"America prohibits slavery, unless you wear a striped prison uniform." - "The 13th Amendment"
"When the prison stock code rises faster than the Nasdaq index, this is the real American dream." - Edward Lind,
a simulation game player, traveled to the United States in late 1999 and became the owner and warden of a private prison.
But the situation he faced was a bit tricky:
prison guards and deputy warden whose loyalty was worse than that of dogs.
The prisoners were extremely vicious and were eager to riot.
and bank loans that must be repaid within 30 days.
Fortunately, he awakened the golden finger: as long as he increases his deterrence value to the prisoners, he can draw characters, skills, drawings and props.
So in order to realize his American dream of being the best, Lind decided to fight violence with violence.
[Civil War] [Business War] [Calm and Decisive] [Gilded Age] [Technological Explosion]
Alan, a business elite, died in a car accident under a heavy truck, but his soul accidentally traveled to New York in 1860 and became a 19-year-old Irish youth with nothing.
With only $75 in his pocket, he built a canning factory from scratch using modern business thinking, expanding it to become a company. During the turbulent years of the Civil War, his assets soared thanks to precise planning.
With the advent of the Gilded Age, he expanded into oil, steel, military industry, railroads, and even ventured into media, real estate, electrical technology, and the hotel industry. From a contemporary elite to a 19th-century pauper, how did he create a multi-faceted, top-tier family tycoon in America a century ago?