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Larry Ellison Rejuvenating Hawaii's Sixth-Largest Island (Which He Owns)

McGruber writes "In June of 2012, we discussed news that Larry Ellison, co-founder and chief executive of Oracle, purchased the Hawaiian island Lanai for $300 million. Ellison now owns nearly everything on the island, including many of the candy-colored plantation-style homes and apartments, one of the two grocery stores, the two Four Seasons hotels and golf courses, the community center and pool, water company, movie theater, half the roads and some 88,000 acres of land. (2% of the island is owned by the government or by longtime Lanai families.) Now Ellison is attempting to win over the island's small, but wary, local population, one whose economic future is heavily dependent on his decisions. He and his team have met with experts in desalination and solar energy to change the way water and electricity are generated, collected, stored and delivered on the island. They are refurbishing residential housing intended for workers (Mr. Ellison's Lanai Resorts owns and manages 400 of the more than 1,500 housing units on the island). They've tackled infrastructure, such as lengthening airport runways and paving county roads. And to improve access to Lanai, Mr. Ellison bought Island Air earlier this year and is closing a deal to buy another airline."

18 of 297 comments (clear)

  1. Reaganomics! by kurt555gs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is the end result. Oligarchs. Trickle Down Economics was a scam.

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    * Carthago Delenda Est *
  2. Modus Operandi by Aaron+B+Lingwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. Buy property / imaginary property
    2. Close it up
    3. Anger the community
    4. Wait for staff to quit
    5. Replace existing features with unwanted bling
    6. Force users of Island #5 to use the new facilities offered on Island #6
    7. ?
    8. Profit

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    [Rent This Space]
  3. Re:impossible by flyneye · · Score: 5, Insightful

    With enough money, you are the government. Haven't you been paying attention to U.S. history at all?

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    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  4. Re:impossible by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is impossible, no private enterprise builds infrastructure, works on long term projects, etc. Only governments do that.

    Ellison hasn't done anything but buy a bunch of stuff yet. And by the way, he bought most of the island of Lanai from another private enterprise.

    Further, if the people don't like what Ellison is does with the place, what can they do, vote him off the island?

    Anyway, might be worth keeping an eye on this project a little longer before you start your Galtian touchdown dance, roman_mir, the history of private enterprise owning islands really isn't all that pleasant, at least for the people who live in those places.

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    You are welcome on my lawn.
  5. Re:impossible by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ellison is one of the more productive people in the world, he was able to devise a machine that is his company, that makes him one of the most productive people out there. All of his employees, all of his properties, they are all extensions of this machine.

    I'd put it a little differently. Ellison is a very clever man who has devised a way of diverting a fraction of the productivity of over 100,000 people into his pocket. That way is the Oracle Corporation. Indirectly, his company diverts a fraction of the productivity of about 390,000 corporate customers comprising the efforts of millions of people into his pocket.

    Nobody ever accumulated great wealth any other way. The most you can ever achieve from your own productivity is to be moderately comfortable.

  6. the biggest socialist bailout in history by decora · · Score: 5, Insightful

    happened under a republican president, the son of Reagan's vice president, whil the treasury secretary was a former Goldman Sachs CEO.

    you are hereby banned from ever complaining about 'socialist democrats' ever again. ever.

  7. Great until you fall out with the king by fantomas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Benevolent dictatorships are fine as long as you agree with the king/laird/CEO/ whatever.

    Fall out with him and you'll lose your house, your job, and all those related to you might suffer. Rich people running islands is not a great long term plan. Ask the population of Eigg in Scotland, for example. All good until your nice rich person gets bored with his toy and neglects local services that people need, or sells it to a Bad Rich Person, etc.

    I would have though US citizens, of all the places in the world, would have a historical perspective on what happens when uncaring kings run your country, and what the poor but honest citizens should do to resolve the lack of decision making power.

    Very curious. Of course Ellison might be a lovely chap and improve the situation - it sounds like people do need improved services... but one man owning an island and having no accountability on his decision making power over people's homes and jobs, this makes me nervous... it's not like the people living here can change employers or move down the road if they are unhappy, it's an island. I'd be interested to hear his thoughts about the democratic processes, how the local people have the option to veto his decisions if they disagree, and so forth.

    If he's really in it for the long term, wouldn't it make more sense to go for independence from the USA and ask the people to elect him as their President?

  8. Re:competition by txoutback · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but the fact is that competition forces them to become efficient and sacrifice profit.

    Sadly, this is too often accomplished by externalizing costs to the environment and to the general long-term physical health of the population... ultimately putting whatever expenses can be externalized onto the government and tax payers.

  9. Re:Incredible by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with Oracle is two-fold. Large organizations have products chosen by buyers, not developers, and PostgresSQL et al do not buy lunches, golf outings, or vacations. In addition, many people after having Oracle around for a bit make the mistake of using it as more than just a database, putting business logic, etc, in their database layer using Oracle's proprietary extensions. This makes it extremely difficult to switch products. Oracle can raise prices quite a lot and people pretty much have to keep paying. This is why typing your business to a proprietary product or format with a single provider is generally a very bad idea.

  10. Re:impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ellison is a clever man who helped invent the modern RDBMS, which is the basis for much of today's information technology.

    Oh please.
    Ellison is a clever man who implemented parts of a modern RDBMS. The invention happened elsewhere, and without Ellison the field would have been advanced at pretty much the same pace. He is noted mainly for his business acumen and inhuman practices to achieve his goals.

    That's as stupid as saying Steve Jobs invented the iPod, the Mouse, the Desktop, or Multitasking. He didn't.

  11. Ellison's an awful person by tgeller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ellison has a history of being just terrible. When the San Carlos airport cite him for breaking noise ordinances when he flies in during "quiet" hours -- you know, waking up uncounted residents in the area -- he just laugh and pays the fine, over and over again. Now he's suing the airport in San Jose airport so he can do the same thing to that city's 800,000 residents.

    Hawaiians can expct zero consideration from this proven douchebag.

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    Tom Geller
  12. Re: impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They won't grant me citizenship.

  13. Re:One Rich A** Called Larry Ellison by PRMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And yet you keep giving him money... Strange.

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    Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
  14. Re: impossible by Shark · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The way to solve that was to have 50 states and very little federal law thus creating competition among the states for population, which directly correlates with their tax revenues. Now that the federal government took over everything and made most of the states indentured servants, finding another country is the only real option left if you don't like your government's way of managing things.

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    Mind the frickin' laser...
  15. Re:impossible by abirdman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ellison didn't invent the Oracle database, he bought the efforts of those who did. Larry Ellison is the same as every Afghan warlord, Saudi princeling, or Russian oligarch-- a twisted parasite on the planet. His efforts did not create productivity, they stole productivity.

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    Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
  16. Yep by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    and If I don't like Larry and I live on that island I can boycott him. Wait, no. I can't. He _owns_ the entire island. Seriously, can we all just just read the wikipedia article on the railroad trusts and call it a day? Oh, and vote. We can vote. Heck, I'll bet the number of successful changes due to election dwarfs the number of successes from a boycott. Can anyone name me the last successful large scale boycott?

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    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  17. Re:impossible by saleenS281 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That depends entirely on what the private company is offering. If the private company owns the only road between your house and your job, how are you planning on boycotting?

    At least with government I know their motivation for building and maintaining that road isn't a 60% gross profit margin every quarter. You can argue about inefficiencies but I can tell you first hand there isn't a fortune 100 company in this country that is anymore efficient than our federal government. Size breeds inefficiency, it's just a fact of life.

  18. Re:impossible by Immerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not to mention water, power, communication (less so nowadays), etc.etc.etc. There are a *lot* of regional natural monopolies in the world, and where those are involved the free market pretty much guarantees that everyone gets shafted.

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    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.