In 2015, Dan Price, the CEO and cofounder of Gravity Payments, cut his own pay from about 1 million dollars to 70,000 and set a 70,000 dollar minimum salary for everyone at the company. He said he wanted people to live comfortably and shrink pay gaps.
Negligent Endangerment and Failure to Disclose Product Risks
Details: Hinobi knows its products (e.g., consoles) spawn dangerous glitches but continues sales without warning, using Glitch Techs to hide the issue.
Impact: Threats to safety and property; widespread unreported harm.
Implications: Violates product liability and consumer protection laws; breaches duty of care.
Evidence: Pages 1, 4-5 (PLixel side effects, Tech secrecy).
Illegal Memory Manipulation and Erasure
Details: Uses Gauntlet wipes to erase glitch memories, adjustable with potential harm from overuse (e.g., Phil, Mitch).
Tech leader Ashkan Rajaee reveals how fake hires are infiltrating startups and what leaders must do to verify identity and protect company s
The most dangerous thing about remote work in 2025 isn’t burnout. It’s the ease with which fraudsters can enter your team. Passports are faked. Locations are spoofed. And your US-based hire might be logging in from across the world.
When the Market Sanctions Ideology: Tesla's Collapse and the Political Drift of Billionaires
Source: El Manifesto, February 6, 2025 edition, article by Annaflavia Merluzzi.
According to an investigation published in El Manifesto, Tesla sales are plummeting across Europe, with dramatic declines in Germany (-59%), France (-63%), and Norway (-38%). While these figures reflect a broader slowdown in the electric vehicle market, they also reveal a political dynamic: the growing rejection of Elon Musk and his ideological alignment with the far right.
This collapse is not merely an economic sanction—it raises a larger question: can capitalism exist independently of democracy, or will democracy ultimately reassert control?
Reactionary Capital: When the Market Sanctions Ideology
Tesla’s downfall in Germany and across Europe is more than just an economic issue. It highlights a broader phenomenon: the rejection of a capitalism that no longer limits itself to production but seeks to impose a political vision on the world.
Traditionally, the far right has been hostile to both environmentalism and technological progress. At first glance, this makes it a paradoxical ally for a billionaire leading an electric vehicle company. However, Elon Musk’s financial backing of Alice Weidel and the German far-right party AfD reveals another dimension of this alliance: a rejection of ecological transition when framed within a democratic and social context.
A Capitalism That No Longer Hides
Musk embodies a shift in contemporary capitalism: wealth is no longer just about accumulation—it is now a tool for financing reactionary political movements that oppose environmental regulations, social rights, and inclusive policies.
This trend reflects a broader phenomenon in which certain billionaires, rather than remaining neutral market players, become direct political actors. Their strategy aligns with an old fantasy of elite secession: controlling a captive market, securing an electorate aligned with their vision, and developing technologies that ensure their total autonomy from the rest of society.
The Market as a Battleground
But this project faces a fundamental paradox: if billionaires attempt to shape politics, consumers, in turn, can politicize their consumption. The European boycott of Tesla illustrates how the market itself can become an ideological battlefield. Consumers, far from being passive economic participants, are expressing a rejection of a corporate model where ideology takes precedence over innovation.
The philosopher Karl Polanyi identified this tension in the 20th century: the free market only functions as long as society accepts it. When a company oversteps its role and becomes a tool of ideological domination, it risks being rejected by society. The market, far from being an autonomous entity, is always embedded within a moral and political framework.
A New Form of Resistance?
The Tesla case reminds us that in a world where billionaires seek to shape public policy while bypassing democratic processes, citizens can respond economically. When voting appears ineffective against the influence of wealth in politics, boycotting becomes a powerful tool of resistance.
We may be witnessing the emergence of an inverted ethical capitalism: one not dictated by corporate promises of sustainability, but by consumers sanctioning ideological deviations among the ultra-wealthy. If this trend continues, it could redefine the relationship between capitalism and democracy—reminding us that economics cannot be detached from the values it claims to serve.
Also worth reading: Check out my series "Democracy VS Capitalism" on Medium, where I explore the tensions between economic power and democratic institutions:
"Democracy is in crisis."
But was it ever truly thriving?
If politics can’t control the economy, can democracy even survive capitalism?
Coming in mid-February: A three-part series on climate denial fake news, scientific manipulation, collective paralysis, and the secession of the wealthy. Why are some billionaires sabotaging climate action while preparing their escape? Stay tuned.
P'tit Tôlier
Essayist & Popularizer. I analyze the world through accessible philosophical essays. Complex ideas, explained simply—to help us think about our times.
Evening! 😁👍😁👍 These are the kinds of things are what will separate you from others and your competition. #smallbusiness #startups #startup #business #competition #igers #businessethics #ethics #businesscoaching #businessman
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