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appalachiablue

(41,052 posts)
Fri Jul 17, 2020, 12:10 AM Jul 2020

'Greed is Good'



- 'Wall Street' (1987), actor Michael Douglas' outstanding performance as WS corporate raider Gordon Gekko. The ethos of greed, inhumanity, cruelty and degradation must and will end. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094291/

- 'Who Would Kick Millions Off Health Insurance In The Middle Of A Pandemic?' Washington Post, July 16, 2020.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/who-would-kick-millions-off-health-insurance-in-the-middle-of-a-pandemic-yes-trump/2020/07/16/ed7c72ee-c799-11ea-a99f-3bbdffb1af38_story.html

- 'The Next Disaster Is Just a Few Days Away. Millions of unemployed Americans face imminent catastrophe,' NYT, July 16.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/16/opinion/coronavirus-economy-unemployment.html

(Roger Ebert. 'Wall Street' review). How much is enough? The kid keeps asking the millionaire raider and trader. How much money do you want? How much would you be satisfied with? The trader seems to be thinking hard, but the answer is, he just doesn't know. He's not even sure how to think about the question. He spends all day trying to make as much money as he possibly can, and he cheerfully bends and breaks the law to make even more millions, but somehow the concept of "enough" eludes him. Like all gamblers, he is perhaps not even really interested in money, but in the action. Money is just the way to keep score.
The millionaire is a predator, a corporate raider, a Wall Street shark. His name is Gordon Gekko, the name no doubt inspired by the lizard that feeds on insects and sheds its tail when trapped. Played by Michael Douglas in Oliver Stone's "Wall Street," he paces relentlessly behind the desk in his skyscraper office, lighting cigarettes, stabbing them out, checking stock prices on a bank of computers, barking buy and sell orders into a speaker phone. In his personal life he has everything he could possibly want - wife, family, estate, pool, limousine, priceless art objects - and they are all just additional entries on the scoreboard. He likes to win. The kid is a broker for a second-tier Wall Street firm...
https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/wall-street-1987
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