Jeff Bezos Talks About Music Streaming, and His Political Ambitions (billboard.com) 70
In a wide-ranging interview with Billboard, Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon, Blue Origin, and owner of The Washington Post, talked about music streaming business. He also talked about whether he desires to become the president of the United States. Excerpts from the interview: On music streaming business, being one of the late ones to join the party:Well, here's what I would say: We've been in the music category since 1998. It was the second category we launched after books. Our customers listen to a lot of music and we have a couple of freight trains kind of pulling the business along. One is Prime, and the other is Echo and Alexa.
On the prospect of seeing President Bezos and other political interests: Oh, no. I don't think so. No. I love my life. I love being an inventor. I love Blue Origin, my space company. I love The Washington Post. They are very good, but the Internet transition was difficult for them -- so I've been able to help them on that. But basically... I have a very full life. And I really like it.
On the prospect of seeing President Bezos and other political interests: Oh, no. I don't think so. No. I love my life. I love being an inventor. I love Blue Origin, my space company. I love The Washington Post. They are very good, but the Internet transition was difficult for them -- so I've been able to help them on that. But basically... I have a very full life. And I really like it.
Re: What Political Ambitions? (Score:3)
WashPo peomulgated the whole #fakenews Russian Hacking scandal.
Watch the magician's hands, not his mouth.
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The Washington Post reports on this. But on the ot
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Easy, racism by white bashing and sexism by male bashing. Play that game for long enough and people see through your bullshit and get sick of it, and they're willing to elect a guy like Trump who just doesn't give a fuck about political correctness.
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More accurate to say, they learned, painfully, that political correctness is a privilege for everyone else but them.
"Identity politics" is a clever euphemism for bigotry, and eventually people figure it out.
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"Key districts" is part of the problem. Why should votes in South Dakota be worth more than those in San Francisco? Why should votes of black people in North Carolina be worth less than those of white people in Kentucky? Why should the votes of the most productive parts of the country be worth less than those of the least productive parts?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/a... [thedailybeast.com]
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Why should votes in South Dakota be worth more than those in San Francisco?
They aren't. Electors are based on the number of Senators and Representatives. Representatives are allocated based on population.
Since we are a union of STATES, the system of electing the federal executive recognizes that there are both STATE and POPULATION based concerns, and the electoral college reflects that.
Why should votes of black people in North Carolina be worth less than those of white people in Kentucky?
Since you want to make this a racial issue, you may continue on your own.
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So much for "consent of the governed".
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Since you want to make this a racial issue, you may continue on your own.
The blatantly racial gerrymandering in NC isn't racist because SHUT UP I'M NOT LISTENING!
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Whether or not there is "blatantly racial gerrymandering" is irrelevant to this discussion.
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It dos affect the number of congrsscritters which is important. So yeah it;s not irrelevant. It's amazing the sheer desparation with which you will deny racism. I don't even understand why: I assume you're not important enough to affect such things so it's not like you're to blame.
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It dos affect the number of congrsscritters which is important.
No, I'm sorry, you are wrong. Gerrymandering is how the borders of an existing district are set, not how many districts there are. It has relevance when you discuss who gets elected in that district, but it changes nothing regarding the number of electors a state has. One per Senator and Representative. And it changes nothing in the results for a Presidential election -- the votes from all districts are summed up for the state total. You could put 100% of a state's minority population into one district and
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You might want to ask Peter Thiel and Hulk Hogan that question.
Re: What Political Ambitions? (Score:2)
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who'd like to see some rich CEO run for office. (See Rahm's speech on recruiting candidates this week for an example
Yeah. Rahm said exactly that.
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Campaign FInance Reform limits how much a federal politician can spend on their own campaign... it's the reason why Trump had to fundraise to afford TV time despite his wealth.
Headlines (Score:4, Funny)
"Oh, no. I don't think so. No. I love my life."
Great stuff
Jeff Bezos: One way to rate his abilties (Score:2)
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Yet somehow they manage to put the frozen food section far from the back of the store. It's almost as if you can run electricity pretty much anywhere you want to put it.
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Jeff Bezos: One way to his abilities is to look at any Amazon web page.
Yes, Jeff cannot afford to be President because he's too busy writing all those Amazon pages on the fly as people look at different products. I don't think Amazon web pages reflect too much on his abilities.
But notice that the "people who bought this also bought" and "other things you might like" are well below the part of the page where you buy with one click.
But this raises the question: are you insulting him for distracting you while you shop, or praising him for good marketing in that he distracts yo
To me, it's annoying. (Score:1)
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I also understand that marketers don't care what I find annoying because of that latter bit. One of the most annoying TV ads evah was the ki
That's why we get Trump (Score:2)
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Yes. Next?
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Some people actually feel responsibility towards the country that made them successful, and feel it's a civic duty.
Interestingly, I think President Johnson actually felt that way. But weirdly it didn't stop him from being an egomaniacle, incompetent sot.
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Interestingly, I think President Johnson actually felt that way. But weirdly it didn't stop him from being an egomaniacle, incompetent sot.
Are you talking about Lyndon Baines Johnson or Andrew Johnson, neither of whom ascended to the office by being elected to it? I would guess that neither, when it came time to leave the office the first time, thought about running because of "civic duty", but both thought "this is cool being President, I am incumbent and can probably waltz through the campaign..."
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and apparently the new rule is you have to have celebrity status to bubble up above the rabble that currently populate U.S. politics.
People have short memories, but I remember the dozen idiots that Trump competed against in the primaries. To beat those guys, all he had to do is show up and be himself. If only another rich guy with an ego the size of his offshore bank accounts had entered the race, there might have been a competition. I also remember lots of people with Hollywood names, from Arnold to Cli
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I know how to beat Trump in 2020: Beyonce. She might not be able to answer a single question about policy
She doesn't need to......just hire some people to ghost-write policy papers for her, like Trump and Clinton both did.
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a real job creator and builder
Yes, Musk could blow tons of government money simultaneously on a hyperloop and a manned mission to mars.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Another CEO-President transition? Doubtful (Score:2)
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What happened to have some class and not turning everything into a mud pit? ....wtf is the next election going to be like? If I were a billionaire with even the slightest interest in running for POTUS, looking at this last election, it would certainly make me think twice if I valued my family and sanity...
Hmm. Maybe you've tripped over the real reason Joe Biden decided not to run.
He also loves the CIA (Score:2)
And their 600 million contract. That's his political career. WaPo is the fake news [theintercept.com] part of it.
A proper CEO - looking ahead over the hill (Score:2)
I think that he has -much like Steve Jobs back then- a good feel of what will be important and successful in a few years, and acts upon it.
The runaway success of Alexa and Echo is discussed in the interview, and it seems they worked on it since a few years already; and also think of for example Amazon Cloud. I once read that the initial germ of this other success was his insistence to build all of Amazon's functionality using web ser