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" ... Bernanke was not only wrong about the impact of bank failures, but his being incorrect created a financial crisis (without the initial bailout of Bear Stearns, Lehman dies rather quietly). Bernanke is presently being lionized by a naive commentariat for his steady hand during the falsely named "financial crisis," but lost on these enablers of Bernanke's monetary mysticism is that our departing Fed Chairman was the financial crisis. ... "
" ... GameStop’s ascent started in the summer of 2019 when Michael Burry, the hedge fund manager lionized for spotting the housing bubble in “The Big Short,” uncovered his next great trade in GameStop. Burry bought two million shares and recommended an obvious arbitrage. “GameStop could pull off perhaps the most consequential and shareholder-friendly buyback in stock market history with elegance and stealth,” Burry told the company after disclosing his position. “Mr. Market is putting this one right in your hands,” said Burry. Within months GameStop spent $200 million to retire 38% of its heavily shorted stock. ... "
" ... Night 1 was bolstered by the Boneyard Match, which was immediately lauded as a masterpiece, the likes of which will be lionized in WWE history. Night 1 also included an entertaining Ladder Match as John Morrison retained the SmackDown Tag Team Championships against Kofi Kingston and Jimmy Uso, while Kevin Owens and Seth Rollins overachieved in a death-defying grudge match. ... "
" ... So, why is this the case? Why is it that fiction has become more synonymous with guilt and frivolity than it is with growth and value? For one thing, our society, which prioritizes “crushing it” and constant hustling, has lionized and rewarded those people who work without respite and prioritize work and business above all else. It doesn’t matter that this lifestyle comes at the expense of a social life; it comes with the promise of building a billion-dollar business, and that takes precedence. These, our society has conditioned us to believe, are the people who end up on top. ... "
" ... The problem is—and it is an acute problem—that entrepreneurship is often taught as a kind of vocational class, attracting students who dream of becoming the next Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk. That’s backwards. We teach children about war, crime and murder—and their ethical dimensions—before we would even dream of teaching them how to create a gun. So should it be with entrepreneurship, in which converge the Promethean drive to steal fire from the gods, the rise and fall of civilizations, the very texture of our daily lives and the most urgent ethical and policy questions of our day. The figure of the entrepreneur, lionized and just as frequently demonized, raises the most profound philosophical and most pressing practical question of liberal arts education: how, then, should we live? ... "