Rebane's Ruminations
June 2015
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George Rebane

Late yesterday afternoon Jo Ann and I were at the annual company picnic of a recent high tech start up.  It was a jolly event held in a local park with well over a hundred people in attendance – the employees brought their families and significant others, their kids were running around and bouncing in and out of an inflatable structure that made my back hurt just looking at it.  The company had laid out a lavishly catered buffet and tubs of soft drinks and adult beverages.  Everyone was talking about how much the company had grown since last year’s picnic, and even since the last Christmas party.

As we sat in our camping chairs with the fold-out side tables (we always take ours for reliable and comfortable seating in a choice shady spot), we mused about the scene playing out around us.  This company now employs about one hundred people who are primarily young college graduates , all of them smart, with most having STEM degrees.  The firm is in the financial engineering sector making new and innovative software for institutional investment advisors.

So where did all this enthusiasm and productivity come from that now pays good salaries for young workers with families, and lets them establish and advance in rewarding careers?  As we looked through the crowd, we identified several employees who possibly could have started their own companies, but they didn’t.  In fact, none of these young and talented people started the company which now focuses their professional lives and sustains their families.  None of them would have had the idea to bring together the specific and critical elements that have made this company the success it is today.

Contrary to what we are told by socialists like President Obama, Senator Warren, and Senator Sanders (and the class warrior Hillary), these employees did not create their jobs.  It was the founders of the company who envisioned how a certain new technology could be productized and introduced into an extremely competitive and sophisticated marketplace.  It was these founders who effectively communicated their vision to a small group of investors (aka ‘angels’), and convinced them to accept the risks entailed in a new start-up in whose growth they would all share.  But before any monies changed hands, it was also the founders who had to establish a relationship of trust with the investors, trust that included a belief that the founders were honorable, had the necessary talents, and would dedicate themselves to the project at a commensurate level of risk to themselves, their families, and their own financial futures.

As these founders became the management of the company, they worked uncounted hours, starting with a small team that also put their professional fates into a fledgling organization which at the time neither had nor could afford sufficient office space.  People worked out of their homes until enough demonstrable product was developed to attract more investment and workers to warrant an adequate corporate presence.  All during this time the founders were on airplanes flying to conferences and customer presentations across the country.  And all this time all the other corporate functions had to be cobbled together in the right sequence and worked with an ever critical eye to controlling costs.

And as the products began to mature and be sold, more people were added to develop additional features and functions along with new products to expand the company’s footprint in the financial marketplaces.  The level of risk and intensity of work did not diminish as the company grew, was nationally acknowledged, and accepted in the marketplace.  During this time the company was always hiring more staff to build, sell, and maintain an expanding catalog of software that was now being used by thousands of investment professionals.  In such a growth phase that continues today, a young company plows back all revenues to pay for ongoing expenses that will hopefully be covered in the future by increased sales.  And the work to deliver online services to keep a growing customer cohort satisfied is an organizational and technical challenge that is known only to entrepreneurs who in the last decades have built the ecommerce infrastructure that everyone today takes for granted.

As we enjoyed our excellent BBQd chicken and tender tri-tip, and listened to the happy throng around us – many still dissecting the happenings of their work days – it was again clear to me (for this was not my first time) how this wonderful country has worked since the days of its founding.  Throughout our history, all our entrepreneurs have ever wanted from their country was the running room to make real their dreams.  They have always been willing to live with the inevitable yet unknown risks to their health, years spent, and their families.  They have always and are still willing to take on the markets and their competitors.  But in the last century, what they have come to fear most is collectivism and the heavy hands of Leviathan.  Knowing this, the overwhelming numbers today would rather work for someone who will take such risks, or better yet, wiggle into the belly of the beast and work for Leviathan itself.

So when we recall those now infamous words, “You didn’t create that …!”, the audacity of the lie and its addled acceptance both saddens and enrages those who have actually created wealth and wealth producing jobs.

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13 responses to “‘They didn’t create that …’”

  1. Bonnie McGuire Avatar

    What you’ve expressed is so true. Thank you George. Most of us who have experienced it know that’s what America was all about. Abraham Lincoln called this a place where the ordinary, common individual would be able to realize their dreams. Something special that they put effort into achieving.

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  2. Steven Frisch Avatar
    Steven Frisch

    Was this company picnic Riskalyze?

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  3. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Frisch, if he wanted to say, he probably would have said it.
    George, I think by focusing on the concrete that was NOT the message, you missed the essential grotesque error of the “you didn’t build that” progressive left, which Hillary Clinton, Obama, Fauxcahontas and others have all repeated. I think they would tell you that the founders of that company didn’t educate themselves, with free K-12 education and subsidized university educations. Not to mention roads built by the government, etc etc.
    In short, progressives think that receiving any benefit, using any public conveyance, places a citizen in a state of indentured servitude that can never be paid back, which means governments at all levels can tax at confiscatory levels with a clear conscience because without the sort of spending they want to make, your business wouldn’t exist. So empty your wallet and Roth IRA George, Senator Warren needs that ill gotten cash to do something Really Important.
    It’s another “pact between generations” that binds the young to agreements they never made… a cornerstone of feudalism where an oath to your liege lord binds your decendents to the same deal. The USA is founded on a repudiation of that concept but it’s been making a comeback over the last century.
    No, we educate our young not to make them self fulfilled slaves but because we want them to be able to support themselves and their families and have the basic knowledge and wisdom to be an able citizen of their state and country. Those subsidies are gifts, not a permanent mortgage on their futures and iff the “progressive” left can’t accept that it may be time to wean K-12, colleges and universites away from Uncle Sugar’s teat.
    That’s the education side which at least for any individual, is easy to quantify. Your K-12 attendence… every year at your school, a certain amount was spent to run the school and you can come up with an accounting of your share of the cost. However… when you voted for a bond to build some infrastructure, it was with the knowlege that your taxes were going towards a commons for all to use. Again, not with any agreement to allow the likes of Hillary Clinton to use against you, your employer or your company… that those who came before you gave the government of the time money to do it gives Hillary the moral authority to take any amount she needs to grow government even bigger.
    I think we’re back to one of the few wise comments attributable to Gerald Ford (he wasn’t the first to say it but he’s the one who said it most memorably): “A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government big enough to take from you everything you have.”

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  4. George Rebane Avatar

    StevenF 906am – Yes.

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  5. Steven Frisch Avatar
    Steven Frisch

    Posted by: Gregory | 14 June 2015 at 02:53 PM
    “Frisch, if he wanted to say, he probably would have said it.”
    Hey, STFU Greg, I din’t ask you.

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  6. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Go FU, Steve. If you want to send a private message to George, you know his email address. If you want to make a public comment, don’t have a cow if I or someone else have something to say about it.
    We’ve all read GR’s past posts, we both knew the company he was talking about. But you had to ask… why?

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  7. Steven Frisch Avatar
    Steven Frisch

    Simply because I wanted to clarify the question. I did not know for sure that he was talking abut Riskalyze. People wonder why I hate your guts; it is because everything, even a simple question, is an opportunity for Snark.

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  8. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    Gregory 2:53 PM
    Well said and true

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  9. Steven Frisch Avatar
    Steven Frisch

    Posted by: Todd Juvinall | 14 June 2015 at 05:06 PM
    Snark buddies to the end.

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  10. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    You’re channeling again, Frisch.
    I don’t “hate your guts”, Frisch, I just have little respect for your and your methods. But thanks again for documenting your state of mind. Malice incarnate. You must be the apple of your Board’s eye.

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  11. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    BTW, Steven Frisch, six figure CEO of the wretchedly misnamed Sierra Business Council, had you just taken Todd at face value you might have considered he was referring to the body of my remark as the first sentence of the 2:53 was remarkably free of snark… mostly just a common sense observation as George was obviously working to not mention the name of the company. It wasn’t a post about the company, either.
    It’s your hate and hair trigger anger, Steve. Maybe you should work on that yourself, get some help.

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  12. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    Gregory 6:22 PM
    I was complimenting the body of your comments. They were excellent. The Truckee Troll just comes here to snark. He is a fool.

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  13. George Rebane Avatar

    For the record, I did want to give an example of a local entrepreneurial enterprise that entails risk, hard work, creates jobs and career opportunities, and hopefully will reward everyone’s personal investments in such an effort. Thankfully such efforts are going on all over the country, unfortunately what is involved and required to succeed is no longer widely known, especially by people who emerge from our public education system. I saw no need to highlight Riskalyze because it was not germane to the message, but simply an instantiation of the message.

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