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zie an hour ago

Sort of True-ish. There are lots of different kinds of ownership. Ownership with little to no say in how things are run to ownership with basically all the control.

If you are an owner with all the control, i.e. you are on the board or in corporate leadership(CEO/CFO/etc), then hey guess what,there is a really great cell here at the local prison just waiting for you, depending on how involved you were.

If you are an owner with little to no control, i.e. most shareholders that just vote for the board, etc. The assets would get liquidated, bond/debt holders would get paid back, and then anything left over would go to these shareholders.

This would incentivize shareholders to care more about what they are owning, this is a good thing. Even if it's pension funds and individual retirement accounts. This would get sorted pretty quickly as soon as the new normal is known and adjusted for.

SpaceX for example just went public, but if you read the docs, the control was not given to the public. Elon Musk 100% controls SpaceX still. Even if every public shareholder unanimously agrees against Elon Musk, guess what happens? Elon Musk still gets his way.

I don't know what the parent comment was thinking, but to my mind, the ones with the most control get the worst of the consequences. So Pension Funds/etc that hold little to no control would get paid out before those with more control.

jackb4040 29 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

This whole thread is a fascinating exercise. I'm watching HN derive Lenin's "What is to be Done?" from first principles.

Henchman21 an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

I think to state it succinctly, the thing I was thinking was: "the people that make the bad decisions should bear the consequences".

zie 43 minutes ago | parent [-]

That generally turns out to be the same thing as me, just said more succinctly. I agree with your thinking.