The fact that billionaires do what they do and don't, I dunno, buy Hearst Castle and turn into a personal gamer castle or something shows what sickos they really are
Earthly pleasures have no meaning, all that does is line go up
Case in point Notch, he was a pretty normal lib before he got rich, and the moment he got his billions he bought a giant house in LA and became some wierd nazi incel
Previous elites had taste, and so their legacies live on in quasi-immortality through their posessions. The current elite are so subsumed within Capital all of their legacy will evaporate once they are gone.
If I were a billionaire, (and for the sake of fantasy, ignoring the moral repercussions of such) Id buy out every super bowl ad slot and fill it with Youtube poops from 2008
Fill it with the same, dark close-up shot of you staring wordlessly into the camera.
Then at the final ad, scream at the very end until the ad abruptly cuts it off
It's weird because were I billionaire, I'd do the maximum acceptable amount of socdem politics and international charity work you can do before the CIA starts trying to kill you, then spend the rest of the time funding movies and videogames around my interests.
Political economy, this science of wealth, is therefore simultaneously the science of renunciation, of want, of saving and it actually reaches the point where it spares man the need of either fresh air or physical exercise. This science of marvellous industry is simultaneously the science of asceticism, and its true ideal is the ascetic but extortionate miser and the ascetic but productive slave. Its moral ideal is the worker who takes part of his wages to the savings-bank, and it has even found ready-made a servile art which embodies this pet idea: it has been presented, bathed in sentimentality, on the stage. Thus political economy – despite its worldly and voluptuous appearance – is a true moral science, the most moral of all the sciences. Self-renunciation, the renunciation of life and of all human needs, is its principal thesis. The less you eat, drink and buy books; the less you go to the theatre, the dance hall, the public house; the less you think, love, theorise, sing, paint, fence, etc., the more you save – the greater becomes your treasure which neither moths nor rust will devour – your capital. The less you are, the less you express your own life, the more you have, i.e., the greater is your alienated life, the greater is the store of your estranged being. Everything which the political economist takes from you in life and in humanity, he replaces for you in money and in wealth; and all the things which you cannot do, your money can do. It can eat and, drink, go to the dance hall and the theatre; it can travel, it can appropriate art, learning, the treasures of the past, political power – all this it can appropriate for you – it can buy all this: it is true endowment. Yet being all this, it wants to do nothing but create itself, buy itself; for everything else is after all its servant, and when I have the master I have the servant and do not need his servant. All passions and all activity must therefore be submerged in avarice.
i went to hearst castle this summer. it's pretty whatever, tbh. the bus ride up the mountain is pretty crazy. then at the top, one of the employees had their miata parked in the lot, and I was instantly envious of whoever they are, because they have the best commute in the world