Chapter 1484 Make Money, Make More Money!
In order to let those obsessive tech nerds understand the core of the capital market, Rui-Liu clearly expressed his views on the capital market in his article:
In the capital market, there are only two criteria for any transaction, which are: what you want and what you want, and what is reasonable and legal. As long as any transaction meets these two premises, there should be no doubts.
And everything Li Mu does follows the premise of "your love and my will" and "reasonable and legal", so he can be called bright, upright and upright.
As for the "robbers" and "bandits" at the gates of Western technology houses, Rui-Liu said in his article: In the history of world business, the real "robbers" and "bandits" are not any companies or individuals, but some who once evil country.
In order to support his argument, Rui-Liu used the two Opium Wars launched by the imperialist powers headed by Britain against China from 1840 to 1860 as actual cases.
He wrote in the article: "In the first half of the 19th century, in order to reverse the trade deficit with China, the British government openly took the state as the main body and smuggled opium into China. In the past 20 years, two wars of aggression were openly launched against China. If the legal principles of today's world are used to summarize what the British and other powers did in those years, it should be: state-made drugs, state-trafficking drugs, and state-armed traffickers. Drugs, national armed aggression and protection of national drug trafficking, I wonder how the elites in Silicon Valley who think Li Mu is a bandit and robber view and evaluate this history?”
Strictly speaking, the United States can be regarded as a descendant of the British. Most people are very friendly to the United Kingdom, and even have a strong sense of intimacy. Many Americans believe that their ancestors are British, at least when they first came from the United Kingdom. The first-generation immigrants who came to North America for large-scale development, Rui-Liu's remarks in the article using the "Opium War" as the argument, all of a sudden stabbed the hearts of most American elites.
Most Americans basically had no idea what the British did to China in the early 19th century, so when they saw this article, their first thought was: Britain really did this kind of national armed forces back then. Is it a bad thing about making and selling drugs? Bull-Shit! I don't believe it at all.
Later, their cheap Google found out, Holy-Shit, that's really the case!
It’s just that in the Western history books, the war of that year was packaged as the purpose of bringing advanced civilization to the East and for the self-defense of Christian culture in China against ignorance and violence. But people with discerning eyes can see that history at a glance. You can defend yourself, but what kind of thing is selling opium while you defend yourself?
As a result, a large number of netizens who shouted against and boycotted Li Mu on the Internet knew that they were wrong and shut their mouths wisely. Only a few extremists were still clamoring.
Interestingly,
The United States is generally a multi-ethnic immigrant country. There are a large number of Indians, Africans, South Americans, and Southeast Asians. The motherland of these people has been humiliated by the West for hundreds of years. When it comes to the scars of national history, they are the most painful wave, so a large number of colonial descendants responded to Rui-Liu's argument, saying:
The crimes of the great powers in the past were more than armed production and trafficking of drugs. They expanded their colonies around the world, plundered colonial resources, and slaughtered the people of the colonies. If you are the most civilized nation in the world, that's fine. The point is that the descendants of these guys have to think that a company in their own country just spent a little more money to acquire a company, and they all have to run away. Calling the seller a bandit, what the hell is that?
A comment made by a man of Indian descent in the UK, which has sparked a lot of likes on the Western web, said:
"Our ancestors were once enslaved by the British for two hundred years. They robbed us of our resources, slept with our women, captured our men as slaves, and even changed our place name. The city of our country, Mumbai, was originally called Mumbai. It is the name of a god in Indian legend. After the British came, they changed Mumbai to Bbay. It was not until 1995 that we finally got the courage to change the name of Mumbai back;
And the British never thought it was a mistake, they didn't feel guilty about the Indians, but they started discriminating against the Indians in the UK, feeling that these Indians have encroached on their resources and robbed them of employment opportunities. Last week, I On duty at the 711 convenience store where I work, a British man suddenly pointed at me and yelled: 'Go back to India, you damn thief', I think, those Americans who called Li Mu a bandit and a thief called me a thief British, should be all the way! "
The descendants of the colonies continue to expose the crimes that many western civilized countries have committed against their motherland on the Internet, which makes the public opinion swayed by the indignation of the descendants of the colonies. As for those militants who were hostile to Li Mu, they were immediately attacked by a large number of descendants of the colonies. Because of the difference in firepower, these militants soon began to die.
There is no longer a voice calling Li Mu a bandit in the market, and because of those angry colonial descendants, Western netizens suddenly made up for centuries of world colonial history.
Rui-Liu, who has been working in the Wall Street Journal for more than ten years, became famous because of this feature article.
His article has aroused great repercussions in the West, and the most affected are the elites.
The financiers who originally admired Li Mu's operation, after reading this article, praised Li Mu even more. Some even believed that Li Mu might become the only entrepreneur in the world who can achieve real meaning. A combination of things.
In the true sense of the combination of the East and the West, it must not only meet the needs of the people of the East and the West, but also be compatible with the cultures, ideas and values of the East and the West. In the business field of today's world, apart from Li Mu, there is really no other person who meets the conditions.
As for those technical nerds who originally regarded Li Mu as a robber and a bandit, they also suddenly understood that there is no right or wrong in the capital market, only pros and cons.
This article also suddenly opened up Wall Street and Silicon Valley's curiosity about Eastern philosophy. For a long time, Eastern philosophy has not been recognized by the West because there is no system in the true sense, and the ideas of various schools of thought are also politically colored. It is too rich to be included in the scope of philosophy by the West, but this time, Western financial and high-tech talents have begun to study Eastern military philosophy, and even become a hot topic of discussion for high-end talents.
The two Chinese words conspiracy and yang conspiracy have also become the core of research and discussion among Western elites. A large part of the reason why these two words are popular is also due to Westerners' familiarity with the theory of "yin and yang".
...
After hearing about a series of discussions surrounding him in Western society, Li Mu published a short article on his personal blog:
"Talents in the business field are always emphasizing various costs, direct costs, indirect costs, visible costs and invisible costs, and even intangible risk costs, pressure costs and spiritual costs... Top financial experts are best at doing it. The thing is to use complex arithmetic to fool the public and make the public think that something that costs a penny sells for ten dollars not because the capitalists are ill-hearted, but because it is worth the price.
In the same way, Microsoft will never feel that the price of indos is too high, even if it has earned a market value of hundreds of billions of dollars, and China's small traders will always be "not making money" and "selling at a loss". The self-professed earns a big waist and a big waist.
For myself, my first drive in business is: make money; second drive is: make more money, there's nothing to hide.
In my opinion, the ancestors of China are the most wise. Sima Qian once stated in one hundred BC the essence of all human business behavior: the world is bustling for profit, and the world is bustling for profit. "
After this article was published on the YY blog, it received tens of thousands of likes and more than 10,000 comments in just a few hours. Chinese netizens highly praise Li Mu's candid self-confession. Entrepreneurs, none of them will admit in public that they are doing business for the sake of making money. Some of them are to revitalize national brands, some are to promote national culture, some are to improve the status of Made in China in the world, and some are to develop local high-tech industries. Even the real estate developers who drive up housing prices say they are trying to make the people live in better houses.
Only Li Mu, in this era when all entrepreneurs have to put a higher pursuit on the goal of making money, he candidly stated that the purpose of his own business is to make money, and anything other than making money is nonsense.
If you want to revitalize a national brand, you must make money first; if you want to promote national culture, you must first make money; most companies that rely on their mouths to revitalize national brands and promote national culture are taking advantage of the national feelings in the hearts of consumers.
What if my Coke can't beat Coca-Cola? My compatriots, come and drink a bottle of Huaxia's own Coke...
Just a bottle of Coke, is it really necessary to rise to the national level? Certainly not for the average consumer, but for entrepreneurs, the answer is unquestionable.
Soon, Li Mu's 300-word blog became popular all over the world, and even Westerners came to his blog to like and leave a comment, because even in Wall Street and Silicon Valley, where the elites are born, they can be as calm as Li Mu. There are not many entrepreneurs. The bigwigs of Wall Street and Silicon Valley are the same as Chinese entrepreneurs, and even entrepreneurs from all over the world. They all want to make money while making a name for themselves. It seems that among the top rich people in the world, only Li Mu is there to make money. Every rich man in China is not interested in making money, and you can tell at a glance who is real and who is fake.
Along with Li Mu's blog, Sima Qian's words spread all over the world: "The world is bustling for profit, and the world is bustling for profit."
What Li Mu did not expect was that his article would be called the father of "MiroBlog" by the Internet industry in the near future...
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Chapter 1484 Make money, make more money! (page 1/1)
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