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Most influential entrepreneur in U.S. history

Today on electoral-vote.com they changed up their usual weekend Q&A by posing questions from readers for other readers to answer. One reader in Germany asked who the most influential entrepreneur in U.S. history was and what effect they had. My response was Eli Whitney. His invention of the cotton gin made cotton farming far more profitable by vastly reducing the time and personnel needed to manually remove cotton seeds from the bolls. This increased efficiency led to cotton replacing other agricultural crops in the South, making the area more wealthy and more dependent on slavery which expanded to fill the increased need for cotton harvesters. As slavery became more entrenched in the South, the sectional divisions in the U.S. were exacerbated, making the Civil War inevitable.

Without the cotton gin, slavery would very likely have gradually diminished organically until it reached the point where it could have been outlawed without the Civil War. Other countries like Great Britain, Brazil, Russia, and others managed to outlaw slavery or serfdom peacefully.
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Hmmmm...how about Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr.?

His entrepreneurship established a dynastic trust to permit generations of Kennedys to either go into public service or disservice, being very impactful on both sides of that scale.

Of course it includes JFK, RFK, Teddy, Sargent Shriver, etc. But also the notorious vaccine disinformation spreader RFK, Jr.

JFK stared down Russia's missiles in Cuba, Russian power in divided Berlin, and gave us the great dreams of going to the Moon, of helping our country/countrymen, & helping other countries (the Peace Corps).
He has inspired generations of other public servants, incl. at least one President, and many other figures.
@SomeMichGuy Interesting. I hadn’t considered him but you’re right, he had a huge effect.
@LeopoldBloom And mostly +, but also RFK, Jr's nonsense.

It DOES get one to think more broadly if one thinks of the full impact, through history, of a given life.

But your answer is quite thought-provoking...even if the Whitney gin had been developed later enough, *that* could have allowed the natural death of slavery, followed by an urgent search for a labor-saving processing mechanism.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@SomeMichGuy Interesting, and puts the emphasis on influencer more than entrepreneurship unless you consider smuggling/bootlegging a form of entrepreneurship. You could include oldest son Joe, Jr., as well, who died serving on an Allied bombing run in WWII despite his father's fascist/Hitler learnings as Ambassador to England. He actually was being groomed to be the Kennedy President. JFK wanted to be a writer; RFK would have been happy continuing as a lawyer/prosecutor as he was for Senator Kefauver's Anti-Crime Committee and Attorney General. Says something for Joe Sr.'s parenting skills that each was being allowed to pursue separate skill sets. Unfortunately, JFK, RFK, and Teddy all emulated his womanizing ways as well, although Teddy seemed to embrace it the fullest.
@dancingtongue JPK, Sr., was a bigger entrepreneur than "merely" any bootlegging; though my initial thoughts were like yours, you might look at the wikipedia article about him

Though despicable in some of his opinions & actions, he nonetheless set up an important dynasty. Too bad he was so awful as a human being.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@SomeMichGuy I reviewed the wiki and I guess the consensus is that most of his liquor money came legally in the top shelf scotch markets from wise investment after Prohibition rather than allegations of smuggling during Prohibition. As for the rest of his "successors", it seems to come from venture capitalism -- being a timely buyer and seller -- beginning with using a big loan from his father to buy his first bank. I wouldn't classify this as entrepreneurship. But at least we agree that he was not a model human being when it comes to his politics, alliances, and social behavior.