Today, the world lost one of its most influential visionaries of our lifetime. I am deeply saddened by the death of Steve Jobs. He has impacted me in many ways ever since I first started using a Mac in graduate school back in 1990: writing countless papers, composing music, creating desktop publishing projects (who remembers Aldus Pagemaker?) and discovering all those fun new fonts. The Mac opened up so many new possibilities for me then and it’s still doing that for me today as I write this on my iMac. It’s one of the key tools I use everyday to build my business and serve my clients.
Mr. Jobs has impacted the entire world in ways most don’t even realize. We owe him an enormous debt of gratitude as one who so artfully bridged the gab between beauty and technology, never settling for something that wasn’t the very best it could possibly be.
This email today is a republishing of Simon Black’s tribute to this great man. Thank you Simon. Thank you Mr. Jobs.
- David
Date: October 6, 2011
Reporting From: Hong KongYou’ve undoubtedly heard by now that Steve Jobs passed away yesterday after a long battle with cancer; it’s been all over the news with wall-to-wall coverage, and iCandle vigils have sprung up all over the world. Jobs is being remembered as a pioneer, a technological revolutionary, a visionary. Rightfully so.
But it’s important to give credit where credit is due, and the world owes a tremendous debt to Steve Jobs for something else. He was perhaps the greatest living example of ‘philanthropy’ in action.
While people like Warren Buffet are pleading with the government to raise their taxes and give away their wealth to sycophantic bureaucrats, Jobs showed time and time again that the best way to improve people’s lives is to create value and be productive.
Steve Jobs was one of the most productive human beings to have ever lived; he started several successful companies which directly employed tens of thousands of people. Indirectly, his businesses improved the livelihoods of millions across the globe, from Chinese factory workers to iPhone app programmers to Apple shareholders.
In building an empire and unimaginable wealth for himself, Steve Jobs enriched the lives and livelihoods of others by creating value. Not by forced redistribution. Not by giving things away. By creating value.
Ironically, just as I write this I am watching President Obama on Bloomberg Television trying to explain how many jobs his new plan will create– 1.9 million in his estimate:
“We’re just going to keep on going at it and hammering away… until… something gets done. I would love to see nothing more than Congress act… so aggressively.”
Politicians would do themselves and their constituents a great service by comparing their own track record for enriching people’s lives against Steve Jobs’ performance, and then kindly stepping out of the way. The path to prosperity is not paved in votes, but rather in freedom: the freedom to create, produce, risk work hard… and be rewarded for your efforts.
If you have the time, I’d encourage you to take a few minutes and read some of Jobs’ own words; there are boundless sources online that will praise his creativity, drive, and intellect, but perhaps no one is better suited to explain Steve Jobs than the man himself.
Below I’ve pasted in some key Jobs quotes, Enjoy.
Jobs on -not- following the crowd:
“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma– which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”
Jobs on change and politics:
“We’re making the largest investment of capital that humankind has ever made in weapons over the next five years. We have decided, as a society, that that’s where we should put our money, and that raises the deficits and, thus, the cost of our capital.”
“I think it takes a crisis for something to occur in America. And I believe there’s going to be a crisis of significant proportions in the early Nineties as these problems our political leaders should have been addressing boil up to the surface.”
Jobs on charity… and the importance of failure:
“And that’s the problem with most philanthropy– there’s no measurement system. You give somebody some money to do something and most of the time you can really never measure whether you failed or succeeded in your judgment of that person or his ideas or their implementation. So if you can’t succeed or fail, it’s really hard to get better.”
Jobs on careers:
“Sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith. I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did. You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. . . As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. . . So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.”
Jobs on making it count:
Most of the time, we’re taking things. Neither you nor I made the clothes we wear; we don’t make the food or grow the foods we eat; we use a language that was developed by other people; we use another society’s mathematics. Very rarely do we get a chance to put something back into that pool. I think we have that opportunity now. And no, we don’t know where it will lead. We just know there’s something much bigger than any of us here.
Jobs on [the blue screen of] death:
“Death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because Death is very likely the single best invention of Life. It is Life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new.”
Well done, Mr. Jobs. Be thou at peace.
Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com


Thank you, David, for this thoughtful post.
Steve Jobs was bold, innovative and insightful, perhaps no where more so than in his decision to share his confrontation with his own mortality with the rest of the world. It strikes me that he modelled something key for us: namely, that dying is not the polar opposite of living but part of it. Steve Jobs had been dying since 2005–one of the many in our world having to cope with being “chronic terminal”. All those years he was dying he was also living: working, playing, creating, sharing.
When dying and living overlap as they did for him for 6 years, the opportunities for reflection and learning are great for those who claim them. It seems that Steve did and that is something we can take from him now and as we continue to live our days. He dared to talk about death, to make himself vulnerable before us. If more of us could do that, we’d be so much better off.
Linda Watson
http://talkaboutdeath.net
Right on, Linda. I agree wholeheartedly. The most memorable quote from his Standford speech video starting about 9 minutes into it is about death:
“If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I’m about to do today? Whenever the answer has been “no” for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something. Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool that I’ve encountered to make the big choices in life.”
-DM