See also his Wikipedia page in the section on his controversial TED talk where he said:
Businesses and the rich do not create jobs. Jobs are created by a feedback loop between customers and businesses that is set in motion by consumers increasing their demand.…
If lower income tax rates for the wealthy really worked we would be drowning in jobs, and yet unemployment and underemployment is at record highs
They refused to publish it? Wow, thank you for finally giving me a concrete reason to hate TED talks. They’ve always seemed like the biggest fart-sniffing conventions I can imagine. And it drives me nuts how people all present with a certain cadence, intonation, tone of voice. Like some kind of learned artificial dialect, the “good public speaker” dialect/accent. A perfectly fitting marker of the incestuous masturbation so prevalent among the kinds of people who give TED talks. I’m not saying they’re all bad, so no offense to anyone’s favorite TED speaker. There’s been decent ones, but its largely exactly the kind of elite Ivy League parasite that, remarkably, manages to be despicable to both conservatives and many liberals. No wonder TED didn’t publish something that might make their own speakers feel bad.
11 years ago…
The Pitchforks Are Coming… For Us Plutocrats — By NICK HANAUER
See also his Wikipedia page in the section on his controversial TED talk where he said:
Businesses and the rich do not create jobs. Jobs are created by a feedback loop between customers and businesses that is set in motion by consumers increasing their demand.…
If lower income tax rates for the wealthy really worked we would be drowning in jobs, and yet unemployment and underemployment is at record highs
TED refused to publish the talk.
interestingly, his later ted talk about basically the same topic is available on the TED channel.
They refused to publish it? Wow, thank you for finally giving me a concrete reason to hate TED talks. They’ve always seemed like the biggest fart-sniffing conventions I can imagine. And it drives me nuts how people all present with a certain cadence, intonation, tone of voice. Like some kind of learned artificial dialect, the “good public speaker” dialect/accent. A perfectly fitting marker of the incestuous masturbation so prevalent among the kinds of people who give TED talks. I’m not saying they’re all bad, so no offense to anyone’s favorite TED speaker. There’s been decent ones, but its largely exactly the kind of elite Ivy League parasite that, remarkably, manages to be despicable to both conservatives and many liberals. No wonder TED didn’t publish something that might make their own speakers feel bad.