| > 42% of Americans own zero shares, meaning that it is already not representative. You don't need it to be representative, just to form majority. 51% is more than sufficient. 58% provides a healthy margin. > The fact that 58% of Americans own a share does not imply that they are shareholders of every single one of the ~6,000 companies listed on the public markets in the US. Should it imply it? I don't see the relevance. > Further, 10% of Americans hold 89% of the stocks in the US, and therefore as many voting shares. Fun fact, I guess. I don't see the relevance here either. Unless you're suggesting that 10% of the population is more likely to speak to representatives on the regular, not hide behind a computer on HN all day while assuming their representative is a mind reader, thus being disproportionally represented? I could definitely see that being true based on my anecdotal observations, although I lack the data to confirm. > it is absurd to imply that “the public” in reference to shareholders is somehow synonymous with “the public” in reference to voters in America. If you make the false assumption that the public requires 100% support to do anything. Back in the real world... |
> If you make the false assumption that the public requires 100% support to do anything.
You’re sitting here complaining about not being perfectly understood over and over and yet here you claim I said 100% support is required. I said one group isn’t representative of the other, ie it’s interests are not reflective of the pother groups interests.
> You don't need it to be representative, just to form majority. 51% is more than sufficient. 58% provides a healthy margin.
Assuming 88% of that 58% are in actually in agreement.
> Should it imply it? I don't see the relevance.
You made the argument that the shareholders of one public company are somehow functionally equivalent to the public at large:
> Anti-trust could, in theory, do more to prevent the general public from not caring about the product they control. The problem is that laws (where Figma and Adobe are located) are prescribed by the very same general public, so you have to convince them its a good idea. And if you've done that, the law becomes largely superfluous because at that point they're already on board and will act as such on their own accord.
Your position is basically: we already live in an anarchy capitalist society with extra cruft.