Bankman-Fried's FTX, senior staff, parents bought Bahamas property worth $300 mln<p><a href="https://www.reuters.com/technology/exclusive-bankman-frieds-ftx-parents-bought-bahamas-property-worth-121-mln-2022-11-22/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.reuters.com/technology/exclusive-bankman-frieds-...</a><p>> Bankman-Fried's parents named owners of $16.4 mln vacation home<p>They're strategy to claim they were merely supportive parents is undermined by the multimillion dollar properties they bought with money from their son.
Jung brought into psychology the notion that things tend to turn into their opposite (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enantiodromia" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enantiodromia</a>) as well as the concept of the (psychological) shadow.<p>The question raised in the article of how could such "deeply ethical people" be "so close to such a massive ethical lapse", is less paradoxical in this light. The same phenomenon shows up with the Effective Altruism movement, and of course lots of other things that present themselves as extremely good.
Say what you will, the mom has foresight (she wrote this long before the FTX crash):<p><a href="https://www.bostonreview.net/forum/barbara-fried-beyond-blame-moral-responsibility-philosophy-law/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.bostonreview.net/forum/barbara-fried-beyond-blam...</a><p>"The philosophy of personal responsibility has ruined criminal justice and economic policy. It’s time to move past blame." - Barbara H. Fried
While reading this I found myself to be envious of the leg up some people can get owing to the circumstances of their birth. However, I was also disgusted by the use of term "nepo baby" to condemn this entire class of people.<p>It seems to me the parents were basically good people who just couldn't see their son's psychopathy for what it was. After all parents' inability to view their children without bias is a trope that has been repeated throughout history.<p>That said, the philosophy of - as the article put it - the ends justify the means can only inevitably lead to these outcomes. Whether free will is an illusion or not, it is pure hubris to think that our knowledge alone can guide us to absolute good for the greatest number of people. We simply cannot process the entire system, and morality is a helpful heuristic here. The specifics of moral code should always be up for discussion, but to use some outdated part of the code to dismiss the whole is just rash.
I'm glad to see the parents getting some scrutiny here because it sounds like FTX probably wouldn't have been successful without them. But it also wouldn't have been this widespread without Sequoia, and this part really got me:<p>> No one in Silicon Valley likes to think of themselves as privileged. Ayn Rand-reading VCs and entrepreneurs tend to bristle at the suggestion that their decisions are anything other than a product of calculated reasoning. Yet the valley’s knee-jerk elitism is so blindingly obvious that it seems almost beside the point to bring up. Investors overwhelmingly favor companies run by White men, often hailing from a tiny group of elite colleges, while shunning anyone who deviates from their superficial sense of what a successful founder should look, talk and act like. Some openly discriminate against founders over the age of 30, against founders with an accent and against anyone who comports themselves as if they’re not already rich. God help you if you show up to a pitch meeting wearing a suit.<p>When the money becomes so detached from reality as to think that people over the age of 30 aren't capable of building products, you know stuff like this is going to keep happening. So much of the stupid stuff SBF did reads as pure inexperience wrapped around an untouchable genius persona. The fact that FTX ran on Quickbooks and had zero internal financial controls really just shows how little due diligence Sequoia really did when they were vetting SBF.<p>FTX couldn't have been such a colossal disaster without the Sequoia funding, but they'll plead ignorance and move on to fund the next major 20-something fraud without thinking twice about it.