Black scholes assumes arbitrage free pricing which has the cost of financing built into the forward. Today rates are practically zero especially in the context of a high implied vol stock in Jack's example.
If you price a 100 year put under the black scholes model, the put will be worth almost max value (strike price). It's a nuance in the model - Warren Buffet highlighted it as an (flawed in my opinon because his tenors weren't long enough) argument for his infamous put short.
If you have constant vol (under the black scholes framework) all stocks behave like a 2x fund. 100 becomes 101 becomes 99.9, etc. And over a 100 years it will eventually go to zero.
I agree that this part of the model doesn't fit with the reality of the world, but that's why the model shows the greeks it does.
Yes I should have said the risk free rate is priced into the forward.