A
Amaris
Guest
To be honest, I think short gains are focused on heavily because people are aware the system we're in is heading for a wall, a climate sized wall, and they're trying to get while the getting is good.I would agree, and in fact expand that to say that even when it comes to money, shortsightedness will hurt in the long run. I do not really care about quarterly profits in my company when I am focused on decades and generations. Many people forget that you have to spend money to make money, and sometimes that means booking a loss for long term gains.
The shortsighted aspect, in your given example, would be that publicly traded companies are used to supplement teacher incomes. It would be like betting all of your employees salaries on black and spinning the roulette wheel. It's all symptomatic of a greater problem.However to be fair, I do not have, say, a teachers union investment fund, representing thousands of teachers who all depend on the company regularly throwing of dividends to fund their lives, as many stock exchange traded companies do. Which makes the lives of those companies more difficult.
The 21st century presented in Picard is only shades lighter than the situation we're in here and now in our own reality. We don't have a Europa mission, so even the dystopian 21st century of Picard is actually somewhat more technologically progressive than we are, which is a bit depressing.