canndo
Well-Known Member
Corporations are the ultimate vehicles of self-interest. The model here never was Marx but Macchiavelli. The corporation's prime principle, "accrue advantage", is in structural conflict with the highest principle of government, "be just to all".
So it astonishes me that we have posters here who genuinely believe in utterly free markets, a codeword for plutocracy, as a force for good. cn
I said I had nothing to add, I lied.
the very fact that we have such posters - the ones who genuinely believe in utterly free markets - or more so, that the only reason a truely free market cannot work is because of government bears whitness to the power of corporations and their campaign to have everyone believe as they would have us believe. This is why I asked Beenthere that very question. Most of those who believe that if only that free market existed everything in the country would fall into place, also believe every other thing that corporate America would have them believe.
tort reform is good, lawyers are bad (contrary to a free market where even lawyers should be free to sue as they please for any amount they please)
corporations will always work better without regulation and things will always be cheaper with less taxation. Freedom to eat fatty and salty foods and drink endless amounts of sugary drinks is a God given right.
People have choice and the market is only there to provide for those choices, the market is actually the slave of the consumer, always following what you, the consumer want - and it is government that gets in the way of that holy marriage.
these are just a few of the things that those who believe in a totally free market also believe in - and corporations are thrilled that they do.
If there is a problem, if consumers are abused in some way, it can't be the innocent corporation that is at fault, as they always do the people's bidding. It must be either not enough freedom for the market, or government incursion into that perfect marketplace that is always instantly self correcting and benevolent - because it always has the consumer's best interest at it's driving core.