The panel was called “Doing Well By Doing Good” and it was the eleven o’clock session in the Aspengletscher Room, which was the second-largest room, the largest having been reserved for a sovereign wealth fund that was launching a foundation to study the problems its other division created.
Dagny had not planned to come to Davos. She had spent her life regarding the place as a kind of trade show for people who had confused having opinions about industry with industry, and nothing she had seen since arriving had revised the view. But Francisco d’Anconia was on the eleven o’clock panel, and she had not spoken to Francisco in nine years, and there had been a time — she did not let herself finish the sentence anymore, but there had been a time — and so she sat in the fourth row with a lanyard around her neck and a bottle of water that had been flown in from a glacier ninety kilometers away, and she waited for the man she had once believed was the most serious person alive.
He came out last. He was still beautiful in the specific way of men who have never once worried about money, a beauty that Dagny had mistaken, at nineteen, for the glow of competence. The moderator — a journalist who had written a flattering book about three of the four panelists — asked him the question she had clearly been told he liked.
“Francisco, there are people in this world who will tell you that money is the root of all evil. What do you say to them?”
And Francisco d’Anconia leaned into the microphone and gave the speech.
It was, Dagny had to admit, a magnificent speech. She had heard versions of it before — across a dinner table, years ago, when she had thought it was the truest thing anyone had ever said to her. So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? He moved through it the way a great cellist moves through a piece he has played a thousand times, and the room went quiet, and somewhere to her left a venture capitalist was nodding with his whole upper body. Money as the tool of free exchange. Money as the antithesis of the gun. Money as the verdict men pass on the worth of what they offer one another, the one judge that cannot be bribed because it is the bribe, refined into honesty. Money will not serve the mind that cannot match it. The applause, when it came, was the warm self-applause of a room that has heard itself described as the moral center of the universe and found the description fair.
Dagny did not applaud. She raised her hand.
The moderator, who did not know her, took the question because Francisco’s eyes had already found her in the fourth row and something had crossed his face that the moderator mistook for delight.
“That was beautiful,” Dagny said, and meant it, and hated that she meant it. “I have one question. It’s a small one.” She stood, because she had spent her whole life learning that you say the true thing standing up. “What does d’Anconia Copper make?”
Francisco smiled. “I beg your pardon?”
“Copper, presumably. That’s the name. So I want to be specific, because you’ve just given a very moving account of money as the measure of what a man produces and offers in exchange — the verdict, you said, that can’t be bribed. So I’m asking about the production. The thing being verdicted.” She kept her voice pleasant. The glacier water was very cold in her hand. “How many tons did d’Anconia Copper bring out of the ground last year? Which mines? You don’t have to be exact. Round to the nearest operating mine.”
There was a pause of the kind that does not happen at Davos, and the room noticed it the way a body notices a skipped heartbeat.
“d’Anconia,” said Francisco smoothly, “is a holding company.”
“Since when?”
“Since 2003.”
“So the answer is none.” Dagny nodded, slowly, as if working it out, though she had worked it out on the flight. “You don’t bring up copper. You hold the companies that hold the companies that used to. So when you say money is the verdict men pass on the worth of what they offer one another — Francisco, what is it, exactly, that you offer?”
She had not come to humiliate him. She wanted to be clear about that, later, in the motel, alone. She had come because she had spent the months since Colorado pulling a single thread, and the thread had led from Ellis Wyatt’s flare stack to a man in Connecticut who was paid not to approve things, and from there to a structure, and from the structure to a name, and the name kept being this one. She had come because she needed to know whether the most serious person she had ever met was in on it or had been fooled by it, the way she had been fooled by it, and she could see now, watching his face find and discard three different expressions, that there was a third possibility she had not allowed for, which was that there was no difference between the two.
Because Dagny knew the rest of the story. Everyone in the industry knew the rest, they just told it as a tragedy or a scandal depending on which conference they were at. d’Anconia Copper was being destroyed. The great five-generation fortune was being run into the ground — mines shuttered, the San Sebastián works written off in a fiasco so total it had become a business-school case study, the stock a long red slide. And there was a romantic version of this, a version Dagny had wanted very badly to believe, in which Francisco was destroying his own empire on purpose, nobly, to deny its fruits to the looters, suffering the world’s contempt as the price of a secret integrity.
She had checked the filings.
It was a dividend recapitalization. Several of them, actually, in a tidy cadence. You take the old company — the real one, the one his great-great-grandfather had clawed out of a mountain — and you load it with debt, and you use the borrowed money to pay an enormous special dividend to the shareholders, who are, when you trace the boxes, mostly him. The cash comes out the top. The debt stays at the bottom, with the mines, and the towns built around the mines, and the men in the towns. Then the thing that everyone calls destruction happens, on schedule, to the bottom, while the top — sunburned, eloquent, beloved, in the second-largest room in Davos — explains that money is the one honest judge in an dishonest world.
He had not been denying the looters the fruit. He had been the fruit’s last and most efficient eater. The nobility and the asset-stripping were not two stories. They were one story, and the only thing the nobility added was that the workers in the San Sebastián towns got to feel, on top of everything else, that their ruin had been somebody’s principle.
“Dagny,” Francisco said, very quietly, off the microphone now, just to her, and for one second his face was nineteen again and so was hers. “You wouldn’t understand what I’m doing.”
“No,” she said, and she found she was not angry, which frightened her more than anger would have. “I think I finally do. That’s the problem.” She set the glacier water down on her empty seat. “It’s a very good speech, Francisco. You should keep giving it. It’s the most valuable thing d’Anconia still produces.”
She walked out before the Q&A resumed. Behind her the moderator recovered the room with practiced grace, and the panel moved on to the next question, which was about impact, and the venture capitalist to her left resumed nodding, and Francisco d’Anconia, the most serious man she had ever known, picked the microphone back up, because the eleven o’clock session ran until noon and there was, after all, still time on the clock and an audience that had paid to be told what it already believed.
Chapter 5: The Money Speech
The panel was called “Doing Well By Doing Good” and it was the eleven o’clock session in the Aspengletscher Room, which was the second-largest room, the largest having been reserved for a sovereign wealth fund that was launching a foundation to study the problems its other division created.
Dagny had not planned to come to Davos. She had spent her life regarding the place as a kind of trade show for people who had confused having opinions about industry with industry, and nothing she had seen since arriving had revised the view. But Francisco d’Anconia was on the eleven o’clock panel, and she had not spoken to Francisco in nine years, and there had been a time — she did not let herself finish the sentence anymore, but there had been a time — and so she sat in the fourth row with a lanyard around her neck and a bottle of water that had been flown in from a glacier ninety kilometers away, and she waited for the man she had once believed was the most serious person alive.
He came out last. He was still beautiful in the specific way of men who have never once worried about money, a beauty that Dagny had mistaken, at nineteen, for the glow of competence. The moderator — a journalist who had written a flattering book about three of the four panelists — asked him the question she had clearly been told he liked.
“Francisco, there are people in this world who will tell you that money is the root of all evil. What do you say to them?”
And Francisco d’Anconia leaned into the microphone and gave the speech.
It was, Dagny had to admit, a magnificent speech. She had heard versions of it before — across a dinner table, years ago, when she had thought it was the truest thing anyone had ever said to her. So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? He moved through it the way a great cellist moves through a piece he has played a thousand times, and the room went quiet, and somewhere to her left a venture capitalist was nodding with his whole upper body. Money as the tool of free exchange. Money as the antithesis of the gun. Money as the verdict men pass on the worth of what they offer one another, the one judge that cannot be bribed because it is the bribe, refined into honesty. Money will not serve the mind that cannot match it. The applause, when it came, was the warm self-applause of a room that has heard itself described as the moral center of the universe and found the description fair.
Dagny did not applaud. She raised her hand.
The moderator, who did not know her, took the question because Francisco’s eyes had already found her in the fourth row and something had crossed his face that the moderator mistook for delight.
“That was beautiful,” Dagny said, and meant it, and hated that she meant it. “I have one question. It’s a small one.” She stood, because she had spent her whole life learning that you say the true thing standing up. “What does d’Anconia Copper make?”
Francisco smiled. “I beg your pardon?”
“Copper, presumably. That’s the name. So I want to be specific, because you’ve just given a very moving account of money as the measure of what a man produces and offers in exchange — the verdict, you said, that can’t be bribed. So I’m asking about the production. The thing being verdicted.” She kept her voice pleasant. The glacier water was very cold in her hand. “How many tons did d’Anconia Copper bring out of the ground last year? Which mines? You don’t have to be exact. Round to the nearest operating mine.”
There was a pause of the kind that does not happen at Davos, and the room noticed it the way a body notices a skipped heartbeat.
“d’Anconia,” said Francisco smoothly, “is a holding company.”
“Since when?”
“Since 2003.”
“So the answer is none.” Dagny nodded, slowly, as if working it out, though she had worked it out on the flight. “You don’t bring up copper. You hold the companies that hold the companies that used to. So when you say money is the verdict men pass on the worth of what they offer one another — Francisco, what is it, exactly, that you offer?”
She had not come to humiliate him. She wanted to be clear about that, later, in the motel, alone. She had come because she had spent the months since Colorado pulling a single thread, and the thread had led from Ellis Wyatt’s flare stack to a man in Connecticut who was paid not to approve things, and from there to a structure, and from the structure to a name, and the name kept being this one. She had come because she needed to know whether the most serious person she had ever met was in on it or had been fooled by it, the way she had been fooled by it, and she could see now, watching his face find and discard three different expressions, that there was a third possibility she had not allowed for, which was that there was no difference between the two.
Because Dagny knew the rest of the story. Everyone in the industry knew the rest, they just told it as a tragedy or a scandal depending on which conference they were at. d’Anconia Copper was being destroyed. The great five-generation fortune was being run into the ground — mines shuttered, the San Sebastián works written off in a fiasco so total it had become a business-school case study, the stock a long red slide. And there was a romantic version of this, a version Dagny had wanted very badly to believe, in which Francisco was destroying his own empire on purpose, nobly, to deny its fruits to the looters, suffering the world’s contempt as the price of a secret integrity.
She had checked the filings.
It was a dividend recapitalization. Several of them, actually, in a tidy cadence. You take the old company — the real one, the one his great-great-grandfather had clawed out of a mountain — and you load it with debt, and you use the borrowed money to pay an enormous special dividend to the shareholders, who are, when you trace the boxes, mostly him. The cash comes out the top. The debt stays at the bottom, with the mines, and the towns built around the mines, and the men in the towns. Then the thing that everyone calls destruction happens, on schedule, to the bottom, while the top — sunburned, eloquent, beloved, in the second-largest room in Davos — explains that money is the one honest judge in an dishonest world.
He had not been denying the looters the fruit. He had been the fruit’s last and most efficient eater. The nobility and the asset-stripping were not two stories. They were one story, and the only thing the nobility added was that the workers in the San Sebastián towns got to feel, on top of everything else, that their ruin had been somebody’s principle.
“Dagny,” Francisco said, very quietly, off the microphone now, just to her, and for one second his face was nineteen again and so was hers. “You wouldn’t understand what I’m doing.”
“No,” she said, and she found she was not angry, which frightened her more than anger would have. “I think I finally do. That’s the problem.” She set the glacier water down on her empty seat. “It’s a very good speech, Francisco. You should keep giving it. It’s the most valuable thing d’Anconia still produces.”
She walked out before the Q&A resumed. Behind her the moderator recovered the room with practiced grace, and the panel moved on to the next question, which was about impact, and the venture capitalist to her left resumed nodding, and Francisco d’Anconia, the most serious man she had ever known, picked the microphone back up, because the eleven o’clock session ran until noon and there was, after all, still time on the clock and an audience that had paid to be told what it already believed.
If this isn’t just well-edited AI slop, you should publish this somewhere.