Bushmen Philosophy It's not all corporations that you don't like, just big ones, and it's not just big corporations you don't like, but just big businesses regardless of corporate status, and it's not all big business you don't like, just certain ones, namely the ones you don't like. It's also irrelevant to you whether the business is a monopoly. You don't like some even where there's competition. — Hanover
Boy, you sure claim to know an awful lot about me based on a few relatively casual comments I made on this topic above. This reads as a series of straw men, so let me disabuse you of your ignorance. There are plenty of large corporations I like and plenty of small ones I don't like, and vice-versa. Corporatism, in the sense I am using the term, can include entities that are not technically corporations, but the same logic applies to them: I have no personal preference for the size of a business or organization. I care about whether it conforms to what I take to be basic principles of capitalism, which I am generally in favor of.
you doubtfully have any problem with the mom and pop restaurant down the street — Hanover
That depends on the restaurant.
you might have a problem with the Dyson vacuum company — Hanover
I have no opinion on it because I don't know anything about it.
you might dislike Wal-Mart — Hanover
I like Wal-Mart and even shop there.
you might like your local power company, despite it being a monopoly and not having any competitors — Hanover
My local power company is a cooperative owned by farmers, so this isn't really relevant.
what you don't like are those companies who do distasteful things, which has nothing to do with their corporate status and nothing to do with how many competitors it might have — Hanover
No one likes companies that do disgraceful things, myself included. It seems you're trying to be overly technical when reading the terms I have employed in order to accuse me of being "hopelessly vague, equivocal, and ambiguous," when I think it was obvious the sense in which I used them.