Netflix's CEO offered to resign from Facebook's board in 2016, citing his fellow board member Peter Thiel's support of Donald Trump:
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings — who called his fellow board member Thiel's support of Trump "catastrophically bad judgment" in an email leaked to the Times — also offered to resign over his disagreement with Thiel, according to a Wall Street Journal report published Thursday. Sources told WSJ that Facebook CEO Zuckerberg declined Hastings' offer to resign. Facebook declined to comment on the matter to Business Insider.
Now, Thiel may resign from Facebook's board instead in the midst of packing up and leaving the Bay area:
The founder of PayPal and a prominent investor in Silicon Valley, Thiel is reportedly moving his investment firms Thiel Capital and Thiel Foundation out of the Bay Area and into Los Angeles this year, according to WSJ.
In L.A., Thiel is also reportedly planning to build "a right-leaning media outlet to foster discussion and community around conservative topics." Thiel bankrolled the lawsuits that eventually forced Gawker Media into bankruptcy, and has been trying to buy Gawker's now-defunct flagship site.
Although Thiel has called Silicon Valley a "one-party state", in the 2016 Presidential election, Hillary Clinton beat President Trump 72 percent to 22 percent in Los Angeles County.
The Guardian also has an article about Thiel's involvement in New Zealand.
Also at Ars Technica, The Mercury News, LA Times, and Vanity Fair.
Related: Peter Thiel Acquires NZ Citizenship and Large Property
Everything Wrong with Peter Thiel's Doomsday Survival Plan
University Could Lose Millions From "Unethical" Research Backed by Peter Thiel
"Black Hole" of Accountability for Drug Trials Flouting FDA Oversight?
Peter Thiel Makes a Bid for Gawker.com
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 16 2018, @01:56PM (22 children)
Can't handle anyone with a different opinion existing. How dare anyone disagree on something completely unrelated to job.
Why doesn't he get to work on better parental controls and a better rating system of videos. Seriously, I had hysterical blindness after a particular scene in Altered Carbon. How about giving us the option. Of watching cleaned up versions of movies like the ota networks.
(Score: 5, Funny) by takyon on Friday February 16 2018, @01:59PM (14 children)
We got two unique snowflakes over here.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 2) by zocalo on Friday February 16 2018, @02:21PM
UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
(Score: 5, Touché) by deadstick on Friday February 16 2018, @02:24PM (7 children)
...and Soylent scores a new oxymoron!
(Score: 4, Insightful) by JNCF on Friday February 16 2018, @02:52PM (3 children)
Zero and one are two unique numbers; they are unique in different ways, and the uniqueness of one does not preclude the uniqueness of the other.
(Score: 3, Funny) by DannyB on Friday February 16 2018, @03:52PM (2 children)
Zero and One are also unique in the same way. They are not in the set of all integers excluding zero and one.
So now Zero and One are unique in different ways, first that they are unique in different ways, and second that they are unique in the same way.
But then this leads to . . .
oh, nevermind
If you don't like grocery prices now, wait until Trump deports the 'lazy' people who pick it, process it and package it.
(Score: 3, Funny) by aristarchus on Friday February 16 2018, @08:26PM (1 child)
Especially the one on the left. (Sorry, very old philosophy joke about the indiscernability of identicals.)
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday February 16 2018, @08:45PM
The value of Zero and One are unique -- just like every other integer.
A snowflake is unique -- just like every other snowflake. (Two unique snowflakes.)
You are unique! Just like everyone else.
To improve efficiency the USPTO no longer requires patents to be unique. We'll have the best patent system. The best. I promise. And believe me, I know my patent systems. The most beautiful patent system ever!
If you don't like grocery prices now, wait until Trump deports the 'lazy' people who pick it, process it and package it.
(Score: 3, Funny) by takyon on Friday February 16 2018, @06:27PM (2 children)
*special snowflakes.
But damn do we have some wonkey_monkeys in here today.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday February 16 2018, @08:45PM (1 child)
I wonder exactly what distinguishes an *ordinary* snowflake.
If you don't like grocery prices now, wait until Trump deports the 'lazy' people who pick it, process it and package it.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 16 2018, @11:07PM
Eats kale with a double mocha java latte in a safe space while reading the Huffington Post instead of studying for that Modern LGBTQRSTUVWXYZ Studies final.
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday February 16 2018, @04:00PM (3 children)
Aren't all snowflakes unique?
That information was included in my education, I think in kindergarten.
If you don't like grocery prices now, wait until Trump deports the 'lazy' people who pick it, process it and package it.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 16 2018, @05:01PM
--Stanslaw Lem
(Score: 1) by nitehawk214 on Friday February 16 2018, @08:25PM (1 child)
It depends on who [harvard.edu] you ask [caltech.edu].
"Don't you ever miss the days when you used to be nostalgic?" -Loiosh
(Score: 2, Troll) by DannyB on Friday February 16 2018, @08:46PM
So kindergarden was wrong -- just like everything else in the 1960's.
If you don't like grocery prices now, wait until Trump deports the 'lazy' people who pick it, process it and package it.
(Score: 2) by HiThere on Friday February 16 2018, @06:44PM
I think you missed a bit of sarcasm.
Javascript is what you use to allow unknown third parties to run software you have no idea about on your computer.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Grishnakh on Friday February 16 2018, @04:29PM (6 children)
Can't handle anyone with a different opinion existing.
Maybe it's a matter of just not wanting to be around someone toxic like that.
Would a bunch of deep Southerners in a small, insular community in Alabama want to have a few "flaming liberals" around them, and not just ones who keep to themselves, but ones who try to convert them to their brand of liberal politics in a loud and obnoxious manner? Probably not; they'll do their best to run them out of town.
So why is it surprising when a bunch of west-coast liberals aren't too friendly with a guy who strongly pushes Trumpian politics on them?
Face it: people are tribal, even the liberals, and people generally like to be around people who are like them. With the conservatives, they want to be around people usually of the same race and cultural background. With liberals, they'll consciously overlook those factors because they usually believe more in diversity, but they still want to be around people who share their political values.
(Score: 0, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 16 2018, @08:13PM
I don't think I've seen multi-racial groupings of liberals, except at a demonstration, so I'll propose that liberals *say* they overlook those factors, but in reality will want to be around people of the same race, cultural background *and* political views.
Eg. New York liberal jews being Trump Sr.'s bread and butter, because he kept the blacks from moving in between them.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 17 2018, @12:41AM (4 children)
who try to convert [rednecks] to their brand of liberal politics
Be thankful that they're around.
Wages Would Plummet Without The Existence Of Labor Unions (Free Riders Take Note) - David Macaray [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [counterpunch.org]
(It was Commies and Liberals that got USA a "middle class"; without them, you'd still be working long hours for peanuts with no benefits.)
A Day In The Life Of Joe Republican AKA Thank a Liberal [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [crooksandliars.com]
in a loud and obnoxious manner
Hey, don't forget us annoying Socialists who think you should have ownership of the company where you work (rather than a bunch of lie-abouts who perform no labor).
-- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 17 2018, @12:59AM (3 children)
who think you should have ownership of the company where you work
It is called stock. Buy some. You can do better than that.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 17 2018, @02:28AM (2 children)
You're still just an employee.
...and you will always be outvoted by the majority stockholders who likely inherited their stock from their wealthy parents.
Why should someone who doesn't WORK there get a vote at all?
Publix supermarkets in Florida has an ESOP.
Some of their employees recently got screwed by such decisions made by the actual (majority) owners of the company.
It's just more of the same old shit. [googleusercontent.com] (orig) [ajc.com]
While an ESOP is a baby step in the right direction, The Workers still get screwed regularly.
OTOH, in a Socialist worker-owned cooperative, every worker gets a vote and every worker's vote is equal to any other worker's vote.
...and no non-workers get a vote.
IOW: One Worker==One Vote -NOT- $1==One Vote
-- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 17 2018, @04:26AM (1 child)
To start a business, you need to risk a lot of money. Who would do such a thing without any benefit? (there isn't a benefit if the non-investors are in control)
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 17 2018, @07:02AM
Boy, do you ever have a twisted view of the world.
I already mentioned control over the quarter of the 168 hours in a week that you spend at work.
When it's your own company and it's a co-op, you don't have a CEO or board of directors whose major efforts are to enrichen themselves greatly while doing no production (and screwing the people who -do- produce).
Who would bother to start a business?
Yogi Berra mode
Nobody goes there any more. It's too crowded.
/Yogi
you need to risk a lot of money
The self-employed guy who tends my lawn started with a lawnmower, a rake, and a broom.
Mondragon started with 6 worker-owners and little else in 1956.
These days, they have over 100,000 worker-owners in 40 countries on 5 continents.
In Italy, since 1985, workers laid off by boom-and-bust Capitalists get help from the government in starting their own co-ops. [google.com]
There are now thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of worker-owned cooperatives there.
there isn't a benefit if the non-investors are in control
You are a fool with very limited vision.
The Capitalists have brainwashed you into passivity and have convinced you that you need them.
Keep working for The Man, making -him- rich instead of yourself.
There are worker-owners around the globe scoffing at your ignorance.
-- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]