Politicians have donors. Some donors are publicly held corporations. Publicly held corporations have public earnings calls. Public calls can be disrupted.
-
-
I disagree. I just think efforts should be directed to opportunities more likely to have engagement. As I said, shareholders have an opportunity to speak at shareholder meetings. You aren’t getting through on investor calls. The six you know are outliers.
-
Okay, and I ask this in all seriousness: what do you propose as more viable alternatives? I honestly want engagement opportunities. I'm poor, have a disability, and am caring for my disabled mother while working full time. I'm stretched really thin, but voting isn't enough.
-
I don’t think there is a two month/two year solution. Honestly think this is the long game and will take years. And it will start with conversations with people we don’t agree with. One at a time. Patience. But we are frustrated and I don’t know how I’m going to do that either.
-
First, this is so vague I don't really know what it means or would look like in your estimation. Second, people, including me, have been having conversations this entire time. I personally have found it wildly ineffective, and it certainly didn't stop us from getting here.
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
Nate has a point. My experience w/ earnings calls (Q2 Tesla aside) is that only analysts get to speak. If you know how to get through and will tell us, I’m all over it. If you don’t you’re wasting our time
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.