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by explainthisth 3438 days ago
While we're being condescending, it seems like some people have Zuckerberg derangement syndrome. Guess Aaron Sorkin's quasi-fictional biopic was effective. I don't see how anyone who reads this article will think Zuckerberg is hurting anybody. A bunch of people who previously owned useless fractional shares are going to get some cash.
2 comments

It's a perfectly rational thing for Zuckerberg to do.

It is also absolutely a case of an ultra elite (basically a "king" of today) white man is availing himself of state (ultimately, military) support to force native Hawaiian people off their lands.

You made an error in your comment. You said their shares were useless. Clearly, they have a use to the individuals in question - both the natives and Zuckerberg.

This is far mode complicated than the privilieged white man narrateive you used here.

I don't like this topic, but when someone talks about this I'd like to know their opinion on this:

- what is his/her ethnicity - what ethnicity does he/she think jews have.

Why I raise these questions? Becase if someone talks about this topic this is pretty sensite, and also pretty context sensitive.

Do "privilieged white" people consider jewish people also "privilieged white" people, or of a different ethnicity?

Do jewish people consider themselves "privilieged white" people?

Do other ethnicities consider them as the same?

What ethnicity does Mr Zuckerberg consider himself? His is of jewish herritage, as far as I know.

This "white people" narrative is pretty destructive, but also is an overgeneralization, and just as destructive as overdifferentiation. I beleive both are a form of destructive, retrogade racism which has crept into Public language lately and is plaguing the thinking of people and destroying the progress of the last half cetury.

I don't blame you for using it, and I don't beleive you wanted to say anything nasty, nor do I want to do so, just formulated some questions the topic raises in me.

Really? Some of these people, as reported in the article, didn't even know about the land they have a share in, and that share is minuscule to the point of uselessness.

I'm no Zuckerberg apologist, but it's clear from the article that there are varying situations represented here and at least some reasonable fraction of them are totally happy to sell him whatever percentage they own. The one person interviewed who actually had a connection to the land is supportive of the sale, because he probably can't pay taxes on it, at which point it goes to the government.

The "fair price" is what the current owner is willing to sell it for and not the price set an auction where only Zuckerberg and the original owner would be willing to bid.

This is basically employing eminent domain to strength Zuckerberg's little fiefdom.