It seems like you are suggesting the government can restrain speech and then, if the people disagree that the government, that they then can sue the government to allow it.
I don't want to live in the world you suggest.
This right here is why I am glad we have a constitution in the US and resist efforts to make it easier to change.
Probably because you seemed to have partisan worms in your brain. Twitter HAS been burdened by the "extreme right" abusing its platform. Its the entirety of the debate around what should be moderated on twitter. Insisting that this can't be true because "the left" hasn't had an exodus doesn't seem to make sense to me.
There is simply not many places to go. You can’t really keep running t from madness all the time since with social media platforms the destination must be at least somewhat inhabited, and also the exodus must be coordinated.
It’s more like moderate left left left, the extreme right were expelled, and extreme left stayed out of grit and also because Twitter was sort of left to them .
No, I said that democracy only works if there is some way of enforcing that the participants actually follow democratic norms; i.e. respecting diverging viewpoints.
One mechanism of accomplishing that would be to restrict people who are using communication platforms to violate democratic norms.
I'm not advocating that is the best way to accomplish protecting democracy. I'm just pointing out that "free speech maximalism" doesn't address the need to protect democracy.
People can respect you as a person, but no I don't think people have to respect different viewpoints. I can respect that you have a lived experience that differs from mine and that your viewpoint is X, but I do balance that against my own views and speak my own truth as well.
If you think that you have to respect every viewpoint that differs, think of the viewpoints of the party you dislike. Think of any of their views. Do you respect their _view_ or do you respect the person and want to allow their speech while disagreeing with it?
Me? I think the best way to deal with speech I don't like is not filtering or censorship its more speech. Anytime I see an implication that someones view needs to be filtered I think "You first."
I would like to see not the 'free market' dictate how it happens - I would like to see companies that harm their investors end with their ceo/cfos perp walked out and arrested.
I want to see companies remember they have a fiduciary duty to their investors.
Investors live on earth. Climate change will incurr extremely high costs on anyone living on earth. Therefore it is part of their fiduciary duty to fight it for any company in the world.
In a more cynical way, ESG is a way to try to escape tougher legislations that would impact revenues in a larger way, and so is also part of the fiduciary duty in that sense.
Note that fiduciary duty already does not force companies to outsource to China even if that would save some money and increase benefits.
Grow up, these climate changes will happen, the companies can make the appropriate changes now (early), or they can hold off and be forced to comply or die by governments.
The point of companies are to make money. As a shareholder in a company, I want to see increased valuations, good free cash flow metrics, and an increasing dividend.
The article is right in a way - ESG is infecting companies.
I do not want a company I invest in to "weigh in" on political issues [1]. I do not want to see banks put in racial quotas in order to get preferred rates [1]. I do not want to see a 'restorative decolonial' approach to ESG in companies [2].
For gods sake, I do not want laws to change to remove a companies requirement of a fiduciary duty so they can adopt more esg goals [3].
When did saying "I invest in a company for profit related reasons" turn into such a big boogey man.
> I want to see increased valuations... increasing dividend
> For gods sake, I do not want [environmental, social, or governance] goals
When did saying "I invest in a company for the endless unrestrained amoral growth ethic turning human society into the control theory equivalent of a cancer cell" turn into such a big boogey man?
When did "profit" equate to "endless unrestrained amoral growth ethic turning human society into the control theory equivalent of a cancer cell" in the first place?
If a nice looking quarterly report is set as the single overriding goal above all other goals, it will by definition override all other goals, time horizons and externalities.
When finance abstracted Capital to the point that Wall Street became an end onto itself, and every justification for amoral financial behavior was levied as fiduciary responsibility, that is when US Business became the equivalent of an out of control Cancer. The US American form of capitalism is an exploitative Ponzi scheme, which is ironic considering the Christianity that is supposed to be afloat. In a more mature and moral society Capitalism would not be the Jack Booted Thug we have manifested. Plain fact: the human race is not as mature as it thinks it is.
Nobody cares about "fiduciary responsibility" in this case. CEOs are not required to maximize profit for their shareholders. If they'll go right ahead and say that in public, you can safely say the lawyers aren't warning them about it.
You should know that an appeal to follow ESG practices is likely to be found illegal right?
I know references and facts arn't as fun as emotional pleas and comparing investing for financial growth to cancer... but lets try it anyway?
> in May, under the banner of promoting ESG, nearly 50% of Travelers Insurance shareholders asked the company to break the law. Full stop. Specifically, about 47% of its investors backed a shareholder proposal that would have caused the company to collect and consider race when writing insurance policies, in direct violation of state law. [1]
> “Our states will not idly stand for our pensioners’ retirements to be sacrificed for BlackRock’s climate agenda. [2]
> "As fiduciaries, trustees must act in ways that financially benefit the trust and its beneficiaries. Trustees who fail to do so are liable for damages to the beneficiaries, and may face additional legal penalties. The social and environmental goals involved in ESG investing create a greater potential for violations of fiduciary law by introducing motives for investment choices outside the traditional definition. Are trustees selecting ESG-focused mutual funds because they believe they are suitable investments, or do they merely hope to make the world a better place by deploying capital under their control according to socially pressured or personally held beliefs?" [4]
Of course, that doesn't stop well meaning fools from trying to change the definition of words to make what they are doing not illegal.
> As the landscape for investment changes, so too does the notion of fiduciary duty. The processes and approaches used to guide investment decisions have evolved over time in response to changes in the generally accepted understanding of market behavior. We are again at an inflection point. As the evidence and rationale behind addressing material and business related impacts of ESG factors in the investment process further develops and is increasingly accepted, so does our understanding of these factors through a fiduciary lens. [3]
> You should know that an appeal to follow ESG practices is likely to be found illegal right?
Are you against companies following the G in ESG? "Opposing ESG" is literally asking for "companies with bad governance". Which is why anti-ESG banks are run out of the house of their CEO with a drinking problem.
Of course, the "your ESG fund is against my fiduciary duties" people are also the "you need to invest in my state's fossil fuel companies" people regardless of whether that's a wise investment.
Arguments aside, completely unrelated to substance, that’s a scary looking link. What were you trying to link to? I enjoy conversing about the substance of arguments but I’m not clicking that. Any help?
"there is one and only one social responsibility of business—to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud."
In a way, you could call this the Corporate/Investing equivalent of effective altruism. Generate as much profit as possible and let employees/shareholders use that cash to support the causes they choose.
If the company kills people in the process of generating as much profit as possible, it should be stopped. You are saying it should be stopped by the 'rules' which clearly means that governments should be forcing rules that focus on the ESG objectives? That seems like a dangerous path to walk. Any intelligent business manager knows that it is better to act early and in ways you choose than to be forced down a road you don't want later.
You need to deliver value to get money. If people with money want the world improved, you must improve the world to get their money.
> I do not want a company I invest in to "weigh in" on political issues [1]
If people want companies doing political things and you do not do political things, they won't give you their money.
> I do not want to see banks put in racial quotas in order to get preferred rates.
Then don't expect "racial" people to put money in your banks and make you money. Don't expect people who care about racial diversity to put money in your bank. They have a choice.
> As a shareholder in a company, I want to see increased valuations, good free cash flow metrics, and an increasing dividend.
Then demand your company responds to the needs of the people whose money you want. Companies aren't entitled to make money. They must respond to peoples' values and needs.
"Valuations" isn't just a metric. It reflects the value of the company to people. If the company doesn't reflect its customers' values, its valuation won't increase.
You forget the time-aspect in your statement about Money being a company's sole purpose.
A bar may want to make money this month, and alcoholism be damned.
An investment fund with a thirty-years horizon of commitments to future retirees must want to make money in a way that does not compromise the commitment to still make money in thirty years, and must be able to prove that it is watching that.
> The point of companies are to make money. As a shareholder in a company, I want to see increased valuations, good free cash flow metrics, and an increasing dividend.
There are companies that have other primary goals.
So to your point, which is it? Do these bank care about the environment or about its profits? If it is the environment, it seems being the world leaders in lending money to non-environmentally-friendly industries doesnt agree with that position.
It is interesting to see this opinion so high up when it is abstracted, but as soon as you drop down to specifics in something like tech you get mountains of complaints about Google abandoning "don't be evil" or ad-tech companies in general being cancerous companies that harm society. If it were really all about the bottom line then these companies would be among the very best companies in the world. They make a shit load of money!
> It is interesting to see this opinion so high up when it is abstracted, but as soon as you drop down to specifics in something like tech you get mountains of complaints about Google abandoning "don't be evil" or ad-tech companies in general being cancerous companies that harm society. If it were really all about the bottom line then these companies would be among the very best companies in the world. They make a shit load of money!
I think the determining factor is: is the issue politically contentious or not?
A lot of the "evil" things Google, Facebook, or some random ad-tech company does are things that are commonly condemned by people across the political spectrum. All/most "ESG" criteria are politically contentious things that seem to strongly align with one political/ideological block [1].
[1] It should be noted that "politically contentious" thing may not be addressing a particular issue itself, but rather a particular proposed solution to that issue.
> Indeed, ESG has join the boogeymen CRT, woke and cancel culture of the right wing elite's puppet show.
Come on. Your comment is actually a fairly good example of a kind of bad faith political tactic that I see quite a bit of nowadays: presenting other-side disagreement as fake or manufactured, often as the bailey of a fallacious motte-and-bailey argument.
All of those things you list are actual points of political/ideological disagreement, and all political movements, left and right, typically feature "elite" efforts to surface and popularize issues like that. Doing that is pretty much the literal job description of activists, activist organizations, and opinion columnists.
You seem to have become mistaken - I am talking about a companies fiduciary duty to shareholder and maximizing long term shareholder value. You are talking about popular sentiment.
Let’s fast forward in financial regulation knowledge with a question perhaps.
Why do you think the sec had to require that directors and executives have a fiduciary responsibility to shareholders? Why are executives fined and jailed when they violate this?
Those answers should explain why there is an incentive to not allow public investable companies to fuck with their investor money in a way that isn’t necessarily in their best interest. If they want to do that, you can invest in private companies that the mom and pop investor can’t get hoodwinked into.
Unless it's mandated, everyone going for those things should be seeing worse outcomes, e.g. banks discounting fundamentals and including the racial markup of their customers in decisions would be expected to perform worse than others, wouldn't they?
You'd just need to invest into companies that are explicitly not focusing on ESG. Of course, there's probably some concern that it'll be normalized and the government goes "well, now that half of companies are doing it voluntarily, we can just force the other half to also do it so it's fair", but that aside it sounds like it should provide a good signal for you where not to invest.
In a way it already has lead to worse outcomes. For example, ESG campaigning has successfully discouraged investment in oil and gas production especially in democratic Western countries. The result of this is that there's now insufficient production capacity and prices and profits have gone sky-high for the companies that do have any, whilst companies in the rest of the economy have seen costs go through the roof. (Russia's actions didn't help, but the energy supply was looking pretty dicey even before that.)
The political result of this is that campaigners and journalists have accused the companies that are producing fossil fuels of profiteering, blamed them for the fact that energy and everything produced using it is so unaffordable (rather than blaming those who refused to invest in more production), and called for windfall taxes to take away and redistribute those supposedly-undeserved profits. Most of Europe is actually carrying out those windfall taxes too. If it wasn't for that political intervention, those who excluded fossil fuel production from their investments would be losing out and those who didn't gaining, as they arguably deserved, but governments are putting their hand on the scale and tilting returhns towards what ESG campaigners say they should be rather than what the markets give.
But that's then working as designed, isn't it? You're not limited to investing in Western countries that have deprioritized power production. If that'll lead to worse outcomes, investing in a country that doesn't follow their ideology should get you better returns.
> Most of Europe is actually carrying out those windfall taxes too.
Sure. Don't get me wrong, I think it's stupid. But, and that's a pretty important but, the population has elected the politicians suggesting these things (and the ones before them who made the decisions not to invest in oil and gas and nuclear power), and the population has empowered the journalists (or their companies) running those campaigns. It seems to be what people really, truly want.
You'll just need to set your indicators one level further up. A country that is fundamentally wrong in capital allocation and prefers to bail out citizens and industry via tax money instead of investing into infrastructure will have worse outcomes. Taxes will have to rise at some point, industry will leave etc, so you'd invest in a different country where they're not following the same ideology.
Sure, it would be easier if people didn't do stupid things, but I doubt you'll be able to convince them.
"The report, which surveyed 60 banks around the world, found RBC had increased its investments in fossil fuel projects to nearly $38 billion from over $19 billion in 2020."
Nearly doubling your investment in fossil fuel projects makes it seam like "ESG" has done nothing to "discourage investments".
The bank named in the article has a "ESG" division as well.
So if you want to be environmentally friendly, they are the bank for you. If you want to open a new fossil fuel well, they are the bank for you...
If you're allowed to include second order effects, I think that's obvious to many in Europe right now, energy prices exploding, driving very high inflation, making people poorer, making winter look much more threatening, and generally creating destabilization.
I don't believe you'll find many who will openly say that that's what they wanted when they said they wanted fewer investments in oil and gas.
... The 2022/2023 winter in Europe and the balkans should help solidify that in your mind. Germany lost its pipeline to Russia where it was sourcing its natural gas because they did not want to produce it locally. This directly caused them to start competing on the international scene for its gas.
Where do you think this 'surplus' of gas is coming from? Its not 'spare capacity' that was sitting around... its coming from poorer countries that can't compete for the same gas due to the price Germany is now willing to pay.
Consider Bangladesh and the political unrest because of the rising fuel prices. [1]. For gods sake, they had a nationwide power blackout that lasted 7 hours. Why? Because the gas supplies were being usurped by Europe. [2].
> Now with Russia-Ukraine war squeezing supply, the richer European nations are getting dibs on whatever is up for grabs. With winter and a cap on Russian fuel imports approaching, European buyers will look to stock up on even more LNG.
Maybe we disagree - but I would say that widespread starvation and energy blackouts impacting the populations of developing countries directly related to ESG policies is pretty damn bad. The road to hell is paved with good intentions - look down.
Don't be purposefully obtuse - its not helpful to anyone and just makes you look like a troll.
Germany did not want to produce oil/gas locally due to concerns about environmental impact. Instead, they decided to import it from Russia. With the Russia pipeline destroyed, they are now competing for these same 'dirty resources' on the global scale resulting in widespread suffering in the developing world.
If you are going to imply that you didn't understand this as the meaning of the statement, I think its pretty telling.
I generally do not welcome things which make the investing landscape worst for the suburban investor. If I saw half the companies start a new youtube series called 'We snort half of our investors cash every monday!' I wouldnt laugh, I would be calling the sec.
> banks ... including the racial markup of their customers in decisions would be expected to perform worse than others, wouldn't they?
if a bank is including a racial markup, it may be because they believe there's more risk with that loan (which must be made up via said mark up).
If it's actually true that such a loan is riskier, then the bank acted correctly.
if it was actually wrong - that a racial mark up was unjustified financially - then a competitor bank that correctly makes this conclusion would offer the lower, correct rate, thus capturing said racial group as customer away from the more discriminating bank!
> If it's actually true that such a loan is riskier, then the bank acted correctly.
Oh my god. We are not going to speed run racial discrimination in lending products again. Once is enough for me. This is actually specifically illegal.
> "What are the U.S. fair lending laws? Fair lending laws in the United States prohibit lenders from discriminating based on specific protected classes (such as race, color, national origin, and religion) during any aspect of a credit transaction." [1]
I wonder if that law has had any impact on the issue? Have there been any followup studies to verify that the targeted groups did indeed become more creditworthy?
You know I never checked. I mean it seems obvious it would but I don’t recall seeing a study.
Honestly though a study like that may be banned from most research houses as it can fall into a bad spot. What happens if the study found it didn’t help. :/
I feel like the regulations here are good regardless. I don’t Want someone to be penalized specifically because of their race.
Companies are not actually 100% soulless profit-making machines and are very capable of choosing other priorities over making what seems to be free money.
Sometimes these other priorities are "being racist" or "letting John Lasseter harass all the women at Pixar". But it's obvious just because of how many companies stay in their industry. GameStop still tries to sell you games even if that's not so profitable anymore. They don't just switch to selling heroin.
The problem is companies prioritize profits over humanities basic needs like a functioning planet and climate.
Regulation should really be the solution imo. The cost of ruining the climate should be higher so companies are forced to change their practices. But if the government is incapable or unwilling to regulate it and you still invest in them in order to make money, then what you're really saying is
"I'm going to invest in this company for profit related reasons even if the company is willing to destroy the planet in order to make more profit"
I don't want to live in the world you suggest.
This right here is why I am glad we have a constitution in the US and resist efforts to make it easier to change.