Tim Stenovec
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that's what it is.
Is it worse today than it was before?
I don't know, except maybe this gets to the inequality piece.
I think there are more people who think that they are effectively unable to actually make it and therefore more willing to take risk and more willing to sort of try to grab this lottery ticket as opposed to sort of make it over time slowly.
I think there is a distinction.
But look, I think you go back and I think of J.P.
Morgan's son.
He was building the biggest yacht at the time.
People would have thought that's like the Gates or Bezos, whatever yacht you're thinking of.
I think that there was a distinction.
But I remember having an interesting conversation, oddly enough to drop a name, with President Obama, interesting, maybe 2015, about the idea that
And I think this is true in the 20s, but really true even just 25 years ago.
I think CEOs, people of means, were oftentimes living in the same neighborhoods with the people who worked on the factory floor of their companies.
And as a result, their kids went to the same schools.
And they went to the same temples and churches and ran into each other at the same restaurants and markets.
And I think that there's a cohesion there that's important for our culture.
And I think that increasingly that has come apart.
I'll give you actually a parallel that may seem not like a parallel, but to me is, which is we're all talking about right now the politicization potentially and independence of the Federal Reserve.
I actually remember as I was working on this book, looking at the diaries of a lot of the people who worked on the Federal Reserve on the board, and it was still such a new institution born in 1913.
that they were concerned about the political implications of either raising or lowering interest rates at any given moment.