genocide, war, and empire. — NOS4A2
You’d compare a list of workplace accidents to genocide, war, and empire. — NOS4A2
You’d compare a list of workplace accidents to genocide, war, and empire. — NOS4A2
If corporations are so powerful then you ought to start one, — NOS4A2
First it’s The Wealthy, then corporations, now it’s multinational corporations. — NOS4A2
I just don’t see where the tyranny is. — NOS4A2
Corporations are not governments, though. — NOS4A2
If a group of people start a corporation it makes no sense to me that others, by virtue of them accepting a job there, should have control over it. — NOS4A2
It makes no sense to me that the people who conceive of, fund, build, accept the risk, and who are responsible for its operation from its conception until its demise should not get to decide how it should operate. — NOS4A2
I would say “just quit” because it is a far better course of action than attempting to force others to give up control of their creations so that Xtrix might feel better. — NOS4A2
What would be respectable, or at least consistent, would be to condemn the fundamentally illegitimate system of corporate governance. That you can't bring yourself to do so -- or simply aren't capable of recognizing it -- is telling. — Xtrix
That someone starts a business doesn't grant them the right to exploit people. Our economy shouldn't be structured in this way. Private ownership is not grounds "anything goes" -- otherwise slavery could still be around (and, in some forms, still is).
Good luck "building, accepting risk, and operating" a business alone. If others have a crucial role in generating profits (as workers at Walmart do), they should at minimum have some input into how those profits are allocated. As it stands now -- unsurprisingly -- 90% go back to shareholders. I seriously doubt workers would vote for this, if given the opportunity. But since it's an anti-democratic institution, that's off the table. And thanks in part to apologists like you, it'll stick around for a long time yet I'm sure. — Xtrix
Fuck those people. — Xtrix
I just don’t see where the tyranny is. — NOS4A2
Where’s the state there? — NOS4A2
I posit that the communal resources can be managed sustainably because it is in their self-interest to do so. I believe it because I’ve seen it first hand in a local anarchist community. No rules, no management, no authority, no mechanism, just a community of people engaging in common enterprise on the land they loved. Their economy consisted of fishing and foraging, tourism, trading trinkets with other communities, and believe it or not, professional surfing. All of this occurred out of the prying eyes of state interference…or so they thought. As soon as the state caught wind of their dealings they were forced to leave and their dwellings were burned to the ground. — NOS4A2
"I made a company. It's mine. If you don't like your starvation wage, go find another company." — ZzzoneiroCosm
Corporations are not run democratically. Elections (which is how officials, who make up the “state”, obtain their positions) are democratic.
Thus people have some say in the latter decisions. Workers have no say in the decisions of the board of directors.
Avoiding corporations is nearly impossible. — Xtrix
Corporations are not governments, though. If a group of people start a corporation it makes no sense to me that others, by virtue of them accepting a job there, should have control over it. It makes no sense to me that the people who conceive of, fund, build, accept the risk, and who are responsible for its operation from its conception until its demise should not get to decide how it should operate. You haven’t offered a single reason why this should be so. — NOS4A2
The objections to Laissez-faire are ethical, not economic. — Banno
:100: :up:They're also economic. Anti-competitive practises as a direct result of deregulation lead to less efficient use of resources and more expensive goods. Efficient free markets only exist where buyers and sellers have equal bargaining power, information is freely available and the market is mature and unlikely to be disrupted by new entrants. Those markets you can leave alone. — Benkei
Any hand-wave that excuses the appropriation of wealth through taxation is incredibly obsequious. — NOS4A2
questioning how passively paying a tax or promoting this or that government service could be considered ethical. — NOS4A2
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