I'm thinking of responsibility in terms of basic decency really. I don't think we have to dig down very far to see that many of the companies we invest our money in are engaging in extremely unethical business practices, activities that most of know to be wrong and would condemn outright if we didn't have a stake in them. Many of the top fortune 500 companies exploit labor, pollute the environment, corrupt political processes and governments, destabalize economies with reckless speculation, and then lie about all of it through their controlled media outlets.Depends quite a bit on exactly how you want to define or understand "responsibility," or how far down you want to dig into it. — tim wood
Even before the bubble popped the speculation itself caused quite a bit of harm in that it drove up prices to the point that many people couldn't afford decent housing. Doesn't that sort of speculative frenzy demonstrate a certain callous disregard on the part of "normal people" for the harmful consequences their activities had for the rest of society? Maybe most people were just blindly carried away by the madness but I don't think that's too abstract for most people to realize if they gave it a moments consideration.For instance, in 2007, whether bad mortgages were being palmed off as grade A instruments by default swap operators or not, millions of home buyers were willing to pay ever-increasing prices for real estate which wasn't in critically short supply, which hadn't been improved, and which (in some cases) wasn't even in very good shape. Thus a bubble developed and eventually broke, to many people's harm. — Bitter Crank
Maybe economically, but there is still an ethics issue, and again while I don't think the likely consequences of the aggregate behavior is obvious, it's certainly not too remote or byzantine to occur to most normal people. I don't think people can plausibly plead ignorance or incompetence on these issues.The difficult part of your question is that individually, most consumer decisions are too insignificant to matter. So, "normal" people are not at fault. On the other hand, if the manager of Calpers (California state employees retirement funds) decides to dump all their coal stock, he or she will have had a direct and significant effect on those stocks, and maybe the whole energy field. — Bitter Crank
Many of the top fortune 500 companies exploit labor, pollute the environment, corrupt political processes and governments, destabalize economies with reckless speculation, and then lie about all of it through their controlled media outlets. — Sivad
The middle classes are heavily invested in these corporations and take healthy profits from their unscrupulous activities. The poor can't really be considered victims either because 1) they're mostly politically apathetic, they've demonstrated very little concern for or solidarity with their fellow paupers and 2) most of them aren't living in poverty due to any protest of conscience, they're poor by happenstance — Sivad
I'll grant that there are certain instances where ignorance is a valid excuse, but it's pretty obvious that most of us wouldn't care even if we were made aware of the harm our purchases were causing given that we do buy many products with full knowledge of the abuses that went into the production. So we can't really take those cases in isolation, we have to consider the broader context.It isn't immediately (or even not immediately) obvious that when you buy blueberries grown in Mexico, you may be causing starvation there. — Bitter Crank
I'm not quite sure who you are counting as "middle class" but as it is usually used, you can rest assured they are not taking healthy profits from corporate activities. Only a small percentage of the population own enough stock to worry about corporate misbehavior. — Bitter Crank
They would still be culpable for their ignorance, but really who doesn't know that their iPhone was made in a sweatshop?You may be exaggerating how much people know about the conditions under which the food they eat was produced, or the products they buy were made. — Bitter Crank
There's a disconnect between the first quote and the second quote. First you properly accuse the big corporations of being corrupt and callous, then in the second paragraph you blame the workers for the consequences of corporate America bastard policies. — Bitter Crank
it is well within their power to change those policies and the only reason those policies remain in effect is a lack of widespread, committed opposition to them. I don't think the working class can be so easily absolved. — Sivad
The dense network that enables a modern society to operate can not be disrupted very much, and still allow the society to go on functioning. Too much disruption and society falls apart. This is more true now than it was two centuries ago. More true now than one century ago. Anyone stopping the economy would be shooting themselves in the head. — Bitter Crank
Workers actually have very little leverage in some industries. Apple doesn't make it's products in this country, and no other electronics company does either. A majority of our autos are made elsewhere. A lot of many products are made elsewhere. Until recently, the US was not energy self-sufficient. Many industries employ a very small fraction of the population. Automation, robotics, digital control, etc. make workers less important in many companies than they used to be. (This is a crisis in itself, but let's talk about that in another thread.) I'm not suggesting that workers have become unnecessary -- just that they don't have the amount of leverage they once had.
Consumers have a considerable amount of leverage. If consumers stopped buying products, that would also bring the economy to a screeching halt -- but again, a modern society can not survive without all parts pretty much functioning normally. — Bitter Crank
And you're right, as individuals we have the power to divest and boycott socially irresponsible businesses, but we don't do much of that either. Instead we have human herds trampling themselves on Black Friday to get sweatshop swag at insanely low prices. — Sivad
People can easily deal with the here and now and with concrete events. 3 dollar pants? Yay! The abstractions behind it, all the different steps of causality, the minor and remote impact of a single set of trousers; we're not programmed to integrate all those details in our thinking because they are nearly irrelevant for the here and now. All those irrelevancies add up. And that's not just "normal" people but everybody. — Benkei
There's nothing preventing people from viewing the world in a wider perspective. The average person is perfectly capable of thinking globally and acting locally. People are aware of these issues, they know that they're all contributing for the good or ill to an outcome. These issues don't escape normal people, their part in the larger process is something that occurs to them. And some part of them knows that when they minimize or dismiss their acts of complicity as 'just a pair of pants' that they're really just bullshitting themselves for the sake of ease and convenience in order to just get on with it. You give people far too little credit, people know better but they just don't want the inconvenience of struggle and sacrifice. They'd rather just go along to get along and not jeopardize their stake in the system by rocking the boat. — Sivad
We have the political power to enact trade policy which prohibits trading with countries that don't have strong labor, environmental, and human rights protections. We also have the power to prohibit corporations that don't operate at those standards from doing business in our country, but we don't do any of that. In fact we do the opposite, we ratify trade deals which encourage that kind of malfeasance and give huge subsidies to vicious corporations who in turn offshore most of their profits. — Sivad
Instead we have human herds trampling themselves on Black Friday to get sweatshop swag at insanely low prices. — Sivad
It's something to worth consider, are these people just trying to keep up with the Johnses or are they also living beyond their means? I don't really know many people that are satisfied with what they have. — Question
The answer to the question, "So: WHY THE HELL DON'T THEY DO WHAT IS BOTH ETHICAL AND SENSIBLE?" is fairly straightforward: most people are working hard to stay afloat, and they do not have the time and energy to become politically active agents of change. — Bitter Crank
Many workers from across the spectrum of employment experience "social disorganization" -- the effects of inadequate education, drugs and alcohol abuse (directly and indirectly), mental illness, maldistribution of wealth (a major factor), the effects of the military industrial complex, and so on. — Bitter Crank
So perhaps we should do our best in the situation we find ourselves. Perhaps like Peter Singer we should give large proportions of our income to charity. — Cuthbert
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