Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Sam Bankman-Fried, Moral Monstrosity

Were there any signs? Everybody wants to know? 

Were there any signs that Sam Bankman-Fried would go from billions to nothing overnight? Were there any signs that wunderkind Bankman-Fried,  darling of the moneyed set, had no idea what he was doing? Were there any signs that he could not be trusted? Not because he was running a Ponzi scheme but because he had no understanding of what he was doing?

Cover-boy, darling of the business media, SBF was a vegan with a hyphenated name. He seems never to have had a real haircut and ran around in ratty tee shirts and cargo shorts. Beyond the massive spread he had in the Bahamas, he seems to have little use for the trappings of success. Or better, for the signs of being a responsible adult.

His mother had long argued that personal responsibility was an antiquated notion and that people should replace it with efforts to recover from mistakes. He was a living, breathing embodiment of crackpot parental theories.

You might consider all of that to be a sign of an overgrown manchild? Or else, if you do not know any better, you might take it to be a sign of a modern genius.

In principle, he promoted effective altruism, a theory that told him to give away his money to the less fortunate, the better to show that he was not in it for himself. He was a one-man band for income redistribution. Of course, he did not just give money to great causes; he was a major donor to Democratic politicians. He supported all the major leftist causes. One would be forgiven if one imagined that he was buying what used to be called protection.

Daniel Henninger tries to get a grip on it in a Wall Street Journal column:

As his cryptocurrency company’s value soared into vaporous billions, Mr. Bankman-Fried said he wasn’t in it for the money. He described himself as a proponent of “effective altruism,” or high-return charity, an idea he learned while at MIT from a philosophy graduate student. Mr. Bankman-Fried, 30, said he might keep 1% for himself and give the rest away through his FTX Foundation.

One might suggest, humbly, that someone who says that he is not in it for the money, but for the thrill he gets by giving it away, is only in it for the money.

Besides, what made Democratic politicians such a worthy and needy charitable enterprise. The issue will become-- who decides who receives the SBF largesse? If this is not power trip, one that has people lining up to suck his #@# I have never seen one.

As for holding on to 1%, when your wealth is in the billions, you can do just fine on 1%.

Beyond that, imagine the zealous co-eds who thrill to the SBF lifestyle, who love feeling that they are not wage slaves. After all, if you want to save the world, an especially vapid idea, are you not trying to seduce the pretty young things who hold to the same  beliefs?

How would this look different if SBF decided to invest his money, to help people to expand businesses and to build up America’s industrial capital? How many mooning coeds will buy into the SBF goal, to prevent pandemics and nuclear war? How many would buy into a program about industrial redevelopment?

Once upon a time a preacher called this the vanity of vanity. It is not about doing good or even feeding the hungry. It is more like a public spectacle of superior moral virtue.

But why has this urge to assert public virtue in outsize ways become a mass movement? People who did good used to be humble. Now they won’t get out of our faces.

Henninger calls it moral grandiosity. To say the least:

The purpose of this moral grandiosity isn’t to engage one’s opponents but to marginalize them, to place them beyond the pale of what the new gatekeepers of virtue define as acceptable discourse.

It’s not merely about giving charity to the poor, the destitute and the needy. If your cause is polar bears, you are making a political statement. If your cause is abortion rights you are making a political statement. You are not acting like a religious institution, known for charitable giving, but are trying to promote an agenda. And, given your propensity to altruism, no one has a right to dispute your principles.

As far as charitable donations are concerned, I bring to your attention this very blog, currently engaged in its yearly fund raising drive. If you are in a charitable state of mind, consider making a generous donation to this blog. Feel free to use the Paypal link on the left or send a check to me, at 310 East 46th St.  New York, NY 10017.


5 comments:

Stuart Schneiderman said...

Yes. to my name.

Ares Olympus said...

I recall my brother paid money for motivational seminars for varied get-rich quick schemes, including Amway. It never made sense to me, but I had a college education and a good job, and he had learning disabilities and dropped out of school after repeating 8th grade, and his varied jobs didn't keep up with his ability to spend money.

I wonder if the biggest thing he got from the seminars was a promise of future altruism. He didn't want to become a millionaire for himself. He wanted to become rich so he could help others. So clearly that was the message the sold. It can feel uncomfortable to try to sell people useless things they don't need or buy into pyramid schemes, but if you're going to do something good with it, then your conscience is cleared.

Everyone can now agree Sam Bankman-Fried was a moral monstrosity, and if it wasn't for Elizabeth Holmes's sentencing in the news recently, I'd say it was a male affliction. Fake it until you make it is a well known maxim that just happens to also support moral monstrosities. And I also recall Jamie Dimon's quote "It's only when the tide goes out that you learn who's been swimming naked." Who knew crypto was kept afloat by low interest rates?! How could we have guessed the emperor had no clothes with so much wealth flowing?

We can consider many or most invested in crypto and supporting this magical alt-world of infinity and beyond were people just like Sam, greedy yet telling themselves their speculative existences would succeed ad enable their altruistic ambitions someday.

Anonymous said...

Seriously! Did anyone really think crypto wouldn't end like this. I'm sure the fails, bankruptcies and corruption aren't over yet

JPL17 said...

I checked out the link, and have to say, "effective altruism" seems like a scam. Although temporary alleviation of suffering is an extremely worthy goal, the Salvation Army and other charities already do that, at far lower cost. To do more than that, you'd have to instill proper character, values and habits in the people you're trying to help. And I just don't see "effective altruism" striving to do that.

Anonymous said...

And , yet , Bitcoin may have declined approx 65%, but there are still believers.