.

Economists Tyler and Alexander , both of George Mason University, have noted the two men’s affinities, heralding Calhoun “a precursor of modern theory” who “anticipates” Buchanan’s thinking.

MacLean observes that both focused on how constrains property owners and aimed for ways to restrict the latitude of voters.

She argues that unlike even the most property-friendly founders Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, Buchanan wanted a private governing of that was wholly released from public accountability.

Suppressing voting, changing legislative processes so that a normal majority could no longer prevail, sowing public distrust of government institutions— all these were tactics toward the goal.

But the Holy Grail was the : alter it and you could increase and secure the power of the wealthy in a way that no politician could ever challenge.

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/533763/democracy-in-chains-by-nancy-maclean/9781101980972/

Nonilex, to random
@Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

But wait, there’s more!

Secretly Participated in Events

by Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott & Alex Mierjeski
@ProPublica

has attended at least two donor summits, putting him in the extraordinary position of having helped a network that has brought multiple before the .


https://www.propublica.org/article/clarence-thomas-secretly-attended-koch-brothers-donor-events-scotus

Nonilex,
@Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

Charles & David ’s access to has gone well beyond his participation in their events. For years, the had opportunities to meet privately w/ thanks to the justice’s regular trips to the , an all-male retreat that attracts some of the nation’s most & figures. Thomas has been a regular… for 25 yrs as ’s guest, acc/to internal docs & interviews w/dozens of members, other guests & workers….

RememberUsAlways, to anime_titties
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

Anyone else notice can't seem to do anything that resembles running a functional ?

Functional government is NEVER in the interest of their overlords.

shoq, to random
@shoq@mastodon.social avatar

Overheard at Chipoltle, three Black Youths waiting for order⏵

BY1: “I can’t believe these stupid white motherfuckers probably gonna elect Trump again.”

BY2: “Hear that. They about to learn what it’s like to have the white man’s boot on their throat like we had all our lives.”

BY3: “Amen.”

RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@shoq

Extremely difficult to throat stomp boot lickers.

itnewsbot, to random
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

‘What the Fuck Was This?’: Behind the 1984 ‘Dune’ Promotional Tour - Four gala premieres, a very excited cast, and David Lynch at the White House with the Rea... - https://www.wired.com/story/masterpiece-in-disarray-david-lynchs-dune-an-oral-history-excerpt/ /movies /books

RememberUsAlways, (edited )
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@itnewsbot

"This" is what happens when steals the concept of artists and writers and promotes it as

It's the same concept with modern corporate

coreyf, to random
@coreyf@sfba.social avatar

Why do mainstream news online sites keep@devoting so much space to ? I don’t get why anyone should cover his antics. He’s a mobster.

RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@coreyf

has a pattern of .

Shock and sensational sells.

GW, to random
@GW@newsie.social avatar

Almost Exposé Proof
by Ralph Nader

Corporate law firms have taught their wayward corporate clients how to use accretions of privileges and immunities to ward off or wait out the most devastating books, documentaries and media exposés. Corporate P.R. firms know that the media doesn’t follow the efforts of civic advocacy groups as a regular beat. Feature exposés are prime candidates for big awards like the Pulitzer Prizes.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2023/09/18/corporate-criminal-behavior-almost-expose-proof/

RememberUsAlways, to random
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

Sometimes I watch broadcasting so I can the that advertise there.

I only watch Fox for the commercials and since the settlement, that is the majority of Fox .

lydiaconwell, to philosophy
@lydiaconwell@mas.to avatar

I've stolen this image from someone else because I want to say a little something about it.

It works for many groups I think, but certainly works from a viewpoint.

A lot of the more vocal, large-follower commentators on the left have been resistant of the , favouring the sites with their larger audiences.

But one thing about this approach is that it favours platforming over networking. It prefers the hot take over building a strong community.

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