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this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2023
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Verizon has 117,100 employees. They spent $3415 per person. This doesn't include all the contractors and consultants they have manning their phone lines overseas for a few bucks a day.
Their market cap is 140.25 billion dollars. 0.4 billion is a trivial amount of money compared to all the money already invested in them. Purchasing a company for less than 1% of your valuation to try and make more money seems like an incredibly safe experiment.
One person thinks about big numbers as "why can't they just give it away so I can have things better." There's four billion people out there who have trouble putting food on the table and could never even think about seeing a quality of life that even the homeless have in the US. Dividing that 400 million up wouldn't do much of anything for them.
Even if you take 40% of americans (132,760,000) and hand out 400 million dollars that's only $3 per person.
Who the fuckity shit said my argument was about dividing $400 million among four billion people?
I forget people have trouble following comments that are longer than a couple of sentences :(
No, their point is valid. You just did a bunch of mathematics while completely ignoring the larger issue of corporations and rich executives wasting money on frivolous endeavors.
Not only that, you literally suggested that dividing the BlueJeans money among the poor of the world would do them little benefit–as if Verizon is the only company perpetrating corporate greed–which they never suggested.
Using your own numbers, $3415 dollars would probably make a huge difference in most Verizon employees' lives, but instead they spent that money on BlueJeans, a product that any reasonable person could have told you was doomed to fail.
Hope this comment wasn't too long for you.
Thanks. I don't always have the mental energy to explain or counter every statement. Love that biting last sentence. <3