Gimmick
Wall Street Social Engineer Zuckerberg is in over his head and or hoodie. America’s Pension Funds go broke pissing other people's retirement money away into holes, into these lies called investments in America. Privatize Social Security? Piss it all away on the Mark Zuckerbergs and Bernie Madoff types on Wall Street? Screw that. Better to hide your cash under your mattress for retirement! It is a safer bet than the present casino con game called Wall Street.
50 billion lost by Bernie. 50 billion lost by Mark. 100 billion. You are starting to talk about some serious chump change here guys.
50 billion lost by Bernie. 50 billion lost by Mark. 100 billion. You are starting to talk about some serious chump change here guys.
Send
Zuckerberg off to Butner North Carolina where he can play golf with Bernie “Have
I got a Deal For You!” Madoff to compare notes on modern day American business.
The deepening slide in Facebook
Inc.'s stock is fueling talk once considered implausible on Wall Street and in
Silicon Valley.
Should Mark Zuckerberg, the social media
visionary but neophyte corporate manager, step aside as CEO to let a more
seasoned executive run the multibillion-dollar company?
In that scenario, Zuckerberg would
remain as the creative force propelling Facebook's technological innovation.
But the 28-year-old would cede the CEO title to someone better suited to
overseeing operations and building rapport with finicky investors — mundane but
essential duties for which Zuckerberg has shown little appetite or aptitude.
"There is a growing sense that
Mark Zuckerberg, talented though he may be, is in over his hoodie as CEO of a
multibillion-dollar public company," said Sam Hamadeh, head of research
firm PrivCo. "While in many cases a company founder can, and does, grow
into the job, things are happening so quickly that there is precious little
time here for Zuckerberg to do that."
Doubts about the Facebook founder
intensified Thursday as the stock closed below $20 for the first time. The
shares, which slipped to $19.87, have shed nearly half their value since
Facebook's disastrous initial public offering three months ago.
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