Those Bastards Nails It

March 18th, 2006 by EyeOnWiner

Those Bastards the blog absolutely nails the Dave Winer situation:

You can keep repeating that mantra that it’s hard to be you, and I’ll let you in a clue: I would love to be in your situation. Have enough money to do your own thing, the respect of a lot of people, your name all over a key internet technology. And all you do is shit on people. That’s not right, dude.

To quote Instapundit: Indeed.

12 Responses to “Those Bastards Nails It”

  1. another past dave target says:

    More great moments in Dave Going Away and then Coming Back:

    Going Away: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-public/message/304

    Coming Back about 36 Hours Later: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-public/message/357

    “I’ve re-joined this group now that the discussion appears to have turned in a productive direction.”

    Dave back to shouting at the group within 10-minutes of re-joining: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-public/message/360

    Dave blames everyone-except-himself for his decision to remove the type attribute, a “good idea.” In other words, it had been in a Dave Winer spec, was taken out, Microsoft is going to use it anyways, so I guess Dave wants credit for the good they’re going to get out of it even though he’s the one who killed it out of the spec? http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-public/message/365

  2. Why in this world do these passive-aggressive nutjobs like Winer make mad cash? THE SELFISH GENE. That’s all there is to it.

  3. “So I decided that I could either sulk about it, or do the powerful thing. Of course I did the powerful thing.” -Winer’s Ego

  4. Clarification Wizard says:

    For the record, At 50 years old with no wife or kids to speak of, $2Million is hardly mad cash. Your average office worker would have that much if not more.

    Kudos to Winer for tricking Verisign into paying that much for essentially a domain name though (the site itself could be built in a month or so)

    Heh…it never occured to me before, but there’s a certain irony to Verisign overpaying for a domain name isn’t there?

  5. EyeOnWiner says:

    Your average office worker does not have $2mil in cash at age 50. If such were true, we wouldn’t have social security problems because nobody would need it.

    They might have a net worth of more than $2mil, but having that much cash is another matter entirely.

  6. Clarification Wizard says:

    Well yes, but I did specify “with no wife or kids”. The cost of raising one child from birth to adulthood is around $250,000 for a middle class family and significantly more for higher incomes. Take those kids out of the picture and assume the person put that money in an investment portfolio and, with compounding, you’d easily have $2million.

    Heck, if I play my cards right I’ll have that much by age 35.

    It isn’t that its insignificant, it just isn’t what I’d consider wealthy (which I assumed was the implication behind the “mad cash” statement)

  7. “Mad cash”. Yes, it’s all relative. For any 45+ slob who has been permanently downsized in the “meritocracy” of the tech world via global labor arbitrage, it’d certainly be plenty of money to fugg off with. That’s what Winer does anyway (fugging off), with or without the cash. That’s his dharma. Technoslobs who pawn off domain names for 2mil or more enjoy Winer’s destiny but they are in the extreme minority. I think being a self-centered prick with no S.O. or family to support certainly has something to do with it.

  8. EyeOnWiner says:

    Hypotheticals hardly count when it comes to averages.

    A 50 year old WITH a wife and kids could easly have 2 million in cash if he just didn’t spend his discretionary income and invested it instead.

    The fact is, though, that $2million in cash (not to mention his other assets, a point you ignored in your reply) is hardly “average” and while it may not be much money by hollywood standards, it’s certainly “mad cash” even in the upper-middle class.

  9. Clarification Wizard says:

    Well, I think I kind of got off my point which originally was that $2 Million at his age might seem like a lot but it’s what most people would spend having a life (which Dave doesn’t have). Every cruise I’ve taken with every girlfriend I’ve ever had has cost money but I wouldn’t trade the experience for the money.

    Though I don’t have any myself yet, I’ve never met anyone who would trade their kids for the money they spent raising them. I guess what I’m saying is that Winer may have $2 Million but its (a) not THAT much money and (b) a pretty crappy consolation prize for having not really live a life.

    Also, on the other assets, it feels kind of obnoxious to parse someone’s financial situation but for the record I’ve always suspected he didn’t have much left before the Verisign deal. I remember him selling his house about a year and a half ago which is a big indicator. If you’re flush with cash do you really sell a house given the real estate values down there? This was at the same time he was trying to pay for his OPML tour and I remember him posting rant after rant about not getting paid to speak at conferences.

    Just speculation but that is what I’d always thought

  10. EyeOnWiner says:

    “$2 Million [is] . . . (b) a pretty crappy consolation prize for having not really live a life.”

    I can definitely agree with you on that point.

    “I’ve always suspected he didn’t have much left before the Verisign deal. I remember him selling his house about a year and a half ago which is a big indicator. If you’re flush with cash do you really sell a house given the real estate values down there?”

    Valid point. I wasn’t really considering that.

  11. Real Estate says:

    If you’re flush with cash do you really sell a house given the real estate values down there?

    What does this mean? He shouldn’t sell the house because real esate values are going to keep going up for the foreseeable future?

  12. Blah blah blah says:

    Who gives a f’ck about it? Not I.