Exactly and that is what we were discussing, business, not personal lives.
So you decided to miss the crux of my point?
I work in industry so I have to hear the mantra that "it's not personal, it's business". And that's a load of ....
It's
always personal.
Wynn didn't get up and give an UNimpassioned speech. He got up and gave a diatribe. I guarantee it's personal to him when his fortune is threatened.
My point is that it matters where the coporate leaders live vs where they set up shop precisely because it indicates:
1. Whether they understand where their true base of income lies. Teddy Roosevelt famously pointed out that the rich and successful owe a debt to the society that provided them those opportunities. That is why this debate about the rich paying more in taxes is so important.
2. Whether they actually consider themselves part of the same society. Clearly people like Wynn
who moves his offices to China feels that the Americans who SURROUND HIM EVERY DAY are of no importance. It is a special "sociopath" who considers their fellow people as mere tools to their enrichment.
3. They truly believe in
anything of value from this country.
Wynn (and he's not the only one by far) view American workers as needlessly overpaid and the burden of
supporting the country they live in as an onerous task that must be avoided when possible.
Wynn (and other executives) have shown their hand. It
is all about money. Which is fine, insofar as
that is totally divorced from the fact that Wynn and the other executives HAVE TO LIVE WITH HUMANS.
If only they could get away from the rest of us I'm sure they would.
But again, Wynn
could not have his fortune without the countless people he employs to do the work.
Wynn could not build the casino himself. He has to contract that out. He could not build the circuits for the slot machines. He has to contract that out. Etc etc.
But apparently Wynn feels like contracting that out to his fellow Americans must be too expensive. Or that paying some portion of his massive revenues to support the
society that has allowed him to be the tycoon he is is simply too much.
I hammer on Wynn because he's the most recent example. But again it isn't just him. It's executives all over the U.S. who look around, can't imagine taking a pay cut themselves and who say "it's too expensive to do business here in this 'nice' country" so they move the work elsewhere.
As if there won't be any "impact" on the place they clearly prefer to live themselves.
Am I not making this clear enough?
It is
never "just business". It is
always personal.
The only time people say "it's not personal, it's just business" is when the speaker is "putting the boot in" to someone else and they don't want the other person to express the pain.
If the boot were on the other foot....it would be personal. Believe it.