Anson Frericks
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And the last time we had kind of a real economic bump in the road, let's call it was 2008, 2009. Yeah, it's sort of the great financial crisis that happens. And after the great financial crisis, there's sort of a lot of people that were upset that banks got bailed out. It seemed like Main Street was the one that sort of that lost out, people lost houses.
And the last time we had kind of a real economic bump in the road, let's call it was 2008, 2009. Yeah, it's sort of the great financial crisis that happens. And after the great financial crisis, there's sort of a lot of people that were upset that banks got bailed out. It seemed like Main Street was the one that sort of that lost out, people lost houses.
And the last time we had kind of a real economic bump in the road, let's call it was 2008, 2009. Yeah, it's sort of the great financial crisis that happens. And after the great financial crisis, there's sort of a lot of people that were upset that banks got bailed out. It seemed like Main Street was the one that sort of that lost out, people lost houses.
And so all of a sudden, business and capitalism kind of has to repair itself and repair its image. And the way that it did that is, especially if you remember the Occupy Wall Street movement, you know, Occupy Wall Street and everyone else says, okay, well, banks and financiers and companies, they need to be a bigger part of the system and making sure that everybody can succeed.
And so all of a sudden, business and capitalism kind of has to repair itself and repair its image. And the way that it did that is, especially if you remember the Occupy Wall Street movement, you know, Occupy Wall Street and everyone else says, okay, well, banks and financiers and companies, they need to be a bigger part of the system and making sure that everybody can succeed.
And so all of a sudden, business and capitalism kind of has to repair itself and repair its image. And the way that it did that is, especially if you remember the Occupy Wall Street movement, you know, Occupy Wall Street and everyone else says, okay, well, banks and financiers and companies, they need to be a bigger part of the system and making sure that everybody can succeed.
At the same time, then you had Obama was the president and he came up with some diversity, equity, inclusion mandates that were happening within sort of the broader base government. And for the next three or four or five years, you see a lot of companies that are trying to repair the image of so-called business and capitalism in the United States.
At the same time, then you had Obama was the president and he came up with some diversity, equity, inclusion mandates that were happening within sort of the broader base government. And for the next three or four or five years, you see a lot of companies that are trying to repair the image of so-called business and capitalism in the United States.
At the same time, then you had Obama was the president and he came up with some diversity, equity, inclusion mandates that were happening within sort of the broader base government. And for the next three or four or five years, you see a lot of companies that are trying to repair the image of so-called business and capitalism in the United States.
McKinsey came out with a famous study that says diversity wins, where they said we're going to have, let's force sort of diversity initiatives on a lot of companies, and those ones would do better. This study has been thoroughly debunked. You had a lot of asset management companies, the BlackRock, State Streets, Vanguards of the world. They started...
McKinsey came out with a famous study that says diversity wins, where they said we're going to have, let's force sort of diversity initiatives on a lot of companies, and those ones would do better. This study has been thoroughly debunked. You had a lot of asset management companies, the BlackRock, State Streets, Vanguards of the world. They started...
McKinsey came out with a famous study that says diversity wins, where they said we're going to have, let's force sort of diversity initiatives on a lot of companies, and those ones would do better. This study has been thoroughly debunked. You had a lot of asset management companies, the BlackRock, State Streets, Vanguards of the world. They started...
Really talking more about environmental social governance issues, which is a term that was coined in 2005, really never went anywhere. The United Nations originally coined it. You know, if the United Nations coined something, usually, you know, be skeptical of it. Didn't go anywhere for the first five or 10 years.
Really talking more about environmental social governance issues, which is a term that was coined in 2005, really never went anywhere. The United Nations originally coined it. You know, if the United Nations coined something, usually, you know, be skeptical of it. Didn't go anywhere for the first five or 10 years.
Really talking more about environmental social governance issues, which is a term that was coined in 2005, really never went anywhere. The United Nations originally coined it. You know, if the United Nations coined something, usually, you know, be skeptical of it. Didn't go anywhere for the first five or 10 years.
But after the Occupy Wall Street movement, a lot of big asset managers kind of picked up this term, started talking about environmental social governance issues. And really, a lot of these issues picked up tons of steam when Trump was first elected.
But after the Occupy Wall Street movement, a lot of big asset managers kind of picked up this term, started talking about environmental social governance issues. And really, a lot of these issues picked up tons of steam when Trump was first elected.
But after the Occupy Wall Street movement, a lot of big asset managers kind of picked up this term, started talking about environmental social governance issues. And really, a lot of these issues picked up tons of steam when Trump was first elected.
And when Trump was first elected and he pulled out of these supranational organizations, the Paris Climate Accords, pulled out of the human rights sort of campaign coalitions, all of a sudden, a lot of these more progressive institutions that said, wait a minute, like we thought government was going to solve these existential crises of climate change and banking systems and systemic racism and you kind of name it.
And when Trump was first elected and he pulled out of these supranational organizations, the Paris Climate Accords, pulled out of the human rights sort of campaign coalitions, all of a sudden, a lot of these more progressive institutions that said, wait a minute, like we thought government was going to solve these existential crises of climate change and banking systems and systemic racism and you kind of name it.