Imagine all your favorite products. They are made in profit-based organizations such as this one. Love it, or oppose it at your own risk and with no misunderstandings about your program of destruction by selflessness.
This isn't about being relatively materialistic: if you like toothpaste, refrigerators, t-shirts, music recordings, and wearing clothes that you didn't make, then welcome to the world of gratitude to profit-chasers.
Some producers of goods and services got sucked into our artificial housing bubble, obviously such as the architectural and building industries, but part of why I wanted to post this is to acknowledge the makers of literally millions of goods and services, which as a whole certainly make our lives more pleasant and convenient, which we would want for any human being, especially with all the improved hygiene and health and broadened horizons of a wealthy society - which is one that allows the profit motive to do its thing (while respecting everybody's rights, just as everyone in a lawful society has to do).
I don't understand why market share would be fundamentally motivating to human beings and not profit. Maybe I'm just thinking like a psychologist when your framework indicates a different bottom line. What kind of analysis? Maybe of the kind where, if you want A, but aim at A, you don't get as much of A as if you'd focused on getting B, which brings about A much faster than trying directly to obtain A. But it all is going to come down to: why are people doing what they're doing? In business, in the business of making money for oneself to spend and/or save, getting more is the bottom line, personally, and as a fiducary manager, in representing the defined financial interests of the business/owners
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