The Whole Story: Adventures in Love, Life, and Capitalism (2024) The Whole Foods Cookbook: 120 Delicious and Healthy Plant-Centered Recipes (with Alona Pulse MD, Matthew Lederman MD, Derek Sarno and Chad Sarno, Grand Central/Hachette, 2018) The Whole Foods Diet: The Lifesaving Plan for Health and Longevity (with Alona Pulse MD and Matthew Lederman MD, Grand Central/Hachette, 2017) Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business (2013)
John Powell Mackey (born August 15, 1953) is a vegan/plant-based American entrepreneur and author. He is the co-founder of Whole Foods Market and was the CEO of the company from its inception in 1980 until his retirement in 2022. He is currently the CEO of Love.Life, which he also co-founded.
A vocal member of the Libertarian Party, Mackey is a strong supporter of free market economics. Mackey has criticized labor unions, and describes his views as "beyond union."[1] Named Ernst & Young entrepreneur of the year in 2003, he is a leader in the Natural foodmovement.[2] He has also written books on business and on plant-based diets.
Early life and education
Mackey was born on August 15, 1953, in Houston, Texas, the son of Margaret Wescott (Powell) and William Sturges "Bill" Mackey, Jr.[3] He has a sister and a brother.
John Mackey's father Bill was a professor of accounting, CEO of LifeMark, a health-care company, and investor of Whole Foods Market, before he died in 2004. In the abstract to his book Conscious Capitalism, Mackey thanks his father for teaching him valuable life lessons.[4]
Mackey's mother Margaret died in 1987 when he was 34. John and Margaret had a strained relationship, partly due to her desire for a different future regarding her son. Margaret felt that such a “fine mind” should devote its time doing something more productive than retailing. John did not agree, but in later years he regretted that he did not make it more clear that he loved her.[5]
Mackey was a student of philosophy and religion at the University of Texas at Austin and Trinity University in the 1970s, and worked at a vegetarianco-op.[6] Mackey spent almost six years at university without achieving a degree. Mackey credits his generalist approach to learning as the main reason he was able to be successful in business.[7]
Mackey co-founded his first health food store, SaferWay, with his girlfriend Renee Lawson (Hardy) in Austin in 1978. They met while living in a vegetarian housing co-op.[6]
They borrowed $10,000 and raised $35,000 more to start SaferWay. At the time, Austin had several small health food stores. The two ran the market on the first floor, a health food restaurant on the second, and, for a short time, lived in the third story of their building. In two years, they merged SaferWay with Clarksville Natural Grocery run by Mark Skiles and Craig Weller and renamed the business Whole Foods Market. All four (Mackey, Hardy-Lawson, Skiles and Weller) are considered co-founders of the business.[6]
Animal welfare
Whole Foods was the first grocery chain to set standards for humane animal treatment.[2] Mackey was influenced by animal rights activist, Lauren Ornelas, who criticized Whole Foods' animal standards regarding ducks at a shareholder meeting in 2003. Mackey gave Ornelas his email address and they corresponded on the issue. He studied issues related to factory farming and decided to switch to a primarily vegan diet that included only eggs from his own chickens. Since 2006, he has followed an entirely plant-based diet. He advocates tougher animal standards.[9]
Despite Whole Foods' welfare standards, Mackey has been criticized by abolitionist vegans such as Gary L. Francione, who believes the Whole Foods company policies betray the animal rights position.[10] Mackey started a non-profit foundation, the Animal Compassion Foundation, to address making animal welfare more economically viable.[11] The Animal Compassion Foundation folded in 2008 with the formation of the Global Animal Partnership, a nonprofit organization that is independent of Whole Foods Market. Mackey is on the board of directors of Global Animal Partnership.[12] Additionally, he is a board member of Farm Forward, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that implements innovative strategies to promote conscientious food choices, reduce farmed animal suffering, and advance sustainable agriculture,[13] and he has been a member of the board of directors for the Humane Society of the United States since 2009.[14]
Letter to employees
In 2006, Mackey announced he was reducing his salary to $1 a year, would donate his stock portfolio to charity, and set up a $100,000 emergency fund for staff facing personal problems.[15] He wrote: "I am now 53 years old and I have reached a place in my life at which I no longer want to work for money, but simply for the joy of the work itself and to better answer the call to service that I feel so clearly in my own heart."[16]
He has instituted caps on executive pay at the company.[17]
Yahoo! Finance postings
In July 2007, The Wall Street Journal[18] revealed that Mackey was, for at least seven years, using the pseudonym "Rahodeb" (an anagram of his wife's name, Deborah) to post to Yahoo Finance forums. He referred to himself in the third person and criticized rival supermarket chain Wild Oats Markets.[19] The Federal Trade Commission[20] approved a complaint challenging Whole Foods Market's approximately $670 million acquisition of its chief rival, Wild Oats Markets, Inc. It authorized the FTC staff to seek a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction in federal district court to halt the deal, pending an administrative trial on the merits. After an extensive regulatory battle with the FTC, a federal appeals court consented to the deal. Whole Foods officially completed its buyout of Wild Oats in August 2007.
In May 2008, after an SEC investigation cleared him, Mackey started blogging again. In a 2,037 word post, he wrote about why he began blogging in the first place and how his upbringing drove him to defend himself and Whole Foods. He admitted he made a mistake in judgment, but not in ethics.[21]
Resignation as chairman
In December 2009, Mackey resigned as chairman of the board of Whole Foods, a position he held since 1978. On his blog, he said, "John Elstrott will now take the title of Chairman of the Board, which will accurately reflect the authority and the responsibilities that he has had for many years." Mackey remains a member of the board of directors.[22]
Retirement from Whole Foods Market
In September 2022, Mackey stepped down as CEO of the company, which he had been since its inception in 1980.[23] He was succeeded by Jason Buechel, who was executive vice president and chief information officer (CIO) between 2013 and 2019, followed by a tenure as chief operating officer (COO) from 2019.
Political views
Libertarianism
In a debate in the October 2005 issue of Reason magazine among Mackey, economist Milton Friedman, and entrepreneur T. J. Rodgers, Mackey said that he is a free-marketlibertarian.[24] He said that he used to be a democratic socialist in college.[25] As a beginning businessman, he was challenged by workers for not paying adequate wages and by customers for overcharging, during a time when he was having difficulty breaking even. He began to take a more capitalistic worldview, and discovered the works of Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Milton Friedman.[26] Mackey is an admirer of some of Ayn Rand's novels.[27]
Mackey co-founded the organization Freedom Lights Our World (FLOW)[28] to combine his commitments to "economic and political freedom as well as personal growth, social responsibility, and environmental stewardship."[29] He supports such changes as green tax shifts, environmental trusts, world legal systems to allow the poor to create legal businesses, and a citizen's dividend to help the poor in the developed world.[30] The name and focus of FLOW have since become Conscious Capitalism, Inc., which was initially created as a program of FLOW and evolved to the point at which it became the organization's principal focus. In 2010 the name of the organization was formally changed. The Conscious Capitalism Institute was chartered in 2009. In 2010 the original FLOW group merged with the institute group to become one unified organization.[31] In 2013, Mackey was interviewed on Harvard Business Review's Ideacast podcast about his views on conscious business.[32] Mackey said, "If you want to be competitive in the long term, your business needs to have discovered its higher purpose and it needs to adopt a stakeholder philosophy". He eschewed the conventional thinking that "business has to be sort of ruthless and heartless to be successful".[33]
Healthcare reform
Mackey opposed the public health insurance option that ultimately did not become part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Mackey asserted that a better plan would be allowing consumers to purchase health insurance across state lines and use a combination of health savings accounts and catastrophic insurance, as Whole Foods does.[34] Mackey's statement that Americans do not have an intrinsic right to healthcare led to calls for a boycott of Whole Foods Market from the Progressive Review and from numerous groups on Facebook.[35] Alternatively, Tea Party movement advocates organized a number of buycotts in support of Mackey's suggestions.[36]
In August 2009, Mackey wrote the editorial in the Wall Street Journal expressing his viewpoints on universal healthcare in the United States.[37] "While we clearly need health-care reform, the last thing our country needs is a massive new health-care entitlement that will create hundreds of billions of dollars of new unfunded deficits and move us much closer to a government takeover of our health-care system," he wrote. He continued: "Many promoters of health-care reform believe that people have an intrinsic ethical right to health care – to equal access to doctors, medicines and hospitals. While all of us empathize with those who are sick, how can we say that all people have more of an intrinsic right to health care than they have to food or shelter?"
In an NPR interview in 2013, Mackey compared the Obama administration's healthcare law to "fascism" instead of socialism, stating, "[t]echnically speaking, it's more like fascism. Socialism is where the government owns the means of production. In fascism, the government doesn't own the means of production, but they do control it – and that's what's happening with our health care programs and these reforms."[38][39] The day following the interview, Mackey wrote[40] that he regretted having made the remark, stating that he "made a poor word choice to describe [the U.S.] healthcare system."[39][41] Instead, he called it "government-controlled health care".[39]
Unions
Mackey is known for his strong anti-union views, having once compared unions to herpes in that "it won't kill you, but it's very unpleasant and will make a lot of people not want to be your lover."[42] Whole Foods Market, along with Costco and Starbucks, teamed up in 2008 to create an alternative to the Employee Free Choice Act. The three companies invited other corporations, unions and public interest groups to join them, proposing instead that unions be given more access to meet with workers, stricter penalties for labor violations and a guaranteed right to request secret ballots in all circumstances.[43]
Mackey commented in 2005:
It's illegal in the United States for there to be company unions – special unions which are formed and controlled by the employees and managers of the company to represent their interests and collectively bargain on their behalf. These type of unions are legal in many countries such as Japan, but are illegal in the United States. Instead the law requires that all unions be outside unions. I believe this law should be repealed and that company unions should be as legal as any other kind of voluntary association.[44]
In a 2010 discussion of books on his reading stack with journalist Nick Paumgarten, Mackey explained his views on human-caused climate change were similar to those of Australian geologist and author Ian Plimer:
...Mackey told me that he agrees with the book [ Heaven and Earth ]'s assertion that, as he put it, "no scientific consensus exists" regarding the causes of climate change; he added, with a candor you could call bold or reckless, that it would be a pity to allow "hysteria about global warming" to cause us "to raise taxes and increase regulation, and in turn lower our standard of living and lead to an increase in poverty."[5]
Personal life
Despite the fact that Mackey's company Whole Foods had a market value of $11.7 billion in 2011, he was known for his frugality. In this time, he drove a five-year-old Honda Civic, and to this day is known for using low-cost hotels and always flying commercial.[46] For an interview with Barron's magazine, he wore khaki shorts and a checked shirt.[47] Much in line with the ethos of Whole Foods, Mackey doesn't eat frozen or processed meals, and is a practitioner of an organic and plant-based diet.[48][8]
Religion
During his twenties, Mackey experimented with different religions and philosophies, and it was rumored for a long time that he was a Buddhist.[49] Mackey now describes himself as a Perennialist.[50]
Family
Mackey had a longtime relationship with Mary Kay Hagen.[6]
Mackey married his wife, Deborah Morin, in 1991.[51][52] They have no children. Both practice yoga. They spend the week in Austin and weekends at their 720-acre (291.4 ha) ranch 40 miles (64 km) west of Austin.[6]
Conscious Leadership: Elevating Humanity Through Business (with Steve Mcintosh and Carter Phipps, Portfolio, 2020) ISBN978-0593083628
The Whole Foods Cookbook: 120 Delicious and Healthy Plant-Centered Recipes (with Alona Pulse MD, Matthew Lederman MD, Derek Sarno and Chad Sarno, Grand Central/Hachette, 2018)
The Whole Foods Diet: The Lifesaving Plan for Health and Longevity (with Alona Pulse MD and Matthew Lederman MD, Grand Central/Hachette, 2017)
Strong, Michael. Be the Solution: How Entrepreneurs and Conscious Capitalists Can Solve All the Worlds Problems (Forword by John Mackey, John Wiley & Sons, 2009) ISBN978-0470450031
^John Mackey, Foreword, to Michael Strong, Be the Solution: How Entrepreneurs and Conscious Capitalists Can Solve All the World's Problems (Wiley & Sons, March 2009), p. xiv
BusinessInsider.comURLBusinessInsider.comTipeSurat kabar daringPerdagangan ?YaLangueIngggrisOnline Computer Library Center1076392313 Bagian dariInsider Inc. (en) PemilikAxel Springer SEPublisher (en)Henry BlodgetService entry (en)Februari 2009; 15 tahun lalu (2009-02) dinNew YorkLokasi kantor pusatKota New York NegaraAmerika Serikat Peringkat Alexa▲ 269 (Januari 2016[update])[1]KeadaanAktif Business Insider adalah situs web berita bisnis, selebriti, dan teknologi Amer…
العلاقات الزامبية الكيريباتية زامبيا كيريباتي زامبيا كيريباتي تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات الزامبية الكيريباتية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين زامبيا وكيريباتي.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتين: وجه ال…
Pre-1912 class of US federal circuit court This article is about the pre-1912 system. For the current appellate courts, commonly referred to as circuit courts, see United States courts of appeals. This article is part of a series on thePolitics of the United States Federal government Constitution of the United States Law Taxation Policy Legislature United States Congress House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson (R) Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R) Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D) Congre…
Main article: 1948 United States presidential election 1948 United States presidential election in Minnesota ← 1944 November 2, 1948 1952 → Nominee Harry S. Truman Thomas E. Dewey Party Democratic (DFL) Republican Home state Missouri New York Running mate Alben W. Barkley Earl Warren Electoral vote 11 0 Popular vote 692,966 483,617 Percentage 57.16% 39.89% County Results Truman 40-50% 50-60% 60-70% 7…
Radio station in Winchester, VirginiaWUSQ-FMWinchester, VirginiaBroadcast areaNorthern Shenandoah ValleyEastern Panhandle of West VirginiaFrequency102.5 MHz (HD Radio)BrandingQ102ProgrammingFormatCountryAffiliationsPremiere NetworksMRN RadioPRN RadioOwnershipOwneriHeartMedia, Inc.(iHM Licenses, LLC)Sister stationsW239BV, WKSI-FM, WFQX, WMREHistoryFirst air dateDecember 10, 1965[1]Former call signsWHPL-FM (1965–1969)WEFG (1969–1982)WUSQ (1982–1986)Call sign meaningW United States QT…
Le registre international « Mémoire du monde » est la liste de toutes les collections du patrimoine documentaire qui ont été identifiées par le Comité consultatif international du programme « Mémoire du monde » de l'UNESCO lors de ses réunions à Tachkent (septembre 1997), à Vienne (juin 1999), à Cheongju (juin 2001), à Gdańsk (août 2003), à Lijiang (juin 2005), à Pretoria (juin 2007), à Bridgetown (juillet 2009), à Manchester (mai 2011), à Gwangju (juin …
Filmmaking technique An early example of split screen in Life of an American Fireman (1903) Patty Duke in the twin roles of identical cousins, Patty and Cathy, in the TV show The Patty Duke Show, an effect achieved by split screen. In film and video production, split screen is the visible division of the screen, traditionally in half, but also in several simultaneous images, rupturing the illusion that the screen's frame is a seamless view of reality, similar to that of the human eye. There may …
لا يزال النص الموجود في هذه الصفحة في مرحلة الترجمة إلى العربية. إذا كنت تعرف اللغة المستعملة، لا تتردد في الترجمة. (أبريل 2019) جزء من سلسلة حولالأنمي والمانغا أنمي أنمي التاريخ الصناعة رسوم متحركة أصلية للشبكة رسوم متحركة أصلية للفيديو الترجمة الدبلجة الشركات أطول المسلسلات…
Gossamer Penguin Test flight of the Gossamer Penguin Role experimental aircraftType of aircraft National origin United States Manufacturer AeroVironment Designer Paul MacCready First flight May 18, 1979 Status Sole example in possession of The Science Place Foundation[1] Number built 1 Developed from Gossamer Albatross Developed into Solar Challenger The Gossamer Penguin was a solar-powered experimental aircraft created by Paul MacCready's AeroVironment.[1] MacCready, whose Gossamer Cond…
2012 book by Jeffrey Toobin For the 1973 novel by Elie Wiesel, see The Oath (Wiesel novel). For the 1995 novel by Frank Peretti, see The Oath (Peretti novel). The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court First editionAuthorJeffrey ToobinCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishPublisherDoubledayPublication date2012Media typePrint (Hardcover & Paperback)Pages325 pagesISBN978-0-385-52720-0 The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court is a 2012 book by Jeffrey Toobin describing…
Display system intended to replace X11 WaylandWeston, the reference implementation of a Wayland serverOriginal author(s)Kristian HøgsbergDeveloper(s)freedesktop.org et al.Initial release30 September 2008; 15 years ago (2008-09-30)[1]Stable releaseWayland: 1.22,[2] Weston: 13.0.1[3] / 7 April 2023; 14 months ago (2023-04-07) Repositorygitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland Written inCOperating systemOfficial: LinuxUnofficial: NetBSD, Fr…
محتوى هذه المقالة بحاجة للتحديث. فضلًا، ساعد بتحديثه ليعكس الأحداث الأخيرة وليشمل المعلومات الموثوقة المتاحة حديثًا. (مارس 2019) المصرية للغازات الطبيعيةجاسكو المصرية للغازات الطبيعيةالشعارمعلومات عامةالبلد مصر التأسيس 1997النوع شركة مساهمةالمقر الرئيسي التجمع الخامس - …
Botol-botol ASI yang dipompa. Bank ASI adalah sebuah layanan yang mengumpulkan, meneliti, mengolah dan menyumbangkan ASI yang yang disumbangkan oleh ibu susu yang tak secara biologis memiliki hubungan dengan bayi penerima. Nutrisi optimum bagi bayi yang baru lahir adalah penyusuan, jika memungkinan, selama tahun pertama.[1] Bank ASI menawarkan solusi untuk para ibu yang tak dapat memberikan ASI mereka sendiri kepada anak mereka, karena alasan-alasan seperti bayi berisiko terkena penyakit…
NironeMappa di Milano del 1880 ca con segnati i corsi d'acqua, sia naturali che artificiali, che attraversavano la parte nord occidentale della città. Sulla sinistra si riconosce la roggia civica, che corrisponde all'antico alveo naturale del Nirone prima della sua deviazione verso il GuisaStato Italia Regioni Lombardia Province Milano Lunghezza8 km Portata media0,4 m³/s Bacino idrografico4,80 km² Altitudine sorgente185 m s.l.m. Nascea Cesate nei pressi di via per Senago 45°35…
For the Jamaican cricketer, see Ken McLeod (cricketer). For people with a similar name, see Ken MacLeod (disambiguation). Ken McLeodPersonalBorn1948ReligionTibetan BuddhismSchoolKarma KagyuOccupationtranslator, author and teacherSenior postingTeacherKalu Rinpoche Ken McLeod (born 1948) is a senior Western translator, author, and teacher of Tibetan Buddhism. He received traditional training mainly in the Shangpa Kagyu lineage through a long association with his principal teacher, Kalu Rinpoche, w…
Lanskap Ozouer-le-Voulgis. Ozouer-le-VoulgisNegaraPrancisArondisemenMelunKantonTournan-en-BrieAntarkomunetidak ada pada 2007Pemerintahan • Wali kota (2008-2014) Guy Bossard • Populasi11.544Kode INSEE/pos77352 / 2 Population sans doubles comptes: penghitungan tunggal penduduk di komune lain (e.g. mahasiswa dan personil militer). Ozouer-le-Voulgis merupakan sebuah komune di departemen Seine-et-Marne di region Île-de-France di utara-tengah Prancis. Demografi Pada sensu…
В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с такой фамилией, см. Витгенштейн; Витгенштейн, Пётр. Пётр Христианович Витгенштейннем. Ludwig Adolph Peter Fürst zu Sayn-Wittgenstein Портрет Петра Христиановича Витгенштейна работы[1] Джорджа Доу. Военная галерея Зимнего дворца, Государственный …