Correct me if i'm wrong, but these were private armies paid by the government correct? Just like the German mercenaries were paid to fight us during the Revolutionary War and the same basic idea of Blackwater. Im not sure how this is relevant to firms pitting armies for control of markets?
Because it is like a fish "seeing" water, it is very difficult to perceive how firms contol markets - in our current world, the "armies" are shills, astroturf, paid commentators, paid posters, PR firms and front groups that vie for control of markets, usually by controling minds, hearts and opinions.
Have you seen the Chevron greenwashing campaign - "we agree"? Chevron is not selling us on the quality of their gasoline but on the fact that they want to look green for us even though in the background they are having all sorts of international problems with their pollution.
BP has been running a campaign on how clean the gulf is and how much they are behind us as hard working Americans "shit happens" and we fixed it is their message even though the reality is that "shit" didn't happen, BP was negligent.
Exxon's campaign extoling the virtues of teachers, science teachers in particular and the need for more in the comming years is about as disengenuous as it gets, considering that Exxon has been a heavy contributor to the global warming naysayers - in effect being anti-science. Nothing in their ads has anything to do with, oh, I don't know... the superiority of their gasoline maybe?
this is the war that is being fought and what we see is only the smallest portion of it, as in these cases the instigators are known and traceable.
The BP fiasco and it's subsequent image clean up is interesting, politicians, radiocons, "average citizens" (who were paid) and other spreaders of positive spin and opinion softened the image of BP after the spill and were all a result of emergency PR response teams that were far more effective than the emergency spill response teams.